Music Trade Review

Issue: 1951 Vol. 110 N. 7

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
cently, who has discovered that indirect sales approaches
have proved very successful and have brought many a
substantial sale into his store. This dealer claims that
doing many little things which are not required in the
general sense of selling has been the source of bringing
into his store people who have been sent in by those
whom he has befriended or some organization to which
he has made donations in a very substantial manner.
A small hospital needed a piano. He heard about it
and sent one to them with his compliments. To be sure,
it was a used piano but it was a good one. The result
was that several sales were made through his kindness.
A neighbor had a sick child; the child enjoyed music;
the father was tied up somewhat financially. This dealer
knew it, so he prepared a piano, a small grand, called
him up and told him he could have it at cost. The whole
neighborhood "heard about it. There were very few
pianos on that block—there are more there now, because
the people came to this dealer and bought them. Becom-
ing active in various associations and organizations
throughout the community has proved a very successful
move for this dealer, not simply because he joined the
organizations, attends various meetings, but after having
become acquainted with many of the members, he has
performed several little kindnesses which practically
didn't cost anything but built a tremendous amount of
good will for his organization. Of course, as he says,
he works about thirteen hours a day about six days a
week at the business, but at the same time he gets a
tremendous amount of satisfaction out of seeing the
business grow through his policy of indirect selling.
What he cannot understand is why there are not more
piano dealers throughout the country, because, as he
says, it's a very fine business and a piano brings so
much enjoyment to people as well as having such an
exceptional educational value, and he cannot under-
stand why more people do not become interested in
selling them. His logic is—be a joiner but be altruistic
about it and make it pay.
Something That Every Dealer Should Help Promote
HILE we are on the subject of sales promo-
tion, and particularly indirect methods of
securing business and creating piano sales,
we might again remind the piano dealers throughout the
country how important it is for them to enter whole-
heartedly into the movement which is being promoted
by the American Music Conference, the National Piano
Manufacturers Association and others throughout the
country in endeavoring to have piano lessons put into
the public schools. Great strides in this endeavor have
been made during the last five years, because as we
said in our Editorial last month, the proper approach
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, JULY, 1951
has been found which has interested music teachers as
well as music supervisors to the extent that they are
now coming to the American Music Conference asking
how these piano lessons can be given. It is gratifying to
know that during the last three years approximately
1500 music teachers have been instructed on how to
conduct these lessons and many cities as well as small
towns are now teaching piano in the public schools. In
addition to this, the parochial schools have become
vitally interested in the project and there are many
classes being developed in these schools throughout the
country. For many years, the various associations in
the music industry which had to do with the merchan-
dising of pianos had tried various methods of interest-
ing the public in the purchasing of pianos. There have
been many hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on
some of these projects, but they have all fallen by the
wayside. In fact, we might say that three times as
much money has been spent on various other projects
which have done practically little if anything toward
the promotion of pianos as there has been on this present
one in promoting piano lessons in the schools. It has
not only proved to be one of the most economical but
one of the most forceful methods, due to the fact that it
can be carried on from generation to generation. It is
proving itself the finest method by which to find out
whether a child is adapted or interested at all in learn-
ing how to play the piano. At first, the individual music
teachers were afraid of it. They feared that it was going
to take pupils away from them, but just the reverse has
happened, because once a child finds out that he or she
is interested in learning how to play the piano, and pre-
liminary instruction proves to the parent that such is
the case, they invariably carry on with a private teacher
after the initial instruction in school. So, here is a
promotion which should be entered into wholeheartedly
by every piano dealer in the country who should give
every support possible in their territory toward helping
establish the piano lessons in the schools. It is the one
method which not only creates present sales of pianos
but will also do so for the future.
Editor
11
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Sohmer's Unique Story of the Piano
Brings Orders for 40M Copies
Earle Foreman, sales manager of
Sohmer & Co. of New York, has issued
a unique presentation leading up to the
manufacture of Sohmer & Co. pianos,
entitled "Pleasant Noises versus Tone"
starting out with the expression—"Ac-
cording to the science of Acoustics and
the Sound Behavior of Vibrating Bodies
—it is both theoretically and physically
possible for two army trucks to crash
together and sound a beautiful A flat
TORTOISE SHELL
HUNTER'S BOW
chord. It isn't likely though, because
they are not built for that purpose.
Neither are all pianos."
He then goes on and says that most
pianos, particularly when new, give
forth pleasant noises to the untrained
ear. Then going way back, under the
caption "How Did It All Start?" He
states, "It started thousands of years ago
when a lowly, unfortunate tortoise
crawled out of the River Nile, got turned
over on his back somehow and never
was able to right himself. He didn't live
long and the hot Egyptian sun quickly
dried out the carcass, leaving only two
or three sinews or tendons, stretched
across the hollow shell." With this intro-
duction, he goes on to tell how a great
Egyptian astronomer strolling along the
River Nile stubbed his toe on what was
left of the tortoise, and in so doing
picked up the tortoise shell and plucked
the tendons, thereby creating a vibra-
tion of sound which was amplified and
prolonged.
"For centuries," he continued, "harps
were called tortoise shell harps because
this is just what they were—a tortoise
shell with its own natural arch and
strung with strings of cat gut, the first
improvement. . . . Next came the
Hunter's Bow Harp. Tradition tells us
that once upon a time, a hunter in Mid-
dle Europe, hung his bow to a tree
branch while he retrieved an arrow.
When he returned and reached for the
bow, it was caught in the branches and
12
came loose only after a sharp pull. It
happened again—a pleasant noise—and
another smart man was listening. A
string vibrated and the larger surface
of the bow took up the sound—amplified
it and prolonged it. The hunter liked the
'pleasant noise' and eventually more
strings were added to the bent bow."
From there on Mr. Foreman skips
through the centuries of harp progres-
sion and goes on to tell about how the
of Mendelssohn. It responds to the ma-
jesty which is Beethoven. It sings sweetly
with Schubert and Chopin. Tone has
color, breadth and distinction. It gives
inspiration and banishes the drudgery
of practice. Such a piano is the Sohmer.
Three generations of the Sohmer Fam-
ily have set an unswerving course toward
the ideal; the ideal of tonal beauty."
He then takes up the art of voicing.
He states, "Sohmer voicers are master
craftsmen who studied their art under
old master craftsmen, as far back as
Hugo Sohmer himself—the greatest of
•IANO Sl'AI.K
first pianos were invented in Italy about
225 years ago, and how crude they were,
and how they have steadily developed
until "now a piano maker must deal
with some ten thousand pieces of wood,
steel, iron, copper, glue, wool, etc. He
also deals with acoustical science, math-
ematics, tradition and know-how and
the greatest of these, up to this para-
graph, is know-how." "So far," con-
tinues Mr. Foreman, "he has made an
instrument with 88 notes. It is in a
presentable cabinet and pleasant noises
can be enticed therefrom."
Mr. Foreman devotes a paragraph to
what makes the difference between an
artist and a near-artist and points out
that it was genius and ability, vision
plus know-how, plus the burning desire
to create and to excel. He then points
out how tone is produced basically by
the intelligent and inspired handling of
several components, and he states that
unless a piano maker has a thorough un-
derstanding and appreciation of these
components, and unless he has a desire to
make an artistic product, plus one fur-
ther ingredient, his piano may have
pleasing sounds but it will not have
Tone.
From here on he points out "Tone in
a piano is the capacity for making a
Nocturne sound like a night song; not
a mazurka. Tone in a piano makes the
Wedding March joyful. It makes the
Funeral March somber. It rises to the
heights of Wagner. It catches the gaiety
PIANO COMI'LETE
his time and generation. Sohmer voicers
are musicians; accomplished musicians.
For who else, indeed, should attempt to
give color and life to tone? Who else,
indeed, knows where brilliance is to be
demanded, where the pianist must seek
and find and accent the golden three of
melody, where the tone must be massive,
magnificent!"
And in winding up this unique mes-
sage, Mr. Foreman states, "The Sohmer
Piano—made by our family for yours—
since 1872."
Samples of these messages were sent
to Sohmer dealers throughout the coun-
try, and so far Sohmer & Co. have re-
ceived orders for 40,000, which are
going to be used by the representative
dealers who sell the Sohmer pianos.
Outstanding Chamber of Commerce
Work Brings Piano as Gift
At a recent meeting of the Board of
Directors of the Chamber of Commerce
of Utica, N. Y., the officers and members
of the Board of Directors presented
Jim Capps with a spinet piano in ap-
preciation of his outstanding efforts as
chairman of the Chamber's Indilstrial-
Business Development Division. Mr.
Capps was at one time president of the
Chamber of Commerce and was the
founder of the committee of which he
is now head, which was formed to at-
tract new industries to the city of Utica
and to retain and expand existing in-
dustries.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, JULY, 1951

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