Presto

Issue: 1920 1790

23
PRESTO
November 13, 1920.
SOME ANOMALIES OF
THE PATENT OFFICE
Musical Instrument Division Does Not Include
Talking Machines, Although Patents Gov-
erning Jewelry Are Issued from There.
One division of the United States Patent Office in
Washington handles everything that could be con-
strued as musical patents, except the patents govern-
ing talking machines. The decision to do so was
originally taken from a technical standpoint. Talking
machines are not grouped with other musical instru-
ments because they are designed to reproduce rather
than to create music. The view taken was that talk-
ing machines are designed for the reproduction of
other sounds than those of music.
But the anomalous thing is that the division of
musical instruments has within its jurisdiction sev-
eral other subjects, such as jewelry and bookbind-
ings, not in any way related to the musical field.
But the staff is mainly taken up with inventions re-
lating to music.
The number of patent applications received each
year are greater than the proportionate increase in
the population of the country. That is held to be
an indication of a healthy interest in music and musi-
cal instruments. It is not odd that the vast pre-
ponderance of patents relating to playerpianos is
for improvements in old or new devices applicable
to. existing types of instruments.
The inventor seeking patent rights covering a
minor attachment can usually secure comparatively
quick action in the music division. But when big
claims of wide scope are made the experts of the
department move slowly and cautiously. The im-
mensity of the work in the department today makes
an interesting subject of comparison with the work
in the early years. For twelve years, from 1790 to
1802, the entire work of the Patent Office was per-
formed by a single clerk in the State Department
and all the records did not fill more than a dozen
pigeon-holes.
PIPE ORGAN MUSIC OPENS
ELECTRICAL MEN'S MEETINGS
NEW INCORPORATIONS
IN MUSIC GOODS TRADE
Whenever a meeting of the Chicago Electrical
Workers' Union becomes too rumbumptious for Mi-
chael Boyle, the business agent, to repress with re-
sounding whacks of his gavel on the presiding offi-
cer's desk, Eddie O'Brien floods the building with
sound from the $20,000 pipe organ. Eddie is a mem-
ber of the Musicians' Union and competent to pump
out anything from George Cohan to Frederick
Chopin.
The new union headquarters at Ogden avenue and
Washington boulevard has an odor of sanctity as
well as the atmosphere of music. It was once a
Greek church. It was once a synagogue. Now it is
the gathering place of Chicago Electrical Workers'
Union. No. 134, and of the plumbers' union. The
former union bought the edifice for $30,000 and spent
$35,000 in remodeling it. Among the improvements
was the overhauling of the big pipe organ.
"The union meetings are opened with a number
on the organ " said Boyle after the formal opening
last week. "Then we have ten minutes or so of
music after the meeting, and all go out feeling fine.
And—O yes—there's no smoking, no swearing, no
chewing, no spitting on the floor at our meetings.
That big pipe organ is some reformer, believe me."
New and Old Concerns Cecure Charters in Various
Places.
Schulze & Gladstone, Manhattan, musical instru-
ments, $50,000; M. E. Sands, W. D. Gladstone, O.
Schulze, 256 West 197th street.
Harris Music Co., Detroit, $100,000. Norman H.
Harris, Robert L. Rosen, D. E. Hoken.
The World's Music Co., Wilmington, Del., $2,000.
J. Vernon Pimm and E. M. McFarland.
GOOD BIT OF ADVICE.
Buy a Gulbransen, advises the Matthewson-Pelz
Jewelry Co., Marshall, Tex., which adds: "If you
cannot play by hand, anybody can play a player-
piano. The stirring melodies of the great pianists
have been recorded on paper so that from the roll
you may hear the artist as if he were present in your
own home. You are not getting all the comforts
of home unless you have a piano. It inspires happi-
ness, harmony and peace and encourages those influ-
ences that make for culture and beauty. Now is the
time to buy; we make these wonderful instruments
easy to purchase."
Arthur Hellrieger is the new manager of the Cable
Pisno Co.'s store in St. Paul, Minn.
TONK
BENCHES
Closes 'Em Too and Soothes Heated Feelings of
Quarrelsome Members in the Interval Between.
Edgar Cleveland, the clever window decorator of
the O. K. Houck Piano Co., Nashville, Tenn., who
has been absent on account of illness for nearly a
year, has returned to his duties.
PIONEER SCHOOL FO PIANO MEN
Established 1901
Jn ii's Mpyear
with upwards of*
1OOO
GO WITH GOOD P ANOS TO
ACTIVE DEALERS' CUSTOMERS
SUCCESSFUL
GRADUATES
WISE DEALERS ALREADY IN LINE
COURT HOUSE SO,
VALPARAISO. IND.
Write Us NOW for Information
TONK MANUFACTURING CO.
6170
1912 Lewis Street
CHICAGO
Piano, Player-Piano and Organ Tuning, Repairing, Regula-
ting and Voicing. Best equipped school in the U. S.
Diplomas awarded and positions secured. Private and claw
instructions, both sexes.
School all the year. Illustrated catalogues Iree.
POLK'S SCHOOL OF TUNING, VALPARAISO, IND.
WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS
Manufacturers •(
PIANO ACTIONS
ONE GRADE ONLY
FACTORIES:
W«st Forty-Fifth Street, Tentk Arenue and Weat
Forty-Sixth Street
OFFICE:
457 West 45th Street
HIGHEST GRADE
Ihe Sign of Supreme
Achievement in Piano
ctions.
CABLE-NELSON PIANO CO.
Manufactures fine pianos and player-pianos and
Wholesales them at lair prices and terms.
The agency is a source of both
profit and prestige.
REPUBLIC BUILDING, CHICAGO
NEW YORK
Comstock, Cheney & Co.
(vory Cutters and Manufacturers
Piano Keys, Actions •! Hammers
sVORY AND COMPOSITION-COVERED ORGAN KEYS
D)9 only Com( any Furnishing the Keys, Actions, Hammers and Brackets
The Best High-Grade Piano for the Money
Newman Bros. Pianos have tonal quality second to none.
Their many superior points and their forty-six years of pres-
tige give the dealer interesting facts to ' ell his prospects.
When you take on the Newman line of pianos and players you
become one of us, and we give you real help when you need it.
Don't just think we are a fine firm to deal with, find out for
sure and you will stay right with us.
Newman Bros. Company
Factories, 806-16 Dix St.
ttofegraph a n d R. R. S t a t i o n : Essex, C o n n ,
Chicago, Illinois
Office a n d F a c t o r i e s : Ivoryrrm.
FOR TONE, BEAUTY
AND LASTING
A
ACCOMPLISHMENT <
,
The WERNER INDUSTRIES CO. CJnci
P I A N O S
AND
P LAY E R S
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/
24
PRESTO
HUMAN QUALITIES
IN PLAYER PIANOS
Article by an English Scientist, Written
Seven Years Ago, Suggests the Vast Prog-
ress That Has Been Made in the Mod-
ern Instrument Since That Time.
When the playerpiano first began to attract atten-
tion there was a wide difference of opinion as to how
far the musical instrument could go in matching
the expression of the human performer. One of the
English writers, who had taken special interest in
the question, decided that it was a "curious fact
that a mechanical pianoplayer can play Beethoven,
but is unable to tackle Chopin." That is the asser-
tion of Christopher W. C. Wheatley, in a letter
printed in Nature, London, June 5; 1913. Comment-
ing on Prof. G. H*. Bryan's experiments with piano-
players, described recently in these columns, Mr.
Wheatley said that all pianists recognize the differ-
ences in tone that may be produced by differences in
touch on the keyboard of a piano. He believes that
the harmonics of a note are most prominent when
the note is practically produced by pressure alone.
Pressure alone is, of course, unable to produce a
note, and a certain fractional hit is always necessary
to give the hammer the necessary momentum.
Different Now.
But that was written in 1913. Since that time the
playerpiano has greatly advanced. The reproduc-
ing pianos have been perfected and the player rolls
have been developed to match. Today the Ampico
is recognized by great musicians as a worthy rival of
the greatest pianism of the human mind and hand.
So are other great reproducing pianos whose names
come at once to mind. But the Englishman's arti-
cle has interest, nevertheless. Mr. Wheatley went
on to say—in 1913:
"As a result it seems worthy of note that varia-
tions in quality must be produced by differences in
the time the hammer is in contact with the string.
Since the sensitive fingers of a trained pianist will
be able to produce an infinite variety of pressure and
hit from the heaviest arm staccato to the merest
'caress' of a key, it is possible to produce very large
differences of quality as well as large differences in
intensity.
"My own experiences with a playerpiano have
made me well-nigh despair of its capabilities in its
present form. In spite of the instinctive control it
is certainly possible to obtain with it, its mechanical
details seem to me to fall far short of the ideal that
a musician can demand. It is, of course, practically
impossible to produce a differentiation of intensity
between notes of the same chord, and to a musical
ear it is this difference of intensity which enables dif-
ferences in quality to be detected and appreciated.
Professor Bryan seems to have been able to control
this differentiation in quality in a solo passage, and
if he can produce a mechanical arrangement which
can even approximate to the sensitiveness of a pian-
ist's lingers, he will certainly go far to make the
pianoplayer more acceptable to musicians.
What He Failed At.
9
"1 have often endeavored to make a playerpiano
play Chopin's First Ballade, but I have never yet
succeeded in overcoming the uncompromising self-
assertiveness of the mechanism. It seems to me a
curious fact that while a pianoplayer can often play
Beethoven acceptably, it fails hopelessly with
Chopin, specially in works like the ballads and noc-
turnes. I have succeeded in getting presentable per-
formances of the sonatas, and I had almost said of
the scherzos, but the lack of flexibility of the instru-
ment seems to make it impossible in music where
differences in color are so important as in the bal-
lades and nocturnes.
"Altho I have no doubt it will be possible to de-
vise a mechanical arrangement which will improve
the player in the direction I have mentioned, yet it
would seem impossible to make any mechanism suf-
ficiently sensitive to be able to produce effects such
as those which can be produced by the fingers, just
as it may be possible to produce an aeroplane which
is capable of marvelous evolutions, while it never
attains the instinctive facility of a bird."
Probably were the English reviewer to reconsider,
he would today have something quite different to
say about what the playerpiano, in its highest forms
of development, can do. But at the time his article
was written there was truth in what he said. And
by his judgments, contrasted with the attainments
of today, the industry may realize how far it has
come in the seven years which have intervened.
OORAPH
November 13, 1920.
WHY START YOUR TRADE
ALONG RIVAL ROADS?
Advertising That Does More for the Competi-
tors Than It Can Do for the Dealer
in His Home Town.
There is a kind of advertising that defeats itself.
It is the kind that just escapes being a knock and
serves to direct the reader to a look in the very
direction the advertiser desired to have obscured.
Here is a good specimen:
"Why Buy Your Piano in Kansas City? Do you
know that it costs those piano houses $70.00 to sell
every piano that goes out of their stores—saying
nothing of the cost of the instruments; the actual
cost of salesmen, high rents, and advertising of
$70.00 YOU pay. Buy here and 1 will prove to you
that I can save you just $100.00 on a piano or player-
piano. I save you the middleman's profit. I buy
direct from the factory and sell direct to you.
''I spent twenty years in one of those large piano
houses and know the above to be facts. Come in
and see the largest stock of pianos ever carried in
Fort Scott. Select one now for Christmas and we
will give you two years to pay for it."
That advertisement was in the "Sentinel" of Fort
Scott, Kansas. It was publicity work of the enter-
prising Woolsey's Music House—the "House of
Pleasant Dealings." When "whying" why draw at-
tention to the tendency of people to buy in Kansas
City? Usually there is a reason.
And why tell the public what it costs to sell
pianos? Whether the information is accurate or
not; and it is not in the case as stated in the adver-
tisement. Don't knock. Just be good and boost
business in a business way. The people will like it
better and they don't have their baseless suspicions
aroused. Verne Woolsey, of Fort Scott, is too bright
a piano man to make such mistakes.
DUTCH WANT PIANOS.
Joh. Biet, piano dealer of Amsterdam, Holland, is
using half-page advertisements
in Berlin trade papers
to advertise' his need of T '10O pianos for export."
Mr. Biet wants them at once and asks for proposi-
tions and prices.
CORPORATION
WtrBBB-G4V&%Z£ r tTB
To the Retail Trade:
\ T 7 E are now making shipments of completed phonographs from our
* * Brooklyn factories, numbers 2 and 3, and we take this method of
acquainting the trade with /*%A\NG^K o u r t r a c ^ e m a r ^ a n ^ tyP e
style of the name J%w®&&tir ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ both of which will appear
upon all phonographs ^
f a ^| ^ manutactured by us.
W e are extremely proud 1 4$LX^
/ °^ ^ e t o n a l quality and
case design which we have \ » I A /
achieved, and in o r d e r
to thoroughly protect our
^Xvj^^
dealers and ourselves as
well as the public, we have adopted this trade mark and type style
of the ^Rffiagpfop which appears in this advertisement.
PHONOGRAPH
CORPORATlONf
1662-64-66 Broadway, New York
PHILO E. REMINGTON
President
EVERETT H. HOLMES
Sales Manager
JAMES S. HOLMES
Vice-President
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/

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