Presto

Issue: 1923 1919

23
PRESTO
May 5, 1923
SHEET MUSIC TRADE
that makes the running of it simple and practically
automatic. The methods for ordering and file listing
rolls and records now largely in use in music stores
IIIIII
iiiiiimiiii
niiiiiii
iiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiini
can be applied to the management of a sheet music
THE COMBINED CIRCULATION stock.
The spread of sheet music departments in regular
OF PRESTO (EST. 1884), AND MUS- music
stores, the enlarged stocks and facilities for
ICALTIMES (EST. 1881), IS BY FAR handling them in long established stores, show win-
dow featuring and printed publicity to a greater
THE LARGEST IN THE FIELD OF extent
than heretofore, and evidences of the new
THE MUSIC TRADE. COMBINA- efforts for
the sheet music goods.
TION RATES OF SPECIAL AT-
The reasons for the new display of energy are
TRACTIVENESS FOR ADVERTIS- obvious. It is the wider knowledge of the way to
easily attainable profits. The discontinuance
ING SPACE IN BOTH PAPERS gather
of the chain stores or some of them of the sheet music
WILL BE MADE TO MUSIC PUB- line has induced many dealers in musical instruments
to enter or reeuter the sheet music business. For
LISHERS.
the same reason drug stores and also stationery and
hardware stores have been induced to establish sheet
This department is designed to advance the sales music counters.
of sheet music, and give any current information in
It is a good sign that the regular music dealers
the Sheet Music Trade.
show a disposition to make the sheet music depart-
This publication believes that Sheet Music will ment a bigger one than heretofore and give it a better
pay the dealer, just as any other commodity pays chance to prove itself a clean and profitable branch
of the music business. It is a significant sign. The
those who merchandise it properly.
The conductor of this department will review return of the regular music store to a proper con-
any numbers that are sent in for the purpose. It is sideration for sheet music goods is a guarantee of
not the intent to criticise, but to review these offer- more ethical methods of distribution that will assure
ings, giving particular information of the theme and an era of prosperity in every phase of the business.
a description of the musical setting of the number
discussed.
Address all communications to Conductor Sheet
Music Dept., Presto, 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, 111.
Theater Owners Who Meet in Chicago Next Month
Will Be Asked to Act.
TO PUBLISHERS
OPPOSE COPYRIGHT MUSIC TAX
NEW DAY IN SHEET MUSIC
Resolutions protesting against the so-called music
Many Significant Signs Point to More Ethical tax, which publishers propose to levy on theaters
which use copyrighted music, were adopted last week
Methods of Selling the Goods.
by the executive committee of the Motion Picture
Various signs denote the greater interest taken in Theater Owners, of Virginia, meeting at the Arling-
sheet music by regular music stores and other trades ton Hotel in Washington, D. C.
Music publishers propose to assess a tax on each
with music goods as a side line. One sign is the
When the
increased prominence given to the sheet music depart- theater, based on the seating capacity.
y
ment in the music stores proper. This sign is a most national convention of theater ow ners meets in Chi-
significant one and means that the department is cago this month, the Virginia association will ask
considered a direct profit maker rather than a mere that steps be taken to oppose the tax.
Members of the committee present yesterday: E.
trade bringer or indirect means of profits.
T. Grail, of Newport News, president; E. D. Hein,
From either point of view the sheet music counter of Roanoke, vice-president; Harry Bernstein, of
would be an advantage. But the shrewd dealers Richmond, secretary and treasurer; Jake Wells, of
today are aware of the large clean profits coming Richmond; I. Weinberg, of Lexington, and John
from a sheet music department properly handled. Pryor, of Danville.
And right there is the thought that suggests the
failure of a great many dealers to give the same
THE SUGGESTED CONTRACT.
attention to sheet music buying and stocking that
The suggested "Bill of Sale and Royalty Contract"
they give to musical instruments. A sheet music
counter will not run itself. There must be a system has been drawn up by the Music Publishers' Royalty
Contract Committee, composed of Isidore Witmark
of M. Witmark & Sons, chairman; Harold Flammer
of Harold Flamnier, Inc., and Walter Fischer of Carl
Fischer. These were prepared after careful study
of similar documents in use by the leading music
publishers, and are intended to combine the best
features found in all of them, and to be correctly
drawn up from a legal point of view, particularly
with reference to the clauses covering renewal of
copyright upon expiration.
7 FOREMOST SELLERS
SHEET MUSIC AT DRAKE
National Association of Sheet Music Dealers
Announce Dates for the Week
in Chicago.
The National Association of Sheet Music Dealers
will also add to the activities and gayeties of con-
vention week in Chicago beginning June 4, according
to the announcement made this week. The dates set
are June 7 and 8 and plans for the business sessions
are now being perfected. The number of music goods
merchants now handling sheet music is greater than
ever before and the fact assures a record attendance
at the meetings of the sheet music association.
Heretofore the meetings of the National Associ-
ation of Sheet Music Dealers has been held at a
different place and time from the other associations
combined in the Music Industries Chamber of Com-
merce, although all the associations have an equal
interest in a great many matters. The dicision of
the sheet music men to be part of the Prosperity
Convention will cause general satisfaction. The con-
vention of the National Association of Sheet Music
Dealers at the Drake Hotel, Chicago, in June will be
the tenth annual event of the kind.
The officers of the association elected at the last
convention to serve one year are: Edward P. Little,
Sherman, Clay & Co., San Francisco, president; E.
Grant Ege, J. W. Jenkins Sons' Music Co., Kansas
City, Mo., vice-president; Thomas J. Donlin, Sam
Fox Publishing Co., New York, secretary and
treasurer.
RADIO AND ITS REWARD
Make Consumers Pay So That Author May Receive
His, Says N. Y. Times.
One reads that the controversy between radio
broadcasters and musical authors over the payment
of royalties on broadcast music will be a fight to the
finish, says the New York Times. The broadcasters
are indignant at the "hold-up by the music trust," and
can"t see why authors want money for their works
when the mere mention of their names is such valu-
able advertising for them. This view has been held
by others in times past, but the authors always won
out in the long run.
Just at present, to be sure, there are "scab" authors
and composers who are willing to let their songs be
broadcast free; but all experience shows that this
price-cutting will make little difference in the long
run. If a man's work is popular, he can get money
for it; and if he can get money, he will.
W T hat mystifies those who are neither song writers,
composers, music publishers nor radio broadcasters
is why the radio people and the artists waste their
time fighting each other when they are both being
JONAH
A WHALE OF
A SONG HIT
ONE STEP
FOX TROT
ELIZA DOYLE SMITH
BABE RUTH
Just Foolin' With You
That Wonderful Sweetie of Mine
You're the One Little Girl for Me
Love of the Ages
Dreaming of Love's Old Dream
When I Dream That Auld Erin Is Free
HERBERT J. GOTT
Music
SHEET MUSIC IN DENVER.
Interest in the third annual Music Week to begin
May 13 in Denver, Colo., has proved a source of
stimulation for the sheet music business according
to the general report of dealers there. The stimula-
tion has also been noticed in the music roll and
record departments. The music memory contest
accounted for the latter. The community singing
feature created an unusual demand for standard
books of songs and modern sheet music of a patriotic
kind.
Publisher
1 7 7 No. State St.
CHICAGO
F. R. Flannigan, Denver, and D. Z. Phillips, Pueblo,
have purchased the interests of Curtis Guttenberger
in the Hext Music Co., Colorado Springs, Colo.
LVERS
- Qest
Music Printers
ANY PUBLISHER x
OUR REFERENCE
^
RAYNERDALflJEIM & Ca
^
. WORK DONE BY
ALL PROCESSES
"2054-2060 W.Lake St, Chicago, 111.
REMICK SONG HITS
Nobody Lied
Sweet Indiana Home
My Buddy
California
Tomorrow Will Be Brighter
Than Today
Carolina in the Morning
Silver Swanee
Childhood Days
When Shall We Meet Again
Lovable Eyes
Out of the Shadows
Your Eyes Have Told Me So
Dixie Highway
Just a Little Blue
Polly
J, H. REMICK & CO.
New York
Chicago
Detroit
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/
PRESTO
24
victimized and exploited by the consumers. Here is
the real hold-up, when broadcasters have to supply
extensive programs free of charge. Why do they do
it? Well, they do it, of course, to popularize radio
and sell more receiving- sets; but sooner or later the
public will be sold up, and then they will have to
stop. It would be more sensible to spend the time
and. ingenuity now devoted to beating the authors
out of their royalties to thinking up methods for mak-
ing the consumer pay for a service which he would
undoubtedly be willing to pay for if there were any
way to keep him from getting it free.
In England an attempt has been made to supply
revenue by making the owners of receiving sets take
out an annual license at small cost. Unfortunately,
dealers seem to be willing to sell sets to anybody,
licensed or not, and the broadcasting companies have
devised no means of preventing a man from listening
this year on last year's license.
$229,319 were exported from the United States. For
the corresponding period ending February 28, 1922,
the ligures were $167,300.
J. E. Mathews, Eureka, Cal., is remodeling his
music store.
COMPOSER WINS $1,000.
P. Marinus Paulsen won the $1,000 prize offered
by Balaban & Katz, Chicago motion picture theater
owners, for the best brief native work in symphonic
form. His Oriental Suite was chosen this week as
the best of a group of five works, which, in turn,
had been culled from ninety by the reading commit-
tee.
The five compositions heard yesterday were
selected by a committee of readers comprising Rich-
ard Hageman, Adolf Weidig and Nathaniel Finston,
conductor of the Chicago Theater Symphony Orches-
tra. The lesson for the American composer which
the contest seems to point may be stated briefly
according to Glenn Dillard Guinn, music critic of
the Herald and Examiner. The first requisite of
Americanism in music is modernism. Music cannot
be characteristic of America if expressed in the idiom
of the last generation.
May 5, 1928
FOR SYSTEM IN
PLAYER SALES
Thomas J. Mercer of Gulbransen-Dickinson
Co. Fublicity Force Makes Selling Player-
pianos His Convention Theme
in Dallas This Week.
One of the must interesting and instructive ad-
dresses given before the Texas Music Merchants'
Association at the convention this week was that
of Thomas J. Mercer, sales manager of the Gulbran-
sen-Dickinson Co.. Chicago. His subject was "Mer-
chandising playerpianos" and in telling of the possi-
bilities he said: "There are 20,000,000 homes in the
United States. The entire piano industry averages
less than 300,01)0 units of production per year—grands,
uprights, playerpianos, reproducing pianos—pianos
of all manner and kind, value and description."
.It was a good text from which Mr. Mercer de-
A Few Items Interesting to People in Sheet Music
veloped his subject.
Department Are Printed.
BAR GERMAN FOLK SONGS.
Other important facts disclosed by Mr. Mercer
An irate reader writes to the Chicago Herald and
were that the "nothing down, little-a-month and
The Scap Song Shop was recently opened at 504
East Houston street, San Antonio, Tex. A full line Examiner commenting on the absence of German ignorant-of-his-playerpiano-subject" kind of dealer is
folk songs in the annual folk song festival in Chicago getting fewer every day and that the type of dealer
of popular songs is carried.
David Jacobs carries a line of sheet music in a last Sunday. The program is made up of the folk who knows his line and sells it according to the funda-
new store recently opened at 1020 Walnut street, songs of Italy, Russia, Lithuania, France, Bohemia, mentals of wise merchandising is becoming more
Alsace-Lorraine and Switzerland.
There is not a general. Continuing Mr. Mercer said in part:
Philadelphia.
It has been my privilege in connection with my
The Madison Music Shoppe is the name of a new German folk song on the list, he points out, and
work with the Gu bransen Company to watch the
sheet music store at 15410 Madison avenue, Lake- asks: "What is the matter with the men and women
responsible for the conduct of this festival and of this development of the better brand of sales work with
wood, O.
great many merchants. One case 1 have in mind
The Taylor Music Shop was recently opened at association; don't they know that the war is over? a I want
to tell you about.
Or are they ignorant of the wealth of folk songs
224 S. Wabash avenue, Chicago.
One thing that interested him early in his investi-
Stanley & Shaw is a new firm carrying sheet music that have made Germany one of the great music- gations was that the player sales didn't produce much
loving nations of the world?"
at 108 E. Fifth street, Sedalia, Mo.
in the form of more business. There has been some
The Kelley Music Co., Inc., Fairmont, W. Va., is
players sold but they didn't seem to stir up enough
public interest to bring more people in to buying play-
DULUTH'S MUSIC FESTIVAL.
increasing the space in its sheet music department.
"Nobles of the Mystic Shrine" is the title of a new
Duluth, Minn., will hold a Spring Music Festival ers. He decided to root out the cause of the inactivity
himself. He sorted out the names of about twenty-
march by John Philip Sousa. It will be played by on May 22, 23 and 24, and the local music merchants
odd people who haJ bought players from the firm
massed bands at the annual convention of the A. A. are taking an active part in the preparations. It is and
he went out aiul called on all of them.
O. N. M. S. in Washington, D. C, in June.
to be Duluth's first civic music festival, and particular
In practical y ever}- instance he found that the
During the eight months ending February 28, 1923, efforts are being made by all those interested to make people did not know what they had. Their knowl-
sheet music and bound music books to the value of it a good precedent for future events of the kind.
edge of player operation consisted of putting a roll
in, setting the tempo, throwing the lever over and
pumping for dear life. There wasn't much music
to reward their efforts. He also found that a good
many of the players were out of regulation and the
NEW YORK
CHICAGO
pianos out of tune. Not much chance there for musi-
433 Fifth Ave.
Republic Bldg.
cal enjoyment.
Manufacturers of the
When he had convinced himself of the reason why
the player business was not taking on speed, he did
two things. He sent out the best tuner and adjust-
ment man in the shop, put those instruments in the
pink of condition. Then he followed up personally
The Official Piano of the Metropolitan Opera Co.
with a few s'mple tuneful rolls and taught some one in
Owning and Operating the Autotone Co. makers of the
Ovning and Operating E.G. Harrington & Co.,Est.1871,makers of the
each family how to get the best possible results out of
tlie player.
The Hardman Autotone
The Harrington Autotone
(Supreme A mong Moderately Priced Instruments)
Starts Organizing.
The
Hensel
Piano
The
Standard
Piano
The Autotone The Playotone The Standard Player-Piano
And meantime he started in on the sales organiza-
tion, taking each salesman through an individual
course of player work, simplifying demonstration and
putting more stress on teaching the customer how
to play and how to understand music rolls. For he
had grasped the idea that the customer was not par-
ticularly interested in what the salesman could do
with the player but what he or she could do with
it That is what the customer buys a player for.
Then things began to happen in that business—just
as they always will happen in any business where a
practical idea takes hold and an organized effort
of NEW YORK
is put forth to make it work.
The twenty-odd player owners that the merchant
AFFILIATED COMPANIES
himself had taught how to use their players became
the nucleus of a growing public interest that soon
began to manifest itself. They took pride in their
player skill, they took delight in showing what they
r
could do and in getting their friends interested. And,
from that time on no customer was ever permitted
to leave the store after signing up for a player with-
out the salesman teaching him how to use that player,
how to get the melody out; second how to use the
feet and hands to bring them out and make the play-
Upright and Grand Pianos
ing sound like music.
Teach them to play, gentlemen, teach them to play
Player Pianos
well. It is the best kind of work you can do. And
see that the players arc kept in first class condition—
Reproducing Pianos
in adjustment and in tune.
That has long been one of the weaknesses of the
Auto De Luxe Player Adions
piano business. Salesmen have dodged the question
SHEET MUSIC TRADE NOTES
HARDMAN, PECK & GO. Cstf
HARDMAN PIANO
AUTOTONE CSJKS3
THE
HARRINGTON PIANO
LERINDUST
anufctcturing for the trade
Standard Player Adions
Art De Luxe Reproducing Actions
Parts and Accessories
Wholesale Chicago Office and Service "Departments
San Francisco Office
462 Vhetan building
KOHLER INDUSTRIES
1222 KIMBALL B U I L D I N G
CHICAGO
WILLIAMS
PIANOS
The policy of the Williams House is and always
hati been to depend upon excellence of product
instead of alluring price. Such a policy doe* not
attract bargain hunters. It does, however, win the
hearty approval and support of a very desirable
and substantial patronage.
M.ker. of Willi.m. Piano.,
E p w o r t h pi.no. - n d Organ.
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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