Presto

Issue: 1927 2123

April 9, 1927.
PRESTO-TIMES
TRADE BRIEFLETS
FROM INDIANAPOLIS
Pianos Are Selling Well and Trade Travelers
Are Dropping in in Increasing
Numbers.
The Christena-Teague Piano Company is pleased
with the activity in the Gulbransen line of instru-
ments at this time. During the months of April, May
and June the progressive Indianapolis house will go
on the bill boards.
Rapp & Lennox are having excellent success with
the Knabe instruments.. During the past week one of
the Louis XV, in mahogany, with the Ampico, was
sold, besides several other grands. Mr. Rapp says
business has finally opened up in better shape than
was anticipated.
On March 25 the annual spring concert of the
Athenaeum male chorus will be given at the Athena-
eum auditorium, at which the Baldwin concert grand
will be used. Mr. Hofer, the manager of the house,
reports some good results from the new Baldwin
folder for the dealers.
Mr. Carlson, of the Everett Piano Company, South
Haven, Mich.; Julius Martin, of the Schaff Brothers
Company, Huntington, Iud., and "Charlie" Grundy,
of the H. C. Bay Company, of Blufrton, Ind., were
trade visitors during the past week.
"THE PIANO MOVER" IN
PROSE AND POETRY
struments and grammophon records of leading
phonetic (sound collections). III.—Section of today's
music and musical education: School music, home
music, schools of music, concerts, opera, dance, etc.
IV.—Manufacture of instruments: Piano, organ, har-
monium, string, wooden and wind instruments, in-
struments of percussion, etc. V.—Mechanical musi-
cal and wireless instruments. VI.—Music publishers:
Professional literature, means of instruction.
ESTEY ORGAN CO. CONTRIBUTES
TO CONTEST FOR COMPOSERS
Prize of One Thousand Dollars Is Offered for the
Best Organ and Orchestra Work.
A $1,000 prize competition for an original com-
position for organ and orchestra has been announced
by the National Association of Organists, which is
seeking to encourage the writing of music.
The Estey Organ Co. of Brattleboro, Vt, has
offered the cash award for the best composition, and
Major Edward Bowes, managing director of the
Capitol Theater in New York City, has promised to
give the successful composition its first hearing by
the Capitol symphony orchestra and the organ.
Any American or Canadian citizen may participate
in the contest. The composition may be an overture,
tone poem or festival number ,and must be in the
hands of the committee of award by Dec. 1, 1927.
EVIDENCES OF PROSPERITY
OF SCHUMANN PIANO CO.
President W. N. Van Matre Sees Much Activity and
Traveler Mclntosh Sends Many Orders.
Humcrcus Story in Verse Tells of the Sad
C. L. Mclntosh, sales manager of the Schumann
Experience of a French Grand in
Piano Co., Rockford, 111., has visited the trade in
the World War.
various sections of the State of Texas this week. Mr.
By the courtesy of Advertising Manager E. L.
Hadley of. The Cable Company, Chicago, Presto-
Times has a copy of the very humorous story of
'"The Piano Movers," in poetry and prose. The
book is a work of art in both the writing and print-
ing. It has already afforded countless laughs in the
piano trade and will continue to add to the amuse-
ment of all who may get it.
"The Piano Movers" is also called "A tale of soft
chords and hard muscles, tender ballads and a tough
sergeant, and a grand piano in a great war—a tune-
ful lay on the old banjo." And that's just what it is
It was written by William Hazlet Upson in a way
to suggest that he must have "been there," and was
probably one of the piano movers when—
"A few odd wires and splinters of wood
And keys were scattered around,
But the place where that music box stood
Was now just a hole in the ground."
There might, furthermore, be a suggestion in the
climax of the story for the solving of the old "trade
in" problem. Mr. Hadley says "most piano men will
get a laugh out of it," and he explains that it originally
appeared in The Saturday Evening Post. It has
been republished by the Universal Press, St. Charles,
111.
. "
GERMANY WILL HAVE
A "SUMMER OF MUSIC"
Exposition of Music and Musical Instruments
to Continue from June 11 to August 28
at Frankfort on the Main.
With the assistance of the Association of German
Composers and Music Teachers, the city of Frank-
fort on the Main will organize, from June 11 till Aug.
28, 1927, an international exhibition in connection
with the centenary of the death of Beethoven, the
large musical festival of the International Associa-
tion of Modern Music which will take place at Frank-
fort on the Main at the end of June. Details relat-
ing to this exhibition say that: "On this occasion
the importance of music in the life of mankind will
be shown for the first time on a large scale and also
the great extent to which it is instrumental in forg-
ing a new and powerful link of culture between
the nations."
The event is announced as an international exhibi-
tion of "music in the life of the people," and the
special features are tabulated as follows:
I.—Music history section: Collection of important
documents on music, instruments, etc., in complete
groups arranged according to periods. II-—Ethno-
graphic section: Complete groups of musical instru-
ments of foreign countries and people, arranged
according to cultural districts. Demonstration of in-
Mclntosh came eastward from a Pacific Coast trip
where, at several points in California, he received,
as he writes President Van Matre, "a good many
satisfactory orders each from one to half a dozen
different models, besides two-car load orders of up-
rights and grands."
The visit of a Presto-Times man to the Schumann
factory this week gave evidence of activity in all
departments and an aptimistic feeling as to the
future, a condition which was emphasized by Presi-
dent W. N. Van Matre, Jr., in conversation with
ir^at energetic and astute younger member of the
American piano manufacturing guild.
MANIPULATION OF PIANO
STOCK CAUSED BIG LOSSES
McCown, Philadelphia Broker, Files Assets and Lia-
bilities, Showing Losses to Concern's Customers.
Readers of the trade papers last January will re-
member the failure of a Philadelphia broker and the
talk which followed because the name of a well
known piano industry was innocently mixed up with
the affair.
Eight hundred unsecured creditors of Frank C.
McCown, bankrupt stock broker, will lose nearly
$2,000,000, according to schedules of assets and lia-
bilities filed in the United States district court in
Philadelphia last week.
Their claims total $3,096,000, while the assets avail-
able to them amount to $1,210,320 and may decrease
in value. Preferred creditors will get $802,320, $169,-
650 less than their claims.
One hundred and thirty-nine women, eighteen
physicians, six clergymen and scores of lawyers and
business men were caught in the crash in January,
their individual claims running as high as $47,000.
McCown failed in an attempt to market stock of the
Estey-Welte Corporation of New York City, the
broker admitting that he had manipulated the price
of the stock from $24 to $28 a share by "wash sales"
on the New York curb market. The Estey-Welte
Corporation was not affected by the failure.
DENVER WANTS CONVENTION.
The Denver Division of the National Association
of Piano Tuners wants the 1928 national convention,
and Francis E. Tate, Denver division president, has
been instructed to go to the annual convention of the
National Association to be held in New York in
August and get it.
W. N. Van MATRE RETURNS.
W. N. Van Matre, president of the board, Schu-
mann Piano Company, Rockford, 111., returned to his
home at Lake Bluff, 111., from his long tour to Cuba,
Honolulu and other distant places. Mr. Van Matre
got back home in time to cast his vote last Tuesday.
Jlardman, Veck %? Co.
make
a Fine Piano
for every pocketbook
All exquisite instruments
offering unique tone beauty
and durability. All made
and g u a r a n t e e d by t h e
makers of the Hardman, the
world's most durable piano.
Your choice of models priced
to consumers from $375 to
$5000. •
55 Yeats of Fine Piano Making
•\V/ • • for catalog and prices
VV I 116 of pianos
Made and guaranteed by
Hardman^ Feck &? Co.
433 Fifth Avenue, New York
Fine Pianos
Makers of the world's most
durable piano—the Hardman
Schumann
PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS
GRANDS and UPRIGHTS
Have no superiors in appearance, tone
power or other essentials of strictly
leaders in the trade.
Warning to Infringers
Tbla Trade Mark is cast
In the plate and also ap-
pears upon the fall board
of all genuine Schumann
Pianos, and all Infringe™
will be prosecuted. Beware
of Imitation* sucb as Schu-
mann & Company, Schu-
mann A Son, and also
Shuman,
as all
stencil
shops, dealers and users of
pianos bearing a uame In
Imitation
of
the
name
Schumann with the inten-
tion of deceiving the public
will be prosecuted to the
fullest extent of th« law.
New catalogue on Request.
Schumann Piano Co.
W. K. VAN MATRE, President
Rockford, 111.
W. P. Haines & Co.
Manufacturers or
BRADBURY. WEBSTER
ana
W. P. HAINES & CO.
Grand, Upright and Reproducing
Pianos
138th Street and Walton Avenue
NEW YORK
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-TIMES
April 9, 1927.
CHRISTMAN
"The First Touch Tells
9 f
The CHRISTMAN
Studio Grand
is the "best seller" in the trade. It
easily outsells its nearest competitor.
Dealers who handle the Christman line
are equipped to do business and never
disappoint either their customers or
themselves.
The CHRISTMAN
Reproducing
Grand
Equipped With the
Is the highest attainment in the ins tru-
ment that reproduces, with absolute
accuracy, the performances of the
World's Master Pianists. It is the
finest creation of Christman artistry,
in which is installed the most famous
of all piano-playing mechanisms.
Write for full particulars and illus-
trated catalogues.
(<
The First Touch Tells > '
Re*.
U. 8. Pat. Off.
Christman Piano Co.
597 East 137th St.
New York
PIANO PROMOTION
WITH MUSIC ROLLS
Foot-Power Player and Reproducing Piano
Both Serve as Piano Teachers in the Great
National Scheme to Intensify Interest
of Public in the Piano.
CREATING PIANO DESIRE
Nothing Helps That Purpose so Effectively as Making
Public Familiar With Music Art of Pianists
Through Reproducing Instruments.
The national movement for the increase of inter-
est in the piano includes the foot-power player-piano
and the reproducing piano in its scheme of endeavor.
And among those vitally interested in the work are
the music teachers. Anybody or anything possible
of contributing to the furtherance of the great
object is welcome among the active forces. To
arouse enthusiasm for piano study the public must
realize the effectiveness of the piano for making
music, and at the same time the ability of the foot-
power player and the reproducing piano for inter-
preting the work of and giving characteristic rendi-
tions of the expert pianists.
A view of the piano promoting situation makes it
clear that the foot-power player and the reproducing
piano are in the same category as the teacher of the
piano. The teachers long ago discarded the idea that
the player pianos, instead of being designed to sup-
plant them, are their most valuable allies. Of course
their service to the composers of music is a fact that
needs no explanation. In a recent newspaper article
an English authority on music said:
Player Piano as Teacher.
"I have no hesitation in saying, from my own ex-
perience, that the average of knowledge of fine music
is higher among the possessors of player pianos than
among the people who follow music as a profession.
I have frequently been surprised to find that a man
who cannot play the piano at all by hand is familiar
with a number of new works about which the aver-
age pianoforte teacher and pianoforte student know
nothing."
Now in this emphasizing of the foot-power player
and the reproducing piano as aids akin to the music
teachers in encouraging the study of piano playing
by hand, two duties of the piano dealer are suggested.
One is the furtherance of the sale of the new 7 rolls
and the other is the giving of proper instruction in
the operation and care of the player to the customer.
The Dealers' Duty.
The bulk of player buyers need some guidance in
the selection of rolls not only at the purchase of the
first supply but after. The average buyer cannot be
expected to have an intimate knowledge of the shades
of value in music and the degrees of merit in the
music composers. In an unmistakable way the music
dealers selling player rolls are music teachers. In the
hands of a vigilant employe of the roll department
the customer with the bare instincts of musical taste
is developed into a person of comprehension. It is
easy to comprehend what a wonderful force in
the reawakening of the piano playing desire is the
music roll; and what an important thing it is for
dealers to keep in constant touch with the player
owner, who never ceases to be a roll prospect.
Rolls Are Factors.
The mere mailing to the player owner the monthly
bulletin of rolls is not enough. Sometimes the names
of the composers are new and unfamiliar and it is
up to the roll department people to enlighten him;
tell him why the new names represent merit. The
ability to know who counts in the music world and
who does not, becomes a matter of pride in the player
owner and is indeed a mark of his discrimination and
the spirit that makes for his permanency in the list
of roll prospects.
The more progressive of the roll manufacturers
realize the value of the instruction feature in their
bulletins and include enlightening reviews in the
monthly booklets. But that should be supplemented
by the dealer's close attention to the roll prospects.
Developed Ability of Owner.
"The concert pianists perform splendid service for
p!ano music and continually have kept up the en-
thusiasm for the piano among certain classes but
they really do not serve the public," said the English
newspaper writer alluded to towards the beginning of
this article. "They mostly seem to go through life
with the conviction that nothing has been written for
the piano since Chopin and Liszt and Schumann.
Sometimes they may pick a few little things by
Rachmaninoff, MacDowell Cyril Scott, Debussy and
one or two other. In fact the habitual playerpiano
user cannot be induced to go to a piano recital for he
knows he will not hear a note of the music he wants
to hear. I believe his knowledge of modern music is
greater than that of some of the pianists."
The Suggestion in Statement.
Of course the writer quoted exaggerates in that re-
spect but he points to phases in the conditions. The
player owner usually is appreciative of good piano
music and any owner may be developed to a similar
condition by the watchful attention of the roll de-
partment.
It is clear that the promoters of the piano playing
revival must rely largely for a stimulation of enthu-
siasm for piano music upon the player and the repro-
ducing- piano. With these instruments the gulf that
has become so wide between the composer and the
public will be happily bridged.
NEW STYLE STORE IN
CLEVELAND MUSIC TRADE
Something After the Manner of the Self-
Service Idea Is Latest in Ohio
City's Piano Row.
The Broadway Music House, 6103 Broadway,
opened for business on Saturday morning, April 4.
M. H. Grantkowski, the owner, says he has four
carloads of pianos in stock. He is an old-time piano
man and also has another store at 6508 Forman
avenue.
Basta's new music store is now open, at 6032
Broadway, and a complete line of everything musical
is being carried, including Jesse French & Sons
pianos, and Sonora and Columbia phonographs. The
new store is fitted up in the most modern manner.
The store at the old location, 5727 Broadway, is to
be kept open until the lease expires.
The Euclid Music Co.'s latest addition to its chain
of stores has been opened on Euclid Heights boule-
vard and Coventry road. It is the only type of store
of its kind in Cleveland and differs in that it has no
outside show windows and no counters to sell over,
as 'the average music store has. Goods are shown
from cases in alcoves in the walls and customers
remain seated while salespeople bring out small goods
and sheet music for their inspection. Pianos, phono-
graphs and radio are in special display rooms.
NEW KANSAS CITY STORE
IN RESIDENTIAL SECTION
Bissell Music Co., Owned by C. V. Bissell, at 3969
Main Street, Serves Local Trade.
The Bissell Music Co., at 3969 Main street, Kansas
City, Mo., is showing a complete line of the pianos,
players, reproducing pianos, phonographs and records
of the Starr Piano Co. The store, which was opened
recently, is a branch of the retail store of the com-
pany established last summer at 1006 Oak street in
connection with the Starr Piano Co.'s wholesale head-
quarters, of which C. V. Bissell is manager.
The new Main street store is in a choice residen-
tial district, with fine display rooms and show win-
dow advantages. It was chosen by Mr. Bissell be-
cause of his keen knowledge of music retailing con-
ditions in that city. Small goods and musical acces-
sories also are carried.
RESULTS FROM BRITISH FAIR.
Piano manufacturers at the British Industries Fair,
held recently in London, report that although visit-
ing dealers did not always buy, their inquiries were
brisk and, moreover, many new accounts were opened.
Inquiries from outside countries were mostly those
of Australian and New Zealand interests, with which
markets it is believed that considerable new business
will follow, according to the Music Trades Review
of London. In general, "well worth while" expresses
the opinion of piano exhibitors, while supply houses
are well satisfied with the inquiries made of them,
some of which have already developed into orders.
BRITISH ASSOCIATIONS ELECT.
At the annual meeting of the Pianoforte Manu-
facturers Association of Great Britain, held at the
Federation offices recently, R. P. Brasted was re-
elected president for the ensuing year. The whole
of the council and officers of the association were
also re-elected. Herbert A. Bain, who has acted as
secretary since the retirement of J. G. G. Noble, on
April 30, 1926, was elected secretary. At the annual
meeting of the Pianoforte Suppliers' Association,
held on March 1, Laurence F. Haggis was re-elected
president for the ensuing year.
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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