Presto

Issue: 1927 2134

PRESTO-TIMES
MASON & HAMLIN FOR COLLEGE
June 25, 1927.
TO NAME SPECIAL
PIANO COMMITTEE
Music Supervisors' National Conference Now
Authorized to Appoint a Special Group
Composed of Three Persons to Pro-
mote Piano Class in Schools.
VICTORY FOR C. M. TREMAINE
Director of National Bureau for Advancement of
Music Achieves Purpose for Which He Has
Actively Worked for Years.
C. M. Tremaine, director of the National Bureau
for the Advancement of Music, recently received a
telegram, of the greatest importance to the piano
manufacturer and merchant, announcing that a spe-
cial committee on piano study had been authorized
and would be appointed by the Music Supervisors'
National Conference. The sender of the wire was
Joseph E. Maddy, chairman of the Committee on In-
strumental Affairs of the Conference, and under whose
general leadership the new committee will function.
The Bureau has been working for the establishment
of a piano committee by the music supervisors for
several months, Mr. Tremaine taking the first definite
steps toward that end on his visit to the meeting of
the Department of Superintendence of the Naitional
Education Association at Dallas, Texas, in March.
The Committee on Instrumental Affairs was present
and held a meeting at that time.
Composed of Three.
The special committee on the piano will consist of
WEI.LS COLLEGE, AURORA, WHICH HAS JL'ST ADDED THE MASON & HAMLIN AMP1CO GRAND TO three persons, and their assignment will be to study
ITS MUSIC DEPARTMENT.
INSETS: WINIFRED MAC BRIDE (LEFT). SCOTCH PIANIST, WHOSE HUS-
the question of the piano as a part of school music
BAND MR CHRISTOPHER J. THOMAS (RIGHT), IS DIRECTOR OF MUSIC AT WELLS COLLEGE.
training and to promote piano classes in the schools
Prof. Christopher J. Thomas, director of music at technical comments as are desirable later on. This of the country. Its members will be specialists in
Wells College, selected a Mason & Hamlin Ampico the Ampico achieves through its uncanny interpre- their field, just as the members of the Committee on
grand from the Clark Music Company at Syracuse, tative fidelity to the many excellent pianists who Instrumental Affairs are specialists in band and or-
chestra. When the latter committee was appointed there
N. Y., for the music department of the famous educa- record for it.
"I feel that the many educational uses to which
tional institution of which he is director. Mr. Thomas this instrument can he put makes it indispensable to was no thought of including the piano among the
instruments the study of which it was to develop,
recently expressed keen satisfaction with the Ampico, the music department of any institution."
nor indeed that piano playing was a subject to be
the latest piece of equipment added to his music
Mr. Thomas' wife is Winifred MacBride, the Scotch taught in the schools.
department.
pianist. She has just made for the Ampico a superb
Recognition of Piano Study.
"In the teaching of the appreciation of music," said recording of the '"John Ireland Sonata" for piano.
The very fact therefore that the scope of this com-
Mr. Thomas, "I believe it to be a cardinal principle
Miss MacBride's performance of the sonata at a
that a work to be studied shall first of all be presented London recital was heard by the composer, and she is mittee has been enlarged to include piano playing,
in as perfect a manner as humanly possible, so that
in receipt of an eloquent letter from him in praise of and that a sub-committee of experts is to be appoint-
the initial experience of the student shall be unbiased
her beautiful interpretation. Miss MacBride's record- ed to promote piano study in the schools, is a great
achievement. li marks the formal recognition of
and unencumbered with such facts, opinions and ing will be released in the earlv autumn.
piano s*udy as a legitimate school subject, in itself a
long step forward. However, only the surface has
of the piano, and it is doubtful if anything ever will. been scratched as yet, and the real significance of the
A Denver newspaper printed this a few days ago: appointment of the committee is the opportunity it
"Columbus, O —To finance a concert career, Faye offers to get piano classes introduced in the entire
Ferguson, a pianist of Ironton. has incorporate:! her- school system.
Froves Effectiveness
self under the laws of Ohio. She lacked funds to
In the lew years of its existence the Committee on
Noted Teachers and Artists Have Supervision hnish her musical training, so she became Faye Fer-
guson, Inc , and sold stock to her friends.
Instrumental Affairs has been able to do much for
of Courses for Which Young and Old
"A board of directors will govern and declare divi- the development of lands and orchestras in the
Are Signing Up.
dends on her. She has appeared already in Xew York schools. Not only has its work led to the establish-
and Philadelphia as a soloist with the Cincinnati sym- ment of many new instrumental ensembles and im-
By J. B. DILLOX.
phony orchestra and although only .10. has given 300 provement of others already in existence, but it has
The Rocky Mountain News of Denver, Colorado, concerts.""
liberalized the attitude of many school superintend-
offers an absolutely free course of lessons on the pi-
A Possibility
ents previously apathetic or opposed. If the special
ano and has organized a club called the "Melody
While congratulat'ng the youn^ lady upon her re- committee on the piano can do as much for this in-
Way Club." One need not subscribe, solicit subscrip-
strument—and there is every reason to believe this
tions nor anything else in the line of canvassing to sourcefulness and artistic ability, it may occur to a will be the case—there will be a large increase in
possible
investor
in
the
s'ock
of
Faye
Ferguson,
Inc.,
quality for the club, but merely clip a coupon from the
school piano classes in all parts of the country and a
News, sign your name, address, state whether you that some young man might purchase the controlling favorable attitude toward them everywhere.
stock
and
then
propose
matrimony.
Could
he
fore-
ever took piano lessons, give your age, and if a school
close and claim the "company"?
Mr. Tremaine, who is secretry of the Committee en
child state the grade you are in.
Several investment bankers of Denver are offering Instrumental Affairs, will also undoubtedly be secre-
There are classes for children and the grown-ups,
and you need not buy a piano to get the lessons. The part of a seven million dollar issue of common stock tarv of the new committee.
of the American Piano Company.
course is supervised by John C. Kendel, head of
John C. Wilcox, music editor of the Denver Morn-
music education in Denver's public schools, the ing Post, was elected to membership in the American
EXPENSES OF A FRENCH OFFICE.
classes to meet in the Denver College of Music, the Academy of Teachers and Singers.
A foreign company which maintains a permanent
Denver Conservatory of Music, the Lamont School
purchasing ofhee in France is regarded as doing bus-
of Music, and the Blanche Dingley-Matthews School
WHILE LINDY FLEW OVERHEAD.
iness there and is required to register not only in the
of Piano Work. Coupled with its announcement, the
E. A. Kieselhorst, of the Kieselhorst Piano Com- Commercial Register, kept in the clerk's office of the
Xews mentions the name of a Denver traffic officer
pany, 1007 Olive street, St. Louis, in finishing a letter Tribunal de Commerce, but also with the Bureau de
who learned to play in ten weeks.
to a friend in the Chicago trade recently, added I'Enregistremeii't, for the purpose of paying a divi-
The Reasons
dend tax of 18 per cent. The company must name a
Why such a generous offer? What is back of it? this postscript: "3:15 p. m., 'Lindy' just flew over responsible agent, usually a bank, which is acceptable
our
store
and
the
'loop'
of
our
city,
and
the
town
is
The News and the Post, competitive newspapers,
wild. We will see him at the ball game tomorrow to the Enregistrement and which undertakes to pay
have been giving the Denverites "all kinds of good
and at the theater in the evening, after which a taxes due in case the foreign company defaults.
things" and each is trying to outdo the other, hence
banquet
at the Hotel Chase." The next day, Sunday.
it is that when the Scripps-Howard newspaper hit
Mr. and Mrs. Kieselhorst left for the East to visit
upon the free course in piano teaching, it selected
NEW INCORPORATIONS.
their sons at Yale University, New Haven, and to
what newspaper men call a "scoop" and lends great
get
ready
for
their
trip
to
Europe,
for
which
they
The Peerless Musical Instrument Co., Inc., of Pas-
weight to the high plane upon which they look upon
saic, N. J., $75,000; to manufacture musical instru-
the value of any person being able to play the piano. sailed today (June 25).
ments.
The moral for all piano men to get from this item is:
The Wood Brothers Music Co.. El Dorado, Ark.,
A promising array of musical talent has been as-
It is an achievement that stands out as praiseworthy,
sembled in the reorganization of the Amboy, Ind., $10,000, Horace A. Wood, E. Newlin and J. A. Carr.
to be able to play the piano and lends zest to the fact
The Jordan-Holmes Piano Co.. Greenwood, Miss.,
that regardless of what great changes have come over band., which has engaged Prof. Elliott of Marion as
$10,000; D. B. Holmes and E. E. Wilkins.
us in the few years past, nothing has taken the place instructor.
DENVER NEWSPAPER
HAS MELODY WAY CLUB
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/
June 25, 1927.
PRESTO-TIMES
methods and aggressive push, were not particularly
welcome, but yet our first year's sales exceeded $50,-
000.
"Myself and my partner, Wm. Ludden, were the
entire working force and we had neither agents nor
salesmen. From that we pushed and expanded until
we had 50 employes under our roof, 10 branch houses Review of the Situation at This Time Shows
James A. Bates, the Middletown, N. Y., Music and an army of agents and travelers, sales of a half
Vast Increase in Public Interest
million dollars annually, and were the undisputed
Dealer, in Interesting Interview, Credits
in the Event.
leaders of Southern music trade.
the Organ with Important Influences
"With the old organ as the earliest means to the
By Frank J. Bayley.
desirable end I helped build the Ludden & Bates
in Advancing Cause of Music.
To the many inquiries as to the outcome of the
Southern Music House on the solid foundation of
Second Annual Greater Detroit Piano Playing Con-
square and absolutely honest dealing. I gave the best
26 years of my life to this end and while this fine test, we wish to reply that all parties interested stamp
business has passed out of my hands and others have it as a complete and unqualified success. Mr. Bitner,
reaped the harvest of my sowing, yet it is a great managing editor of the Detroit Times, after consulta-
Veteran of Trade Is Gratified at His Part in Build- satisfaction to me that my name is still on the sign tion with the various departments of the paper, states
ing Up Great Southern Music Business
and that the prestige I gained for the old house still that the Detroit Times is desirous of making the
piano playing contest an annual event of the paper.
Which Was Begun with Organs.
holds good.
Arthur Dondeneau, assistant superintendent of De-
How
He
Views
It.
A man's knowledge is the sum of his experience
troit schools, the active head in fact, this week assured
"Perhaps I see with the eye of youth when I re- the writer that the full co-operation of the whole
and his ability to voice his knowledge is in equal
ratio to the keenness of his observation at every call my old organ days. Strenuosity and joy were school system can be depended upon for an annual
period of his life. There are veterans in the music synonyms in those days. There was always the Detroit piano playing contest.
business who are "dumb" when called upon to re- human and personal consideration in the organ trans-
The matter of group instruction was taken up. He
action. We dealt with real folks whose ambition to
own an organ was evoked by their instinctive love stated that they would expand the piano teaching as
of music. We didn't voice it at the time, but we all fast as funds will allow. It was suggested that we
felt we were aiding art and thereby increasing the add a new class to the 1928 contest for those taking
culture and bringing the happiness of greater refine- the group instruction in school, to which he replied
that he thought this was quite unnecessary and in-
ment into people's lives.
advisable. "I have talked the contest all over with
"My transition from an organ man into a piano
our music supervisors and music teachers We are
man was gradual, but I clearly recall when I ordered for the piano and know that the piano playing contest
six Emerson pianos and sold them all before they
is exciting an interest in the piano among all the
were landed from the steamer, which sure was good
work for a greenhorn. In 1870 we bought musical children," said Mr, Dondeneau. "Personally, I should
merchandise from C. Bruno & Son, and I am still consider it a calamity for the piano to die out. I hope
the music dealers sell a lot of pianos as a result. You
buying from them.
deserve to be repaid. However, we are merely and
Ups and Downs.
solely interested in the merit of the educational value
"In those 59 years of strenuous business I've had to the child, and since we are thoroughly sold on this,
ups and downs good and plenty. I've weathered yel- we appreciate your co-operation with us."
low fever epidemics, earthquakes, cyclones, fifteen
Champions Multiply.
years of nervous breakdown, and been knocked out
Last year there were a total of 286 school cham-
three times with financial disasters, but I came back pions but the 1927 contest has produced 420, divided
and while I have not achieved prosperity as common- as follows: Elementary schools, 222; intermediate,
ly understood, yet I have the satisfaction of feeling
176; high schools, 22; which comprises all public and
that I have made a good fight and won that respect
parochial schools, not only in Greater Detroit but
and esteem which to me is far better than riches.
several outlying towns up to 18 miles out. The total
.TAMES A. BATES.
"Now, Mr. Presto-Times, you will begin to think enrollment being 16,000 children.
you have encountered a case of inflammatory self-
The Grand Finals.
late startling incidents in their business careers and satisfaction. But I have something to be grateful
to draw the moral which makes every experience in for. To have shuffled along for 85 years without ever
The grand finals will take place in the Belle Isle
life a guide or a deterrent thereafter.
paying any alimony, and to be still on deck and in bowl on the evening of August 15, and the little girl
On the other hand, there are men who have lived the piano ring, is a satisfaction which comes to but adjudged champion will thereby become the queen of
a Detroit city music carnival of two evenings, August
long- lives in the music business who actually few.
"My 85 years' trail has not been altogether an easy 16 and 17, on the four blocks of Washington boule-
radiate wisdom. There is a lesson in every one of
vard, and her court will comprise the 421 school
their experiences to those who can sense it. But jaunt. I've had my full share of trials, griefs, and
champions. The Detroit Times and the Detroit Music
to every listener there is the element of interest in hard knocks, but there have been compensations and
their conversation that makes it important. Such even though my sun is setting, what matters to one Trades Association feel that since the mayor, the
a man is James A. Bates, the Middletown, N. Y., who ever has bright remembrances of the past, lov- common council, the Detroit Retail Merchants Asso-
music dealer the veteran who was so signally hon- ing friends to cheer and a heart still young and re- ciation, the Convention Bureau, the Musicians' Union,
sponsive to youthful emotions. I hope to carry on the Federation of Women's Clubs, the Detroit Radio
ored at the recent national convention.
even to the very end, and when my call comes to Dealers Association, the Board of Commerce and the
Name Still There.
join the other music trade pioneers gone before. I noonday lunch clubs, such as Rotary, Kiwanis, Op-
''It is always a satisfaction to see my name still hope it will find me right on my job.''
timists, Lions, etc., have endorsed this movement and
on the sign of the Ludden & Bates Music House,
the music carnival as a fitting climax, as a publicity
Mr.
Bates
returned
home
to
Middleton
from
the
Savannah, Ga., because it recalls individual efforts
stunt it is an assured success.
convention
Saturday,
June
11.
En
route
he
was
that had an influence in advancing the cause of music
handed a letter from W. B. Price, president of the
in a day when the means to advance it were not as
Schaeffer Piano Manufacturing Company of Chicago,
numerous as they are today," said Mr. Bates to a
saying: "Your response was splendid," and con-
Presto-Times man this week.
gratulating him on the honors he had received.
"Fine pianos, players, reproducing instruments are
powerful at this time in furthering the cause of music,
TALKS ABOUT SLOGAN.
but I have the keenest joy in recalling the part
played in a similar way by the old organ, which is
H. H. Fleer, the president of Lyon & Healy, Inc., Interesting Items from Southern California City
honored as a pioneer in the music goods activities. Chicago, in some of his introductory remarks as toast-
Suggest Activities in Music Houses.
In the thought of helping to place thousands of organs master at the surprise dinner given in connection
in Southern homes I experience an emotion which
The Starr Piano Co., at 630 South Hill street, Los
with the Children's Piano Playing Tournament Com-
only the older men of the music trade can experi- mittee and backers, presented arguments drawn from Angeles, is conducting an extensive sale of phono-
ence. It was, in itself, somewhat creditable while sayings and writings of well known authors to graphs and records from the purchase of the stock of
profitable, but that which gives me far greater satis- strengthen the slogan he suggested, "Sell Music." the Davidson Talking Machine Co., Chicago.
faction is that we were also able to accomplish some- He quoted not only Franz Liszt and other profes-
Los Angeles has the distinction of having the only
thing worth while for the advancement of musical
sional musicians, but read an undeniable argument piano soloist who plays the piano lying on his back.
r
culture, and thus to do our little bit tow ards making from Darwin. On the same occasion Eugene Whalen His name is Arthur Franklin Fuller.
America musical.
read interesting rhymes of reason for the good of the
Ben Platt returned this week after a tour of the
cause of "Selling Music." David Kimball's brief talk
Green but Courageous.
East and immediately his appearance in Los An-
"When in 1869 I established the old Ludden & on fidelity to the best ideals in business were apropos. geles is reflected by new activity in his various enter-
prises.
Bates Southern Music House at Savannah, I was
green as grass in the music business, and as brash
VISITS GEORGE M. SLAWSON
Since favorable termination of the contest of the
as they make 'em, and as I look back at the countless
George J. Dowling, president of The Cable Com-
Fitzgerald Music Co., in which a Knabe grand was
fool mistakes I made not only then but all the way
pany, paid a visit a few days ago to George M. Slaw- first prize, the company has experienced an increased
through, I wonder at the success attained.
son, dean of Cable travelers, at his home in Bangor, trade in both the Knabe grand and the Ampico.
"It is rather interesting to recall that our start was Mich. Mr. Slawson had been sick but is now able
A Ludwig grand has been selected by the owners
to be up and about. Mr. Dowling and The Cable of the steamer Honolulu for her trial trip from Los
made by securing the agency of the Burdett organs
from the Tremaine Brothers, Wm. B., Charles M., Co.'s force of officers and employes are pleasantly Angeles to Honolulu. The piano was selected in
and John, who traveled through the South concert- surprised at the rapidity with which Mr. Slawson is competition with several prominent makes, and the
recovering from his illness.
ing and establishing agencies, and I have often won-
fact that the piano graces the salon of the steamer is
dered if, in their subsequent great successes they ever
a great source of satisfaction to Los Angeles repre-
recalled me and the concerts they gave in Savannah.
AT THE AMPICO STUDIOS.
sentative, the Wiley B. Allen Co.
Old Organ Days.
The following artists called at the Ampico studios.
The Birkel Music Co., Los Angeles, is featuring the
"Those were great organ selling days and in one New York, during the past week and recorded: Tina Conn saxophone and are attracting considerable at-
year we sold over 3,000 Mason & Hamlin, Packards
Lerner and Lee Sims. Also the following artists tention to the fact that Oscar Tatton, the eminent
and Sterlings. It was the Reconstruction period
called to approve their recordings: Hans Barth, soloist, is featuring the Conn in Dave Gould's
too when Yankees, with their newfangled business
Edgar Fairchild and Ralph Rainger.
Revelierrs at the West Coast theaters.
PROUDLY RECALLS
OLD ORGAN DAYS
SUCCESS ASSURED FOR
DETROIT PIANO CONTEST
TELLS HISTORIC INCIDENTS
SOME NEWS NOTES FROM
THE LOS ANGELES FIELD
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/

Download Page 4: PDF File | Image

Download Page 5 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.