Presto

Issue: 1928 2172

MUSICAL
TIMES
PRESTO
Established
1881
Established
1884
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADE WEEKLY
0 Cents a Copy
$2 The Year
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1928
SIGNS OF SPRING
IN NEW YORK CITY
Stores Suggest Assurances of Dealers That a
Lively Piano Business of a Seasonable
Character Is at Hand and Factories
Give Other Evidences.
AROUND THE FACTORIES
Cheerlul Anticipations Are. Heard from the Men Who
Make the Piano and Statements Are Supported
by Shipping Room Figures.
By HENRY MAC MULLAN.
As the month of March advances towards the offi-
cial date of spring's opening, the retail piano husiness
gives a more seasonahle representation of what spring
husiness should be. That character is denoted in
the redecorating of warerooms and special a'lure-
ments in show windows of music stores. Any time is
a geod time to show the artistic Period models, but
for two weeks past the tasteful designs seem to be
more in evidence in the piano house displays.
Of course the most convincing evidences of the
spring awakening are given by the piano factories,
where the shipping rooms present the most undoubt-
able signs. The make-up of the shipments express
the fact that the small grand continues to hold favor
with the buyers.
Gordon Campbell on Production.
"My idea of distribution," said Gordon Campbell
of the Rrambach Piano Company, New York, to the
Presto-Times correspondent, "is 350,000 pianos a
year the division would be 200,000 new instruments and
150.000 used ones."
"Do you think there were more than 175,000 pianos
manufactured in this country in 1927?" he was asked
"I do not," replied Mr. Campbell. "Now, in regard
to the propriety of dealers, my observations show
that only one piano dealer can prosper in a town of
10,000 inhabitants; two can do very well in a town of
25,000. Of course, there are generally others who
sell a few violins, accordions and what not, but I have
in mind piano dealers. The retail business here in the
East has been through some tight places during the
winter, but it seems now that the tide has turned
toward better trade."
Mr. Campbell believes the larger concerns in the
piano manufacturing business, as in every other line,
are the fittest for survival and expansion, and cited
in proof the keen rivalry in the automobile business
that is shoving the larger firms farther and farther
into the foreground.
Mr. Campbell's father, Mark P. Campbell, was in
California when the reporter called, but Gordon
Campbell had nothing to say of the results of his
father's activities there or of the general significance
of the chief's trip. After this brief interview, Gordon
Campbell hurried out of the office to catch a Penn-
sylvania train for Phi'adelphia.
American Piano Supply Co. Moves.
A sign on the door of the former headquarters of
the American Piano Supply Company, 110-112 East
13th street, New York, informs the caller that the
company has just moved to the sixth floor of the
I lammacher, Schlemrr.er & Co. building, at 102 East
13th street.
Wanamaker Was Piano Man, Too.
The death of Rodman Wanamaker, aged 65 years,
head of the Wanamaker stores, New York and Phila-
delphia, which occurred at Atlantic City, at 1:30 a. m.
on March 9, removes a man whose stores handled a
great many pianos in the last ten or twenty years.
Kreisler Is Also a Pianist.
Eritz Kreisler's compositions made up the entire
program of the Ampico hour Thursday evening at
Xew York. Kreisley has composed many selections,
and though he is generally known as a violinist his
piano playing has also received favorable note. His
own composition, "Caprice Vienois," was played dur-
ing the hour as played by the reproducing piano.
Several of the Kreisler compositions that had been
transcribed by Rachmaninoff appeared on the pro-
gram .
Getting Tuning-pin Business.
"Of course you know the piano business has not
been as large in the last year as formerly," said O.
Hessmer, of the American Musical Supply Company,
441-447 Communipaw r avenue, Jersey City, N. J., to
the Presto-Times correspondent. 'However, we are
getting our share of the tuning-pin business, and piano
manufacturing is on the upward trend once more."
GREAT PIANISTS
PLAY STEINWAY
Tuttle Fights Loan Sharks.
United States Attorney Charles H. Tuttle, who is
credited with being the most fearless tighter of law-
breakers in the east, and who spoke recently to the
assembled piano dealers of New York City at the
Hotel Breslin, is now hot on the trail of loan sharks
who have counted among their victims some of the
music teachers and piano workers. He said: 'T am
anxious to educate exploited people to their rights,
and I want to give them all the encouragement I can
to come to me with their troubles under the promise
that their names will not become public."
Scarcity of Machinists.
"It is very hard for me to find machinists who can
do our work," said J. Erlandson, proprietor of the
J. Erlandson machine shops at 331 West Broadway,
New York, on Wednesday. "You see," 1 make tools
for all sorts of piano factories, and the work is very
particular, many of the designs being on very special
orders to have the devices made just so. Now, these
orders come often accompanied by hurry-up produc-
tion commands, so that I need a very fine machinist
or two to help me get ready in time, and where
in all New York can I find them?" Mr. Erlandson is
not pessimistic about piano trade conditions, but he
says it can stand a lot of new prosperity.
Air-Mail Is Bottle-Necked.
Rottlc-necking congestion in large cities is one of
the world's greatest drawbacks today. Take delivery
of air mail, for instance! Your correspondent's let-
ters are mailed in the air-mail chutes here on Wednes-
day; they reach Chicago on Thursday morning at 5
o'clock. They reach the Presto-Times office one
block from the main postoffice of Chicago on the
next day; more than 24 hours in traveling from the
Chicago air field to the Presto-Times, although they
flew the thousand miles round trip in a few hours
Of what use is air mail with the alighting field miles
away from the postoffice, and all kinds of congestion
in that short distance?
"We found the same difficulty since father went
away on his present trip," said Ed. G. Tonk, of Wil-
(Continued on page 13)
Two great piano events in Chicago on Friday and
Saturday of last week and on Sunday of this week
were essentially occasions in which the Steinway
piano participated in the triumphs of the artists. They
were the appearance of Vladimir Horowitz with the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra March 9 and 10, and
that of Paderewski on March 11 at the Auditorium,
where the number of those who heard him is to be
measured by the total capacity of the Auditorium,
plus its orchestra pit, plus 350 more on the stage. But
there were so many more that he will play in the
same house again on the afternoon of Saturday,
March 31.
Chicago is familiar with the great Polish pianist;
it was Horowitz who provided the amazing surprise.
As an artist he has well justified the estimates made
by Ernest Urchs of the
a r t i s t s department of
Steinway & Sons, when
he met Mr. Horowitz in
Europe last summer. Ed-
ward Moore, the Chicago
Tribune music critic said:
"Vladimir Horowitz is all
that they have been say-
ing about him, and a con-
siderable bit m o r e , b e -
sides. He is the most ex-
citing person who has sat
in front of a piano key-
board this generation."
In his report of the
concert Herman Devries
March 11
Paderewski, Galli-Curci,
of the Chicago American
Maier and Pattison
said:
"Nobody, I am
Mnreh 9 and 10
Vladimir Horowitz
sure, in this busy town
Steinway, of Coarse!
has ever heard of Vladi-
mir Horowitz until yes-
terday. The name was
m e r e l y a name, even
when the press depart-
ment of Orchestra Hall
gave details of Horowitz'
birth and education, his
achievements and success
abroad. But you may be
sure that every one inter-
ested in music is talking
about him today.
ATLANTA TUNERS' EXHIBIT.
The Atlanta, Ga., division of the National Asso-
ciation of Piano Tuners played an active part from
Wednesday to Saturday of this week at the 1928
convention of. the Georgia State Federation of Music
Clubs when it met in Rome, Ga. The division had a
complete display of piano working models, with a
member present at all times to explain to those inter-
ested the function and working of different parts of
the piano. The exhibit in the municipal auditorium
consisted of charts, diagrams, and working models of
the upright action piano, the grand action piano and
the playerpiano action, and a great deal of interest
was roused in the piano and its care.
COUNT DU BARRY A VISITOR.
Count George May du Barry, head of the Royal
Court of Music, formerly the Du Barry Piano Co ,
Seattle, Wash., visited Chicago this week as a stop-
off on his wide tour of exploitation for his "Tone-
Wavc-Dome," a patented contrivance for enhancing
the tonal qualities of pianos, and his "Music Cap," or
ear tone guard, which selects the vibrations and gives
more tonal elegance to orchestra and other music.
A KRAKAUER DIVIDEND.
A meeting of the board of directors of Krakauer
Bros., piano makers, Cypress avenue, 136th and 137th
streets, New York, was held on February 7, at which
time the regular quarterly dividend was declared, pay-
aide March 15, 1928.
When Horowitz, with the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra, Fills Music Lovers with Amaze-
ment, He Justifies Estimate of His
Art Made by Ernest Urchs.
"Beside the remarkable,
prodigious, beautiful pian-
ism of Horowitz, all the
established, s t a n d a r d
piano celebrities had bet-
ter look to their laurels,
WAB.VSH AVK.AT JACKSON BOl'l
for he sets their stars into
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the dim background. He
is a flame, a poet, a tech-
REDUCED REPRODUC- nician. He is a human
We arrange terr.
that ma he one 30 <
lyon&Healy
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A
LYON
& marniiip nins a hrai'n -jnri
HEAIA NJ3WSPAFER AD. m d U l l l l e P l u s a t ) r a m dlld
a temperament.
The appearance of the two great artists was a
natural incentive to Lyon & Healy to associate the
Steinway piano with the remarkable displays of piano
artistry. As usual, the active Steinway representa-
tives in Chicago made the musical event at the Audi-
torium and Orchestra Hall the basis for very effec-
tive Steinway piano publicity.
ADOLPH SPICKER DIES,
Friends of Adolph Spicker, aged 60, of Cincinnati,
Ohio, last week were shocked to hear of his death,
which occurred at his home on Friday. He was pro-
prietor of a violin store and repair shop in Cincinnati
and numbered among his clients Ysaye, Kreisler and
MacMillen. He received his musical education in
German v.
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
TRADE STIMULATION
IN SO. CALIFORNIA
Happy Ending of the Multitudinous Unethical
Sales and Terriffic Price-Cutting of Recent
Years Effected by the New Condi-
tions in Piano Representation.
ANTICIPATIONS VERIFIED
Estimates as to Piano Agency Alignments Are Re-
called and the Accuracy of the "Prophet"
Acknowledged by the Observant Ones.
low prices as a means of inducing customers to buy
cheap pianos of unknown name and character.
Rumor Denied.
Rumor in Los Angeles that the Wiley B. Allen
Company is negotiating the sale of the lease of its
building is strenuously denied by the company. The
company announces that it will remain an independent
dealer, handling the line of The Cable Company, the
Ludwig and another line not yet decided upon.
PUBLICITY COMMITTEE
FOR JUNE CONVENTION
March 17, 1928
TONKBENCHES!
to match any piano,
in style,
finish,
quality and price.
President Hermann Irion Names Five Efficient
Men to Properly Advertise the Meeting
at Commodore Hotel in June.
President Hermann Irion of the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce has announced the appoint-
ment of the publicity committee for the 1928 conven-
Months ago Presto-Times referred to the possible, tion of the music industries to be held at the Com-
even probable, big changes in piano representation- in modore Hotel, New York City, the week of June 4.
Los Angeles and, incidentally, other points on the
Following are the members of the committee: E. H.
Pacific Coast. It seemed to your correspondent the Vogel, Kohler Industries, chairman; William J.
terrific price-cutting and slaughter sales would bring Dougherty, Music Trades; B. B. Wilson, Music
about a readjustment and realignment in piano Trades Review; Frederic A. Steele, Music Trade
agencies in California.
Warehouse sales, private Indicator; C. D. Franz, Musical Courier-Extra.
house sales, dealers' slaughter sales became rampant
and were taken up to greater or less extent by well
established stores, and the piano buying public got
to believing that high-grade instruments; pianos of
celebrated makers like, for instance, Knabe, Mason
& Hamlin and some others of lesser light were being
handed out like souvenir picture cards at Christmas
time. As inducements to close sales, benches, lamps, Other Results of the Group Movement in
smoking sets, vases and other articles were offered
Piano Teaching Told at Music Super-
to induce elusive buyers to purchase such and such
visors' National Conference.
an instrument.
That
thirty-six
pianos were sold as a direct result of
Move to End It.
class piano lessons in the public schools of Dallas,
In the hope and with the intention of stabilizing Tex., was one of the facts gathered by the piano
business and destroying the kind of competition that section of the Committee on Instrumental Affairs
had gained such a vogue, a plan was suggested as of the Music Supervisors' National Conference. The
far back as last September, when the thing was committee has been active for some time in the
alluded to in Presto-Times. It has since been worked preparation of a manual on the conduct of piano
out to get things back to a normal and a money- classes. The material for the work is being secured
making basis.
from a questionnaire sent to twenty cities by the
At a gathering in Chicago early last autumn the National Bureau for the Advancement of Music.
"tip" went out that something was soon to take
It was further developed that thirty-two of the
place, and not long after that occasion, at a meet- forty elementary schools in Dallas now have the
ing in New York city by banking interests and a piano classes, sixteen teachers and one director being
few piano men, a plan was outlined; a "combina- employed for this work. The department is self-
tion former," so to speak, and arrangements perfected supporting.
for banking connection in Los Angeles resulting in
One prominent piano merchant reports that more
the recent centralization of the agencies of great instruments have been purchased through the influ-
pianos controlled by a great New York piano manu- ence of these classes than from all other sources com-
facturing concern.
bined.
Select Platt Music Co.
The Platt Music Company was selected as dis-
tributing representative for the Los Angeles district,
operations to begin with that house after its location
in the new Platt building, then under construction.
This gives the Platt Music Company control of All the New Season Models Have Artistic Qualities
the important agencies of the Chickering, Knabe,
That Appeal to Discriminating Buyers.
Mason & Hamlin, J. & C. Fischer and the Foster-
Armstrong line of Rochester-made instruments,
William Tonk & Bros., Inc., 452 to 456 Tenth ave-
throughout a large part of Southern California.
nue, New York city, reports an excellent business in
A canvas among several music houses of Los the new Tonk models in uprights, grands, players and
Angeles and among persons informed on music trade reproducing pianos.
matters, elicited various comments: That the Mason
An artistically printed folder, made for the use of
& Hamlin, Knabe and Chicketing would be sold under the retailers, shows the Queen Anne model grand,
one roof and that the principal salesmen who had Florentine grand, Little Beauty expression grand,
been associated in selling these pianos heretofore Miniature grand, Little Beauty reproducing grand,
would become associated with the Platt Music Com- style 20 Louis XVI Period model upright and upright
pany. Also that some of the houses which had rep- model 30.
resented these pianos would tie up in some way with
All these are good sellers and appeal to buyers by
the Platt business in the big new Platt buildirig. reason of their excellent tone and beauties of case.
This was easy to talk about, but not so easy of ac- The Little Beauty reproducing grand is 5 feet 2 inches
complishment. The story was denied by officials "of long and is equipped with the Welte Mignon
the Wiley B. Allen Company and Fitzgerald Music (Licensee) action. It comes in mahogany, walnut or
Company, who informed your correspondent that in special woods. A great favorite with buyers is the
•hey intended to continue business in the even tehor Miniature grand, 4 feet 10 inches long and 4 feet 7
of their way.
inches wide. It comes in mahogany or brown ma-
•The story of the Baldwin piano in the Los Angeles hogany.
territory has been told quite explicitly in Presto-
Times. The Baldwin Company has desired an open-
ing on Broadway for a long time and, reciprocally,
Miami, Okla., now has a new music store in Hoff-
the Southern California Music Company has wanted
the Baldwin for as long a time. Hence the Baldwin man's Music Company, 26 North Main street, which
and Mr. Uhl's Southern California Music House are carries a complete stock of musical merchandise. It
was formally opened last week. The merchandise
settled good and strong.
includes reproducing pianos, grands, players, uprights,
The Results
radios, phonographs, band instruments, sheet music,
The result of these combinations so far effected phonograph records and all accessories. A competent
should be of benefit to the piano trade and should radio specialist will be a part of the store's force and
enable all the stores to obtain better profits as compe- his services will be available to patrons. Holt Hurst,
tition is not so much in evidence. It is pointed out well known there, will have charge of the piano tun-
that strong action should be taken to remedy and ing and piano repairs. He will be subject to outside
control the practice of certain dealers offering old calls. Miss Faye Carr has charge of the sheet music
pianos of certain well-known makes at ridiculously department.
By GILBERT BRETON.
For Uprights
Medium or Higher Priced
PIANO CLASSES SELL
THIRTY=SIX PIANOS
For Grands
In Regular, Tuo'Tone orHiMght
For Periods
Upholstered When Preferred
WILLIAM TONK & BRO., INC.,
FIND FAVOR FOR BIO LINE
NEW OKLAHOMA STORE
Write today for a copy of the latest
TONKBENCH Bulletin' in which styles, to
match practically any standard Upright or
Grand Piano, are illustrated, described and
priced.
Ask also for our special folders on Period
Styles, Upholstered Tonkbenches and Udell
Radio and Music Roll Cabinets.
T(
Mantfgpniig
Comp&ny
1912 Lewis St.
CHICAGO
Pacific Coast Factory
4627 E. 50th St., Los Angeles, California
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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