Presto

Issue: 1928 2175

April 7, 1928
PRESTO-TIMES
NEWS OF TRADE
GULBRANSEN DEALERS
1NNEWYORKC1TY
, N R E Q I 0 N A L MEETING
Interesting Items from Other Important Points
in the Eastern States Also Included in the
Following Budget—Problems of the
Retail Music Trade Discussed.
TRADE=IN EVIL
A Perpetual Condition in Piano Business Is Blamed
on Dealers Who Disseminate the Silly Idea of
the Piano's Ability to Continue in
Use Forever.
By HEXRY MAC MULLAN.
"The best grades of grands and reproducers are
selling the best of all," said L. Schoenewald, retail
manager of the Chickering New York store, 27 West
57th street—Chickering & Sons, Inc.,—on Wednesday
of this week to Presto-Times' New York corre-
spondent. "We are moving along nicely, and I am
feeling very hopeful," he continued.
"And what would you say, Mr. Schoenewald, is
GROUP OF GULBRANSEN DEALERS AT THE N E W YORK MEETING.
needed most just now to bring about better condi-
tions of piano trade?" he was asked.
At this meeting, probably more than at any of its
The Gulbransen organization held the third of a
A Subject for Public Teaching.
predecessors, the piano merchants gave practical evi-
series
of
dealer-meetings,
at
the
Hotel
Pennsylvania,
"Two things are necessary—not one, but two"—was
dence that concentration on piano selling pays and
his reply. "These two things are not mere hobbies; New York, on Wednesday and Thursday, March 28
that the same amount of effort expended in the piano
they are necessities. The first is to put pianos in and 29. The setting was of a beautiful "salon" of
end of the business earns the dealer a larger net profit
Gulbransen
pianos,
arranged
on
the
top
floor
of
the
the public schools everywhere. Teaching the chil-
than does any other department of the music busi-
dren piano music in schools takes the responsibility giant hotel.
ness. Evidence was also presented that capable piano
The Gulbransen merchants came from New Eng-
off the parents; it gives the children time to play,
salesmen are better paid for the same amount of work
which they do not get when piano lessons are to be land, New York state, Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
than are the salesmen in many other lines of business,
taken at home; the teaching will be modern, by the Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia, more than a
Considerable constructive discussion was had as to
hundred strong.
group instruction plan, you know."
the trade-in problems with which the retail trade finds
Everything Else Taught, Save Piano Lessons.
In most cases they were leaders in the piano trade
itself faced, and many plans were considered for
Mr. Schoenewald said everything else was taught
in their community, part of the vast army of Gul-
changing the public attitude toward old pianos, so
now in the public schools except the piano. Why, bransen dealers who have pledged themselves to work
that instruments traded in will not be held by their
they even have washing machines at work in schools in the interests of the piano business as a whole, to owners at exhorbitant prices.
in their technical departments. Sewing, carpentry, do all in their power to bring up the piano demand
Mr. Gorman's Plea.
cooking—every kind of a trade, but not the piano; and output in this country.
nothing for musical instruments.
Mr. Gorman made a strong plea for the general
For More Salesmen.
adoption by the dealers of the one-price system cover-
The Trade-in Evil.
The points stressed at the meetings were increas- ing all of their piano lines. The Gulbransen line for
The other thing Mr. Schoenwald discussed was the ing the man-power of the piano business through in- many years has been nationally-priced, with the genu-
trade-in piano. It was all wrong to teach the public dividual effort on the part of the merchants; proper
ine selling price stamped on each instrument at the
that the piano is an instrument that will last a life- supervision of the efforts of the men who do store-
factor}^, thus building up confidence and acceptance
time. The piano lasts about ten or fifteen years, if
selling and selling out in the field; concentration on on the part of the public. It is A. G. Gulbransen's
kept properly in tune and well cared for; no piano is piano selling by piano men, and adequate remunera- belief that the standing of the piano business in the
good for a lifetime.
tion to attract and hold good men.
public mind will be helped by general practice of the
What would one think of a man who would keep
one-price plan more than by any other single move.
The
men
discussed
closer
cooperation
with
their
an auto of the model of his father's days and declare
Mr. Kiehn's Address.
that it was just as good as when he bought it twenty competitive piano merchants, who are not their real
Modern advertising practices in the piano business
or twenty-five years ago? Or a piece of furniture or competitors in the bid for a proper share of the
anything else that wears out, Mr. Schoenwald asked. householder's budget. Competition is from without, were gone into fully by Walter Kiehn, advertising
The public must be taught on this most important not within, and piano dealers are beginning to realize manager of the Gulbransen Company. He gave par-
ticularly carefully analyzed facts on the place of win-
matter—the piano gets old, wears out. They must that the piano business will have to present a united
dow display in the field of retail piano selling, and
not keep their pianos until the last string breaks; front if the modern selling tactics of other lines of
covered also all of the other factors of retail advertis-
until the sounding board goes dead; until the action business are to be equalled or surpassed.
The meetings for the two days were in charge of
ing, namely, newspaper advertising, mailing, outdoor
fails to respond as it should.
advertising and use of literature by salesmen. These
Mr. Schoenwald has a large staff of workers, as John S. Gorman, vice-president and sales manager of
subjects were all covered from the standpoint of
becomes the head of so great a retail establishment in the Gulbransen Company, who presented to the deal-
the metropolis, but he says he instructs all of his ers facts unearthed in an extensive survey of piano modern practice and the possibilities of putting the
men to tell the truth about pianos. He said he selling conditions just completed by the Gulbransen retail piano business as a whole on a higher advertis-
would dismiss any man who would assure a customer organization. Plans for remedying the situation as it ing plane.
has been found to exist were fully gone into, with a
that a piano lasts a lifetime.
On each of the two days the assembled dealers
view to quick improvement in place of the attitude of
were ihe guests of the company at luncheon, served
Optimistic Views of C. Alfred Wagner.
C. Alfred Wagner, who recently resigned from the "waiting" for the natural upturn in conditions. This in the Butterfly Room of the Hotel Pennsylvania.
presidency of the American Piano Company, has re- is a state of mind met with in many quarters and in
The New Models.
tained his offices in suite 9A, Chickering Hall Build- many lines of industry and that, if permitted to con-
Of
chief
interest
among the Gulbransen instruments
ing, 27 W T est 57th street, New York, where he was tinue, inevitably results in still further slowing up of exhibited were the new Spanish model Grand and
conditions.
seen by Presto-Times New York correspondent on
the four foot six inch Art Grand—both distinctively
The Sales Angle.
Thursday. "I am going to give up this office in a
handsome and elegant in design. Other new prod-
few days," he said, "but I've been enjoying the rest
From the sales angle, the result of the New York ucts in keeping with the new style trend, in which the
for the time being. I stuck close to work for twelve regional meeting is that another large group of Gul- Gulbransen merchants took a keen interest, were the
years, except for a six months' vacation once in Paris, bransen dealers is committed to the program of add- Triano, the Three-Way Piano, the Art Model Minuets
so I've enjoyed this brief loafing spell. But an active ing largely to the man-power of the retail piano busi- with fancy scroll back, the four foot six inch Repro-
man can not loaf long and enjoy it, so I suppose I'll ness and bringing the day nearer when there will be ducing Grand and the period models. Many new and
be at work again before long. It is commonly be- 100,000 men approaching the public with the story up-to-the-minute advertising devices were also shown
lieved that the piano business gets into the blood
for the first time.
of the piano.
and one cannot quit it." Asked about the piano
outlook generally, he said that the men who would
stick to the piano trade from now on would make explains. He is manufacturer of piano protection
channels of greater activity; so I have all kinds of
more money than ever had been made before. The covers, scarfs, draperies, piano bench cushions, etc.,
faith for its greater future."
trade, he thought probably would not be so great in and distributor for the A. Merriam Company. South
Aeolian Annual Spring Sale.
volume, but it would be a better kind of trade; the Acton, Mass., manufacturers of piano stools, chairs
demand would be for the high-grade reproducing in- and benches. "Just now the call I get most is for
Announcement was made in the New York Sunday
struments, the fine grands, etc. He declared he saw piano covers," said Mr. Bauer. "I have faith in the papers this week of the x\eolian Annual Spring Sale,
nothing discouraging in the piano outlook; far from piano business, a business with which I am very beginning Monday, April 2, at all the five Aeolian
it; the trade had simply taken a new start in an closely associated. I believe that just as soon as the stores in New York and suburbs. "For weeks," the
entirely new way. And it was bound to be a money- nominees for president are known—say about the advertisement says, "our full force of repairmen has
maker for the men who would stick.
first of August—that there will be a remarkable spurt been preparing for this great event. They have care-
Piano Covers Going Well.
in all kinds of musical instruments and musical fully gone over the large stock of instruments that
Frederick J. Bauer, piano accessories, 65-67-69 merchandsie. The world is changing in many of its has come to us in the course of our big winter's busi-
Fourth avenue, has been at that number for twenty- ways, but there is something stable about the piano ness in exchange for Duo-Art pianos and Weber and
(Continued on page 11)
four years. "Right here, and without a vacation," he business which is drawing it back into its former
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).
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P R E S T 0-T I M E S
The American Music Trade Weekly
Published Every Saturday at 417 South Dearborn
Street, Chicago, Illinois.
PRESTO P U B L I S H I N G CO., Publishers.
F R A N K D. A B B O T T - - - - - - - - - -
Editor
(C. A. DAN I ELL—1904-1927.)
J. FERGUS O'RYAN
- - - - - Managing Editor
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 0234.
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
mercial Cable Co.'s Code), " P R E S T O , " Chicago.
Entered as second-class matter Jan. 29, 1896, at the
Tost Office, Chicago, 111., under Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription, $2 a year; 6 months, $1.25; Foreign, $4.
Payable in advance. No extra charge in United States
possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Rates for advertising on
application.
Items of news and other matter are solicited and if of
general interest to the music trade will be paid for at
space rates. Usually piano merchants or salesmen in the
smaller cities are the best occasional correspondents, and
their assistance is invited.
Payment is not accepted for matter printed in the edi-
torial or news columns of Presto-Times.
Where half-tones are made the actual cost of produc-
tion will be charged if of commercial character or other
than strictly news interest.
When electrotypes are sent for publication it is re-
quested that their subjects and senders be carefully indi-
cated.
Forms close at noon on Thursday. Late news matter
should be in not later than 11 o'clock on that day. Ad-
vertising copy should be in hand before Tuesday, 5 p. m.,
to insure preferred position. Full page display copy
should be in hand by Tuesday noon preceding publication
day. Want advertisements for current week, to insure
classification, should be in by Wednesday noon.
Address all communications for the editorial or business
departments to PRESTO PUBLISHING CO., 417 South
Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1928.
The last form of Presto-Times goes to press
at 11 a. m. Thursday. Any news transpiring
after that hour cannot be expected in the cur-
rent issue. Nothing received at the office that
is not strictly news of importance can have
attention after 9 a. m. on Thursday. If they
concern the interests of manufacturers or
dealers such items will appear the week follow-
ing. Copy for advertising designed for the
current issue must reach the office not later
f han Wednesday noon of each week.
SELF=SELLING PIANOS
One phase of piano promotion that should
not be overlooked when the promotional activ-
ities are being estimated, is the self-selling'
ability of certain pianos. "The piano which
sells itself" is something- more than a line ; it
is a truth the correctness of which is proven
in numerous satisfying incidents in the piano
trade.
Xo matter how earnest and active the sales
force may be nor how admirable and alluring
the regular line may be, crises often arise that
baffle the salesmen. THere are exasperating-
occasions when perfectly willing- prospects
continue in an undecided mood that worries
everybody until something" occurs to save the
sale.
In a story in the news pages of Presto-
Times this week, Mr. H. Edgar French, presi-
dent of the Jesse French & Sons Piano Co.,
asks a question of a trade paper man that calls
attention to the self-selling qualities in good
pianos. In the incident suggesting the story, it
really was the photograph of a special grand
of great case allurements that was instru-
mental in saving sales for two dealers admit-
tedly at their wits end to interest prospects
insistent on being shown a piano with a per-
sonal appeal for them. But the picture faith-
fully showed the beauties of line and design
that enamoured the exacting customer.
The personal equation enters into every
piano sale and the dealer's appeal to the moods
of their prospects only in a general way. You
cannot standardize the point of view. The
piano manufacturer keeps in mind the highest
requirements of the artistic piano and strives
to meet the demands of the appreciative cus-
tomer. It is a factor in the promotion of
pianos which has endured from the first. To
make his pianos prized by their owners he
made them tuneful and satisfactory ; to make
them appealing to the eye and the artistic
sense, he made them as beautiful of case as he
could. He may not have voiced it, but he tried
to make every piano "sell itself."
April 7, 1928
pride to note what has been done and is still
being done to improve the artistic character
of the cases here. The Period and art styles
in the presentations of American piano manu-
facturers prove the artistic ability and clever-
ness at adaptation of the designers as well as
the judgment of the manufacturers themselves
to keep in advance of the modern artistic de-
mands.
Standardization has been applied sensibly
in the foremost factories but the beauties of
CONTEST SPIRIT GROWS
the cases have not been endangered by the
The piano playing contests are promised
economical processes. It is certain that—
features in the musical activities in many
largely because of the enterprise of some of
cities throughout the country and are stirring
the great piano industries—the demand for ar-
up the kind of interest that insures activity in
tistic designs has been stimulated. The notion
the industry and trade. Whether or not many
that pianos cost so little has in a measure been
pianos are sold, as an immediate result of the
dissipated. The number of fine case designs,
contests in any community, it is positively
with artistic details, is increasing. And thev
true that eventually the effect must be to
are meeting with the kind of reception that
stimulate the people to buy pianos. The seed
proves that the piano buying public is not all
must be planted before the harvest can be ex-
looking for the cheapest, but often the finest
pected. It may require some waiting, but as
—for pianos that fit the purposes for which
sure as the sun shines the crop will develop.
they should be made. Not necessarily many
And so it is in any special line of business.
case designs by any manufacturer, but more
Until recently pianos have never been pro-
variety in the industry as a whole, and some-
moted in the same sense that some other
thing fine from every ambitious factory.
things have been pushed forward. The real
need of pianos has never been made a part of
One indication that the radio industry is
the public consciousness ; never in an organ-
ized way been presented as an active influ- passing from a transitory to a settled state is
ence in the cultural training of children and the elimination of the amateur radio builder.
the preservation of the home feeling. The Everybody has met him and his presence in
piano has been permitted to make its appeal any house where you may be invited for a
through the urge of family pride, and because listening-in party is productive of continuous
of its place in the social attainments, rather static. He is the chap who wants to run the
than because it is an essential in education parlor show and delights in playing on the
and the mental development of the young. index board like a church chimes operator,
That it is not only a sign of refinement, but a yanking the auditors from a Muscatine, Towa,
necessary part of the educational equipment fiddle solo to capture an ether lost shriek from
has never until now been given great emphasis. Timbnctoo.
* * *
The contests are doing this, and doing it ef-
The element of economy enters into the in-
fectively.
And the playing contest has developed into ducements to dealers and others to attend the
other realms than that of the piano. It has trade conventions at the Commodore Hotel,
taken hold of the other instruments of music. New York, the week of June 4. The special
Bands are now forming into classes and meet- rate of one and one-half times the regular
ing in competition. The annual school band one-way fare has been secured from the Trunk
contest is now an important feature in mu- Line Associations and the various passenger
sical events. Study of the band instruments associations of this country and Canada by the
is becoming almost a regular feature in the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce.
* * *
music life of many cities and towns. Even
the humble harmonica is coming in for its
When the announcers in one hundred and
share of the contest plans for spreading music, fifty-eight broadcasting stations throughout
and prominent men in community life are tak- the day, evening and night announce the vocal-
ing personal interest in the practical side of ists and instrument soloists and add the names
music. Which means the spread of the de- of the accompanists "at the Baldwin," it is
mand and sale of musical instruments of all rather an important continuous advertisement
kinds.
for the fine piano.
* * *
It looks like the day of the music store.
The spring piano deliveries rather than the
And there is no place so indifferent to music
but that the live dealer may help along the spring orders, indicate the increase in sales in
playing contest with direct profit to his bus- the piano business, according to the M. Schulz
Co., Chicago. Urgent requests just now for
iness.
prompt deliveries is at once a sign that the
dealers are being rushed by customers and a
PIANOS, HERE AND ABROAD
confession of unpreparedness on the part of
If standardization is being striven for by
dealers.
French and German piano manufacturers, it
* * *
does not apply to the outward appearance of
Now that Belgium and France have allotted
the instruments, if one may judge by the pic-
tures of the instruments in the music trade special days for celebrating the musical joys
paper exchanges. Variety, even oddity, seems of the accordion, the British are asking why
to be the aim of the French piano manufac- England does not declare a national fete in
turers particularly. Some of the original honor of the English concertina.
* * *
models are admirable, and others are not so
good.
Some pianos had greatness thrust upon
Looking at the novel styles in the French them ; others reached out and took it.
* * *
lines naturally suggests a reference for pur-
poses of comparison to the pictures of the
The piano customer's viewpoint is of the
newer American models. It is a matter of salesman's making.
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).
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