Presto

Issue: 1931 2262

4
PRESTO-TIMES
October, 1031
ment of Music at New York from Arthur J. Mason
of the Federation of British Music Industries, its
author. Mr. Mason writes: "Seven London girls
who have been studying the first steps in piano-play-
ing as members of a class—it consisted of these seven
grand radio. Signs indicated the growth of our com-
girls only—and who have had no individual teaching,
List of Officers for the Ensuing Year
munity in the fifty years. The little baby grand
have recently passed the preliminary examination in
bore the sign 'Fifty Years Ago,' the little one T o - piano playing of the Associated Board of the Royal
The following are the officers elected for the com-
day.' The big radio was equipped with a powerful
College of Music and the Royal Academy of Music.
ing year of the Music Merchants' Association of
public address outlet which gave forth entertainment
They were, of course, examined individually, like
Ohio elected at the annual convention held in Cleve- and information as it went along.
all the other candidates for the Associated Board's
land, Sept. 16:
"The two piano floats represented the development
diplomas. But their class-teaching, and their study
President—Carl E. Summers, Summer & Son, Jack- of music in fifty years. The first was a two-horse
in class, sent them into the examination room as
son and Portsmouth, Ohio.
drawn old-fashioned vehicle, on which was an old well able to pass the tests set them there as any indi-
Vice-President—Frank Kimmel, manager of Ani- cabinet organ. This was played by the young lady
vidually taught student. This is by way of being a
manager of our sheet music department, arranged in
triumph for class-teaching of the piano."
pico Hall, Cleveland, Ohio.
Air. Mason goes on to say that while the class
Secretary—Clark F. Cross, Eastern representative the garb of fifty years ago. To get just the type
of horses required some research work. 1 wanted for
piano idea is new in his own country it has already
Culbransen Co. of Chicago. Springfield, Ohio.
contrast the Napoleon type of steeds, those that dis-
Treasurer—Marie C. Addelman, Kratz Piano Co., played their bony part. Your humble servant in ap- been widely taken up in the United States and Can-
ada, and he bespeaks for it the careful and open-
Akron, Ohio.
propriate garb and make-up, drove this pair. A par- minded investigation of the English educators. Point-
One of the principal speeches of the convention
ody on the popular song, 'The Kings' Horses' will
ing out that times are changing in many fundamental
was that of Edwin R. Weeks, president of the Na- give you a picture of the equipage. 'The old horses
respects and that traditional ways are yielding to
tional Association of Music Merchants, delivered at —the wagin, we drove up the hill and we drove down
others more in line with modern requirements, he in-
the banquet tendered to the association Wednesday agin (who?) the old horses and the wagin.'
timates that the music teaching profession is facing
evening, Sept. 16, at Hollenden Hotel, the main part
"They were bony, and they were thin, but a darn a danger if it does not keep in touch with progressive
of which speech is herewith given:
fine pair for the shape they're in. (Who?) The- old
movements affecting it.
bosses and the wagin.
President Weeks' Speech
" 'They're not out to fight the foe; you might think so,
"I am honored, indeed, to be called to the beautiful
But, oh, dear no, they're simply out that you may BAILEE WILLIAM THOMSON OF GLASGOW
city of Cleveland, the metropolis of the old Buckeye
know
AGAIN VISITS AMERICA
State, that has not only given many presidents to the
The style in music fifty years ago,
An important personage who was recently a guest
United States, but has given a president to the Na- And the horses and the organ
in the United States and while in Chicago paid a
tional Association of Music Merchants in the person
They drove up the hill and they drove down agin
visit to the offices of Presto-Times, was William
of my predecessor, Otto B. Heaton, of your capital
(who?)
Thomson, J. P., to whom the title "bailee" has been
city, who in h's term of office proved himself to be The old horses, and the wagin.'
applied for some years past. The editors of Presto-
such a capital administrator.
"This outfit was labeled 'Music in Binghamton
Times have enjoyed an acquaintance with Mr. Thom-
fifty years ago when George F. came to town.' Fol- son for well nigh two-score years, in fact away back
"It was he who originated the slogan that spread
lowing
this
and
quite
in
contrast
was
a
really
beau-
over the nation: 'Teach a boy to blow a horn and he
to the days when he was Great Britain's leading repre
tiful float with a period model grand piano in a proper
won't blow a safe.' 1 cannot hope to cope with men
sentative for American organs. That was in the days
from the Buckeye State as a former experience has setting with our most attractive girl members of our when the reed organ was a great deal more popular
taught me, hut even so, I have made bold to supple- force in the picture. This was labeled 'Music in Bing- and when Chicago produced more of these instru-
ment Mr. Heaton's terse slogan with Teach a boy hamton Today—Fifty Years After George F. came ments than any other city in the world. But of Bailee
to Town.'
to play a saxophone and it may keep him from some
Thomson's record as a seller of musical instruments
"These two factors, as I have said, have doubtless the trade in America as well as abroad is familiar.
other' crime.'
helped
our
business
but
for
which
we
can
claim
no
"The experience with a man from the Buckeye
Mr. Thomson's present visit here in America has
State just referred to was, when I as president of the credit, but the third factor we have had a part in and
1 think any dealer can follow it with ultimate results. been with a different motive, however. In the various
Rotary Club, essayed to introduce the well known
We have been pounding away on the slogan 'The cities that he visited much of his time has been spent
humorist and philosopher, Dusty Miller. I said m
substance, 'W r e have for our speaker today a Miller. piano is coming back.' I think you, as well as our- on the speaker's stand, speaking before various
Scotch clans, clubs and societies on the subject of
selves, have constantly been sympathized with from
A miller is a man who takes the grain of the field
self-government for Scotland. Mr. Thomson has won
the fact, as our informants put it, that the piano was
and taking out the chaff grinds it into that substance
very soon to be a thing of the past. It finally got a reputation as an orator, for he possesses the ability
from which our staff of life is made. But the Miller
at my side, who is about to address you, is one our goat, so to speak, and so we started this cam- to present the feelings of the people of Scotland, their
problems and the solutions in a clear and concise
paign against this sentiment and general belief.
who has gone through life, collecting grains of
manner.
"And so it was we started on the campaign. We
thought but who has so winnowed out all the chaff
flaunted
the
slogan
from
the
house
tops,
in
the
news-
Bailee Thomson's last talk in the United States was
and all the dross that what he brings us to day is
just the essence of wisdom and philosophy.' And, to papers, in our show windows, in our radio broadcasts. at Bridgeport, Conn., on Sept. 28, on which occasion
I wrote news stories for our daily papers similar to the Bridgeport Telegram of Sept. 29 gave nearly a
which Mr. Miller responded as follows: 'This is a
most unique introduction on the part of your presi- an article that 1 recently wrote for the Music Trade column report of the meeting, dwelling especially on
Review, and gradually our pessimistic friends began
his speech, which it named "Battle Cry for Free
dent; in it he has sought to make me a miller by
Scotland Sounded in Fiery Address."
occupation as well as name, and in the former ca- joining the chorus and began saying, T see the piano
pacity and in the winnowing process to which he has is coming back.'
"This was the battle cry of William Thomson."
"So let us all swell the chorus. The situation war- says the Telegram, "in a fiery message last night
referred, let me say that I have never been so ably
rants
it.
The
buggy
has
gone,
the
cottage
organ
has
aided and abetted as today by this old wind mill.'
to a large audience assembled at the Moose Temple
gone, miniature golf has gone. The piano through
to hear the former justice of the peace in Glasgow
"1 cannot give or bring to you men, many of you
the years has faltered, but never failed. Let us fan urge the freedom of the Highlands. The lecture,
who have large businesses and longer experience, and keep fanning these embers into flame that this
sponsored by the National party of Scotland, was
much that you do not already know, but I can sound
greatest of all instruments may continue as a means
delivered under the auspices of Clan Campbell No.
a note of optimism born of our own experience in
of harmony in the home."
24, O. S. C."
the last three months that 1 hope will be music in
Retiring President Anthony Maresh, of Cleveland,
From Bridgeport Mr. Thomson went to Montreal
your ears.
presided at this banquet and Dan Nolan, of the Na- for a talk and sailed from that city Oct. 2 for Glas-
"That note is sounded when I tell you that during
tional Association of Music Merchants, was toast- gow.
the last three months, June, July and August, our
master.
piano business has increased over the corresponding
In addition to President Edwin R. Weeks of the
months of 1929 and 1930 about 70 per cent. We
National Association, who was guest of honor and
HIS HONOR, MAYOR MARSH
attribute this to three causes. First, the swinging
principal speaker, the other speakers included the
back of the pendulum, the natural return of the piano incoming president, Carl E. Summers, Past President
Mr. B. O. Marsh, proprietor of the Marsh Music
after a period of counter form of entertainment. Otto B. Heaton, retiring-Serretary Rex Hyre, and House, Decorah, Iowa, has the distinctive honor of
There have been many of these counter forms of
Delbert L. Loomis, executive secretary of the Na- being the present mayor of the beautiful, enterprising
entertainment through the years. Roller skating, tional Association of Music Merchants. President
and prosperous city of Decorah, Iowa, and this year
bicycling, the automobile, the phonograph, and last
his honor is entering upon the fortieth year of his
Maresh made an interesting farewell address.
of all, the radio has caused temporary abatement, but
The 1932 convention will be held at Portsmouth, business, which began Sept. 1, 1892. Mr. Marsh is
in time there was a return of piano interest.
a public-spirited business man. His letterheads are
Ohio, in September next year.
"Another reason for our better business is the re-
On Wednesday afternoon, the day of the banquet, decorated with Decorah buildings and views in and
turn to almost normalcy of our chief industry, of
an address, which in substance was about the same around that city.
our Endicott-Johnson shoe factory enterprise. Three as the speech in the evening, President Weeks gave
weeks ago our community tendered a fifty-year golden a talk over Station WHK, Cleveland, through the
HUDSON'S FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY
jubilee celebration to honor Mr. George F. Johnson,
Columbia Broadcasting system. Arrangements for
who came to our community fifty years ago. It took
the broadcasts were made by Frank Kimmel, man-
Hudson's, of Detroit, in all their advertising matter
on the nature of a Mardi Gras with a monster parade ager of Ampico Hall, Cleveland, and Ray Schirring, place the caption, "Hudson's Fiftieth Anniversary."
of marching men, women and children, and most of
of the Cleveland store of Lyon & Healy, Inc.
A recent notice under this heading gives prominence
our businesses represented by floats. Our firm had
* * * *
to the Brambach piano, which instrument they have
three floats, one representing the radio part of the
Piano class instruction in Great Britain seems to featured for a long time, having sold, as their adver-
business and the other two the piano. We had a be in a flourishing condition as indicated by a letter
tisement states, more than three thousand Brambach
monster radio built which was a replica of a baby
received by the National Bureau for the Advance- pianos in Detroit.
THE OHIO STATE CONVENTION
Your lamily deserves
the cultural and social advantages ol a otemway
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/
October, 1931
P R E S T O - T I M E S
SUGGESTS MORE CARE IN ADDRESS-
ING MAIL MATTER
Word conies to Presto-Times office that mail mat-
ter addressed to the house of Steinway in London,
especially periodicals and circulars, is late in reaching
proper destination on account of incomplete marking
directions. Steinway & Sons, London, advise corre-
spondents that their London address is 1 and 2 George
street, corner Conduit street, London, W. 1. As the
London office observes: "There are just exactly
twenty-one George streets in this large village, so that
'corner of Conduit street' and 'London, W. I.,' are
absolutely essential in any address if the sender
wishes his mail matter to reach Steinway & Sons
without delav."
TELLS OF ADVANTAGES OF PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Presto-Times gave an extract in its September is. 1 -uc
from an article written by Professor William A.
Bentley, director of the Knox Conservatory of Music,
Galesburg, 111. We now make another quotation from
a recent article written by Mr. Bentley in which he
says:
"The education of our children deserves much
thought and consideration on the part of those in
charge. A child's own inclination should help some-
what in the course of study pursued, but the subtle
influence of music not only in children but in the case
of adults as well is so far-reaching that we do not
stop to consider what the study of music in childhood
might do in the whole life of an individual.
"We often hear older people regretting that they
could not have studied music in their youth, or re-
gretting that their parents did not insist that music
be a part of their child life, and make them practice.
In such cases the life has been deprived of the very
thing for which their nature craved, and the one out-
let for self-expression has been taken away from
them, their life made mechanical and uninteresting."
Professor Bentley is now enthusiastic in the matter
of piano class instruction in the public schools. He
was slow to endorse this method of piano instruction,
largely because of a misconception concerning class
instruction as promulgated through some of the music
charts used in class instruction.
WHERE THEY ARE: WHERE ARE
THEY?
The following names and addresses are herewith
given as corrections from the last issue of Presto-
Times and additional names which have been kindly
furnished by correspondents:
The name of Mr. Robert H. Waud, formerly su-
perintendent of the American Piano Co. factory at
Rochester, N. Y., whose name was given in the last
issue of Presto-Times as R. E. Wand, has a home at
2416 North Greenway drive, Coral Gables, Kla.
H. P. Veatch, referred to as a well-known piano
traveling man, is now connected with the piano de-
partment of Lyon & Healy.
Roy S. Dunn, whose address was requested, is now
associated with the Schumann Piano Co., having as-
sumed the position of the late C. B. Mclntosh.
The new address of Hermann Leonard, formerly
American Felt Ambassador and for many years witii
Alfred Dolge, is now care of Hotel Park Plaza, 77th
street. New York.
Joseph Barreuther inquired about was, when last
heard from, selling pianos in Yonkers, N. Y.
H. R. Bauer, formerly with W r eser Brothers, was,
when last heard from, a resident in Newark, N. J.
George H. Beverly's home is at New Rochelle, N.
Y., but his friends have not seen him of late in or
about that suburb of New York City.
Fred Coryell, as already mentioned in Presto-
Times, passed away some two or three years ago.
The home town of William Gullett is Rye, N. Y.
The address of E. P. MacDonald, formerly with
Jesse French & Sons Piano Co., is requested.
on the unemployment situation in our large cities
would be instantaneous. Nor would it work hardship
on the theaters- or interfere with anything they now
have or do. It would simply add a wonderfully line
attraction between shows which would probably
imbue them with new life. And once established,
managers would find plenty ol ways to effectively use
the orchestra.
May we not bring this suggestion to the attention,
not only of t.ie musicians, but labor leaders and legis-
lators, for consideration. For when the orchestra is
once more a component part of the theater—when
the thousands of unemployed musicians are back on
the job—and the thousands of jobs now held by
musicians are vacated for others to fill—it is safe
to predict that the unemployment situation in Amer-
ican cities will be so relieved that the swing of the
pendulum toward normalcy will be felt throughout
the length and breadth of the land -and the neces-
sity for the dole system materially lessened.
To this end let us then demand that theaters doing
a certain specified box office business, furnish us with
music made by visibly living men; men who are hold-
ing down a job.
(Signed)
A PLEA FOR LESS SO-CALLED "MA-
CHINE MADE" MUSIC
Has it occurred to you that America needs music?
That submerged as it is with its problems of irre-
sponsibility and idleness it needs music as never
before?
And it can have it. For America is musical.
Throughout its schools its children are making music
—good music. Student bands and orchestras are no
longer an innovation, but an established fact in char-
acter-building education.
Our schools and colleges are yearly turning out
hundreds of thousands of young men and women
with a sufficient knowledge of music and music ap-
preciation to enjoy the very best musical programs.
And we give them machine-made music, while thou-
sands of excellent musicians are walking the streets
looking for work of any kind—or holding a job that
rightfully belongs to somebody else.
Under the stress of the present economic condi-
tions, any suggestions for relief, however fantastic
on the surface of things, are worthy of investigation.
As a step in solving the unemployment situation—
why shouldn't every theater be required to use an
orchestra—as a few metropolitan theaters still do—
the number, of members to be determined by the
average box office receipts.
If all the musicians who were thrown out of work
by the inauguration of the talking movie were sud-
denly called back to the theater orchestra the effect
BROWNE GRFATON COLE.
HAPPY THOUGHT IN PIANO ADVERTISING
Sohmer ment to the New York papers the caption on which
is:
"Happy Child: He Can Speak in Music."
Then follows the text as herewith reproduced:
"He plays only the simplest melody—and not very
well, perhaps—but he is enchanted because he has
created something!
"Expressing himself in music is so much more
helpful and healing to the child (and grown-up, too)
than just listening to music. No child who learns to
love a piano will come to manhood emotionally empty.
"The piano is the basic instrument for musical cul-
ture. The Sohmer, now 60 years old, is as perfect an
instrument as the world has known. Today it costs
less than in a decade, and you may pay for it in three
vears."
ADVANCE SHOWING OF 1932 KNABE
MODELS
Ampico Hall, 1721 Euclid avenue, at Playhouse
square, Cleveland, Ohio, has announced special ex-
hibitions and advanced showing of the new 1 ( )32
models of Knabe p'anos and the Knabe companion
pianos. The J. & C. Fischer. Marshall & Wendell.
Haines Brothers, and Laffargue.
When in need of music rolls, or advice about them write to the experts who make the
CLARK ORCHESTRA ROLLS
for all standard 65-note rewind electric pianos and automatic pianos of all makes and
descriptions. Rolls for Goinolas and Orchestrions. Also Calliopes and Galliaphones.
"Always the latest and snappiest 9 '
When ordering, give style of instrument on which roll will be used.
CLARK ORCHESTRA R OLL COMPANY
DE KALB, ILL.
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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