Presto

Issue: 1936 2278

PR ESTO-TI M ES
March-April, 1936
iTOTXME
THE AMERICAN MUSIC TRADES JOURNAL
ISSUED THE
FIFTEENTH OF
PUBLICATION MONTH
'•RANK D. ABBOTT
Editor
Telephones, Local and Long Distance, Harrison 0234.
Private Phones to all Departments. Cable Address (Com-
mercial Cable Co.'a Code), " P R E S T O , " Chicago.
Entered as second-class matter April 9. 1932, at the
Tost Office at Chicago, 111., under act of March R, 1879.
Subscription, $1.00 a year; 6 months, 60 cents; foreign,
(2.00. Payable in advance. No extra charge in United
States possessions, Cuba and Mexico. Rates for adver-
tising on application.
PRESTO PUBLISHING CO.
Publishers
417 So. Dearborn St.
Chicago, 111.
The magazine "Today," Vincent Astor's
noted publication, says that when ten-cent
greeting cards replace five-cent ones and
pianos show big upturns business recovery is
upon us.
The phonograph, which is very popular in
India, is the production, in that country, of a
monopoly enterprise known as the British
Gramaphone Co., Ltd. This concern maintains
a large and well equipped plant at Duni Dum, a
suburb of Calcutta, where it is said as many as
1,500 persons are employed in the production
of these instruments and the gramaphone
records.
Another case of what radio has done to a
piece of music or, rather, for a composition,
is exemplified in the record of that radio hit.
"The Music Goes Round and Round." As the
story goes three young fellows helped Red
Rodgson, who had "thought out" the melody,
got it published, which two helpers have
already received about $10,000 each and Hodg-
son himself expects an equal amount, which
division is according to their agreement of
"halfing" the profits, if any. As the story goes,
Hodgson gets one cent per copy from sheet
music sales, two-thirds of a cent from orches-
trations, and two cents from each phonograph
record made. Hodgson's backers are supposed
to receive a like amount.
The "men wanted" advertisements of the
Wurlitzer Grand Piano Company, for men for
the Wurlitzer factories at De Kalb, Til., which
have been appearing in newspapers in locali-
ties from which cabinet makers and other
wood workers might be secured is a certain-
sure indication of the returning of piano-
building prosperity, generally, now at hand,
but it is peculiarly significant of the tremen-
dous Wurlitzer piano activity which was mani-
fest all through 1935.
The Rotary Club of Binghamton. N. Y., has
issued a memorial in behalf of its beloved
member, Edwin R. Weeks, to be made a direc-
tor of Rotary International at the Atlantic
City. N. J., meeting. June 22-26, this year.
Presto-Times and certainly the music trade in
general will be interested in the Binghamton
Rotary Club in presenting its esteemed mem-
ber, Ed. Weeks, as candidate for the office of
director on the Board of Rotary International
believing that Rotarian Weeks is well qualified
to sit on the International Board along with
The Japanese Piano Importation
Fizzle
Little need be added to what has already appeared in the trade papers and a
few other publications about the "invasion of Japanese pianos" to America. To all
appearances there is no reason to believe that any perceptible importation of Jap-
anese pianos or what is called a piano, the little instrument of Japanese production,
will come to this country beyond the regular downright toy for the larger kids.
The flare which came up with the importation of these Japanese instruments,
probably not more than 200 all told, subsided when it was learned that the instru-
ments are little things of little key-board capacity, one string to the key and of lit-
tle or no use for the performance of even ordinary pianoforte music and therefore
of little or no consideration as a musical instrument of the piano class. So far as
being a factor of competition with the standard American upright piano in tone,
quality or volume of tone similar to that of a small harp and instruments of the
dulcimer group.
Information from New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco and other cities
where these instruments have been on exhibition and for sale give out word that
they are a failure in sales attraction. A considerable number of dealers bought
samples to show and to place in comparison with American pianos, and now can-
not sell these after the curiosity has abated.
* * * *
With new developments in American piano making today and with one im-
portant firm bringing out a piano that will very readily compare at the price and
is far more attractive to the eye, it is not believed that there will be any chance of
Japanese pianos invading this market with any sort of an instrument that can take
the place of the American piano. Winter & Company, it seems, are trying out this
experiment but there is not much incentive to any manufacturer no matter how
low in price or mediocre in construction of the instrument to try to place on the
market an instrument with the main objective being price. Any American pianos
are low enough in price and it is not a constructive principle in piano production
to encourage lower prices even if some foreign country can be beaten in their at-
tempt to win some trade here.
To make a small toylike piano is commendable enough so far as we can see, but
there are toy shops that could do this work. These miniature instruments prob-
ably do have some tendency toward creating an incentive in children for the study
of music which in due time might call for a standard piano. But as for trying to
make a cheaper piano; a piano to sell at a ridiculously low price just because some
poorly paid artisans of other countries like Jap; a tendency to encourage cheapness to the impairment of quality. Let them over in
Japan or anywhere else give their time to cheap, unmusical and unpiano produc-
tion but as for our own country and our own product we should keep to the legiti-
mate. However, it can be said that if something of the Japanese piano order must
be turned out in this country to meet the requirements of the Japanese importa-
tions, there are factories here with capabilities for mass production able to master
the situation and thus minimize importations of even toy pianos.
* * * *
Carload Days Are Here Again
Carload and truckload shipments of pianos and large orders of other products oi
the music industry offer substantial evidence of music trade revival. Vet, while
these activities indicate returning prosperity and more sales, present day compe-
tition requires close attention to detail in quality, attractiveness and points of sala-
bility of the product. The one who fails in these will fall behind in the competition
race.
Carload and truckload orders are not plentiful these days compared with the
golden era a few years ago when "Carload Charley" and "Trainload Billy" earned
Their titles by actual achievements in big selling and big orders; but stimulation to
musical instrument buying and establishing the piano as a fixture and its necessity
in home life is manifest everywhere, a condition which is aiding the music mer-
chant in every department of his business for in a home where the piano enters
other instruments of music, musical publications and accessories follow.
* * * #
THE LAWREJSCE H. SELZ I'lAXO PUBLICITY WORK
VRATIEYIM
TO EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
At a meeting of the Executive Committee of the National Piano Manufacturers
Association, held in New York recently, the work of the publicity committee in its
operations with Lawrence H. Selz toward giving publicity to the piano in piano
music and musical events in which the piano is prominent and made conspicuous,
was gone over thoroughly. Mr. Selz' operations for the months of January and
February were entirely" satisfactory. The extent of publicity in newspapers
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-TI MES
other outstanding Rotarians from various
parts of the world and his election at the con-
vention of Rotary International to be held at
Atlantic City will be greatly desired.
The building at 329 S. Wabash avenue. Chi-
cago, which has been the home of Wurlitzer
for more than a quarter of a century and which
was one of the structures of the Wurlitzer
building projects during the super-boom days
of Wurlitzer and a dozen other music trade
and industrial concerns. This five-story build-
ing will be laid low as rapidly as workmen
can tear it down and the lot on which it now
stands will be added to an automobile parking
gound which now extends south to Van Bu-
ren street. The removal of Wurlitzer to 109-11
Wabash leaves Bakhvin, next door north;
Adam Schaaf and Cable Piano Company at
the corner of Wabash and Jackson Blvd.. the
three sole piano houses on the east side of the
street in that block.
John Eshelby, manager of the London house
of Steinway & Sons, and Theodore Ehrlich,
factory manager of Steinway at Hamburg,
who came to New York for a conference with
the Board of Directors of Steinway & Sons,
could not remain long in this country, in fact
they had to return to their posts of duty im-
mediately after the directors' meeting and
conferences. They regretted exceedingly that
they could not visit other cities, especially Chi-
cago, where they have many friends and per-
sonal acquaintances.
The Eshelbys have figured prominently in
the activities of Steinway abroad for a long
time. John Eshelby, the manager at London,
was the assistant manager when William R.
Steinway was at London, before he went to
Hamburg to make his headquarters. The late
George W. Eshelby was manager from 1912 to
1921. There are also two of the Eshelby boys
at the Hamburg factory. Mr. John Eshelby,
the London manager, made a flying trip
through the United States in 1928.
Charles M. Stieff, Baltimore, carries a well-
worded and well displayed advertisement
showing a Stieff concert grand attractively
priced, but immediately following the adver-
tisement is a notice marked "Special: A Stein-
way used upright at $165.00." Apparently this
price attached to a Steinway piano, although
the instrument must be a dozen or more years
old, possibly a score of years, indicates the
tremendous pull of the Steinway name.
The plan accepted by the National Association
of Piano Manufacturers as submitted by Law-
rence H. Selz, Chicago, provides a line of pub-
licity to be reached through the columns of news-
March-April, 1936
throughout the country given in connection with the Selz cooperation was fully
up to expectations. It was shown that in January 101 clippings were sent in, 145
in February, and that an extent of reading matter space used in January showed
that over 850 inches was reported and in February nearly 1,900 inches. This pub-
licity embraced publication scattered far and wide all over the country and many
illustrations and reproductions of photographs appeared in daily and weekly news-
papers and in several National monthly magazines.
L. P. Bull of the Story & Clark Piano Co., Western member of the executive
committee of the Piano Manufacturers Association, was gratified at the results
of the work of the Selz organization in spreading music publicity relative to the
piano. Some of this newspaper publicity has embraced entire pages of newspapers
and much column matter.
* * *
Interest in music lagging? Take a stroll through the main floor of the great
Lyon & Healy establishment at Wabash Avenue and Jackson Boulevard, Chicago,
any day, especially on a Saturday, and observe the mass of customers and onlook-
ers passing to and fro, and observe carefully the groups of teachers, students, ama-
teurs, collecting music. Take advantage of a delightful occasion like this and the
onlooker will join this writer in reply to the inquiry by repeating the refrain, "No,
No, a Thousand Times No"; interest in music is not lagging.
A peculiarly anomalous condition exists in the music industries just now, par-
ticularly as regards piano and band instrument manufacture in that, while strenu-
ous activity prevails in some places, no perceptible improvement is shown with
others. Some of the more fortunate piano factories, for instance, have been gain-
ing steadily for a year or more past and show marked increases even in the snow
blocade months of January and February this year. With several factories the gain
is continuing week by week in current output, a condition which, if it keeps up as it
probably will do, we can enjoy a trade like that existing before the late so-called
depression.
papers, national magazines, trade and class
publications.
This publicity means stories,
articles about the piano and tbe advantages of
being able to play the piano. It will tell of the
advisability of having a child seeking a well-
rounded education learn to play the piano.
After this, articles and terns will be supplied
the press with stories on the piano as a piece of
furniture and stories of the piano manufacturing
industry itself.
An Authority on Piano Values Com-
pliments the Gulbransen
K. H. Droop, secretary, E. F. Droop & Sons Com-
pany, one of the "Real Quality' music houses of the
country, in writing about recent special piano sales
going on at their store says this of the Gulbransen
piano which they have been handling for several years
past. Here is what Mr. Droop writes: "In conclu-
sion and speaking of our Chicago piano agency, wish
to inform you that we have been doing a splendid
business with the little Gulbransen upright and with
their small grand piano. During the years that we
have handled the Gulbransen we have found them
very reliable and excellent values throughout."
Disastrous Grinnell Bros. Fire at
Ypsilanti
The Ypsilanti, Mich., store of the Grinnell Bros, was
damaged by tire and water to the extent of about $30,-
000 on Sunday. March 8. The tire burned out the first
floor and ruined everything in the basement. Twenty
large pianos were spoiled by water, as well as the
stock of radios, phonographs, small musical instru-
ments and merchandise. It was the first big fire at
Ypsilanti in ten years. Mr. Rapp, general manager
at the Detroit store, was at Ypsilanti checking up on
the loss, damage, etc.
Various improvements have been recently made
to the McGinnis Piano Company's store located at
number 17 Eighth Street South, Minneapolis. The
double store front has been entirely remodelled and
new piano salons added to the salesrooms. Mr. L. A.
Dunaway. who was recently appointed sales manager
of the piano department, has been identified with the
piano business in managerial and promotional capacity
in and about the Twin Cities for upward of thirty
years. M r. Dunaway says that here is a marked in-
crease in piano interest and sales and that 1936 will
show continued improvement.
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 7: PDF File | Image

Download Page 8 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.