International Arcade Museum Library

***** DEVELOPMENT & TESTING SITE (development) *****

Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 86 N. 25 - Page 6

PDF File Only

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
American Indian Motifs
Used in Piano Designs
An Effective and Unusual Series of Piano Cases
Designed by Cherokee Princess Displayed by
the Hallet & Davis Piano Co.
The art of the North American Indian has
finally come into its own so far as the decora-
tion of piano cases is concerned, and the results
proved most interesting to the many convention
visitors who called at the showrooms of the
Hallet & Davis Piano Co., New York, during
the recent sessions.
The series of North American Indian motif
decorative treatments are most elaborate and
distinctly Indian in character with strongly con-
trasting colors in designs that are distinctly
typical. The designs shown by the Hallet &
Davis Co. are the work of Princess Atalie, a
Cherokee, who has combined with her compara-
tive appreciation for American Indian decora-
tions a thorough understanding of its purposes
and the legends back of it.
One of the instruments in the Hallet & Davis
group reflects the Navajo, whose natural
artistry is quite familiar to the public because
of the wide appreciation for the Navajo blan-
kets. As in the blankets the designs are made
up of religious and tribal symbols emblematic
of faith, custom or tradition, so have those
symbols been incorporated in the piano design
with a color scheme that is perfectly blended.
A second instrument reflects the spirit of the
sand painting Navajo, and is also strong in
symbolism. For instance, the East and the
Goddess representing the East, are represented
by white, the West by yellow, the North by
black and South by blue. Blue also represents
the upper world, and a mixture of black and
white spots the lower. In the development of
WHEN CHANGING AGENCIES
Consider the Old Reliable
BOARDMAN 6c GRAY
PIANOS FOR YOUR LEADER
Strictly First Class Since 18S7
Full Projection
Albany, N.
Given Agents
Y.
the scenes and the decoration of the figures
other colors have been worked in effectively.
Other models shown in the Hallet & Davis
group include one based upon the art of the
Hopi Indians; another on the shell Gorgets of
the Cherokees; still another on the bird motif
used so generally by the Pueblo Indians of New
Mexico, and still another upon the totemism
of the Indians.
Plans for Western Music
Trades Golf Tournament
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., June 15.—All arrange-
ments have been completed for the fifth annual
Western Music Trades Golf Tournament. Bee-
man P. Sibley, chairman of the Golf Committee,
stated to-day that the tournament will be held
on June 29, at Lakeside Golf Club, in Holly-
wood. It is expected that there will be over
a hundred entries and practically every manu-
facturer, jobber and retail Los Angeles dealer
in musical instruments contributed liberally to-
ward the fifty prizes which will be given to the
various winners. The committee for the tourna-
ment consists of Beeman P. Sibley, president
of the Western Piano Corp., chairman; Frank
Grannis, Southern California Music Co., treas-
urer; L. E. Fontron, Martin Music Co., Los
Angeles; Harald Pracht, Sherman, Clay & Co.;
Victor Tupper, of the Tupper organization;
T. V. Anderson, of the W. W. Kimball Co., and
T. N. Mercer, of the Bankers' Commercial Se-
curity Co.
To Open Twelfth Store
The United Music Co., operating a chain of
music stores through New England, has made
arrangements for opening its twelfth branch in
Norwich, Conn., with Maurice Feldman, former-
ly manager of the Taunton, Mass., store in
charge.
Pearson's Music Shop, 36 Calendar avenue,
La Grange, 111., has taken on the Kimball line
of pianos, and George Holbrook, representative
of the W. W. Kimball Co., of Chicago, will
have charge of the department.
Becker Bros.
High Grade Pianos and Player-Pianos
Factory and
Warerooms:
767-769
lOth A v e .
NEW YORK
JUNE 23, 1928
Delbert L. Loomis to Tour
Pacific Coast in the Fall
Executive Secretary of National Association
of Music Merchants to Visit Retailers in the
Far Western States
In accordance with a plan agreed upon at
the final meeting of the Board of Control of
the National Association of Music Merchants,
held on the closing day of the convention, it was
decided to arrange for the Executive Secretary
of the Association, Delbert L. Loomis, to visit
a number of cities on the Pacific Coast in the
early Fall for the purpose of bringing to mem-
bers of the trade in that section first-hand in-
formation regarding the promotional work
which is being carried forward by the executive
office of the Association, working, as it is, in
co-operation with the National Bureau for the
Advancement of Music.
According to plans tentatively made Mr.
Loomis will leave New York the latter part of
September or during the first days of October
and will visit Los Angeles, San Francisco, Port-
land, Tacoma, Seattle and Spokane, and will
probably also stop in one or two places on the
way to the West Coast. He will return via
Chicago in time to attend the Board of Control
meetings which will be held in Chicago Sunday
and Monday, October 21 and 22.
Shirley Walker, president of the Music Trades
Association of Northern California, and just
elected a vice-president of the National Asso-
ciation, is taking a very active interest in the
projected trip and will personally arrange for
some of the meetings.
To Close Piano Section
CANTON, O., June 16.—Announcement is made
that the Klein-Heffelman-Zollars Co., well-
known local department store, now controlled
by the Ross Stores, Inc., will discontinue its
piano department within a short time. A sale
now is in progress to close out all pianos on
hand. The talking machine record and radio
departments will continue to be maintained on
the mezzanine floor.
KURTZMANN
PIANOS
Win Friends for the Dealer
Mmktrt tine* 1891
Grand and Upright Pianos
Player and Reproducing Pianos
High Quality—Greatest Value
in the market today
¥. AStvLxck fcmx €0.
C. KURTZMANN & CO.
FACTORY
526-536 Niagara St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Executive Offices:
228-230 So. Wabaib Are., Chicago
Factory: 3859 So. Aihland Ave.
Pianos and Player-Pianos
Grands
Uprights
Player-Pianos
KRAKAUER BROS., Cypress Aveooe, 136ii an* 137th Streets
2-14 CHESTNUT ST
•PHILADELPHIA.-p A
NEW YORK
of Superior Quality
Moderately Priced and Easy to Sell
Don't fail «« invmatimatm
402-410 We.t 14th St.
N«w York
More Cunningham pianos are found in Philadelphia homes than
any other and you can accomplish the same results in your
city.
Ask for our plan of selling Cunningham pianos.

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