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In this Dec. 3,
2014, photo, Jim Foster talks about his career at his Foster Family Music
Center piano store, in Bettendorf, Iowa. Foster is closing his store this month
after being in business for nearly 30 years. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
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When Jim Foster opened his piano store 30 years
ago, he had 10 competitors selling just pianos.
AP reports when he closed Foster Family Music in late December, not one was still selling
pianos in the Quad-Cities area of Iowa and Illinois.
"We did try hard to find a buyer," Foster
said. There were no takers.
Stores dedicated to selling pianos like Foster's
are dwindling across the country as fewer people take up the instrument and
those who do often opt for a less expensive electronic keyboard or a used
piano. Some blame computers and others note the high cost of new pianos, but
what's clear is that a long-term decline in sales has accelerated.
The best year for new piano sales in the U.S. was
1909, when more than 364,500 were sold. But after gently falling over the
years, piano sales have plunged more recently to between 30,000 and 40,000
annually.
Larry Fine, a Boston-based piano technician,
consultant and author, said it's an indication of a changing society.
"Computer technology has just changed everything
about what kids are interested in," said Fine, who also publishes a
website offering consumer information on new and used pianos. "People are
interested in things that don't take much effort, so the idea of sitting and
playing an hour a day to learn piano is not what kids want to do.
"Youth sports demands also compete with
music studies.
"Children these days are being recruited for
so many other activities, whether it's soccer, gymnastics, or swimming,"
said Robin Walenta, CEO of West Music, a music retailer with a chain of stores
in Iowa and Illinois.
To succeed now, Walenta said retailers must
engage families in music education. Her company offers an early childhood music
program that starts with 3-month-old babies. A keyboard exploration program is
available for youngsters until they're ready to begin individual lessons at age
7 or 8.
Foster Family Music survived because it took a
similar approach, offering digital pianos and acoustic pianos with built-in
electronics for student lessons and hosting thousands of students in large
performance events, Foster said, sitting at a Wi-Fi and fiber optic-equipped
Yamaha Disklavier grand piano.
Walenta said those types of features on pianos
help ensure the instrument continues to be a mainstay for children learning
music.
"On a digital piano they can practice with a
harpsichord sound or a trumpet sound. It makes it more fun," she said.
"Kids these days need that kind of interaction to be interested."
When Dennis Saphir recently closed his piano store in the Chicago suburb of
Wilmette, it was the end of a business his family started six generations ago
in Vienna. He took it over from his father who brought the business to the U.S.
during World War II.
Saphir said new piano sales are challenged by
fewer parents requiring youngsters to take lessons as part of their upbringing
and a glut of instruments already in homes.
"We actually found ourselves competing with our own pianos that came back
on the market and, frankly, nothing was wrong with those pianos," he said.
"We had serviced them and made sure customers took care of those pianos.
There were lots of really excellent pianos on the market for a fraction of what
the new piano would cost."
The average cost of a new grand piano last year
was just over US$16,000.
Well-maintained pianos can make music for 50 to 70 years, said Peter Stumpf, a
piano technician for the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and Carnegie Mellon University,
also in Pittsburgh.
Stumpf acknowledged new piano retailers are challenged by technicians like him
who restore well-made used pianos and sell them at a fraction of the cost.
The piano's design, durability and new
flexibility brought by technology helps keep the instrument created by Italian
Bartolomeo Cristofori more than 300 years ago relevant today, said Joe Lamond,
president and CEO of the National Association of Music Merchants, a music products
industry trade association.
"Having all the notes
laid out in front of you spatially is really an important way to learn
music," he said. "It's why it's one of the most important instruments
for people to begin on. That's not going to change."
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