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The Yamaha dealer I bought my N1X from is closing their doors "largely" due to lack of supply because of COVID.
This guy personally sold me my N1X and gave me what I felt was a fair deal on it. I also had a very pleasant experience shopping in his store. Sorry to see him go.
God bless, David
Yamaha AdvantGrand N1X Duane Shinn - 52 Week Crash Course - Completed Duane Shinn - Praise and Gospel Course - In Progress Greg Howlett - Inspirational Improvisation - In Progress
This is so disheartening. And I will extend that to not just music stores (a couple of violin/guitar stores closed down in my area) but to all local business that had to close. There was small business selling running shoes and clothing that had to close as well.
The piano store where I bought my CA79 from is in a good shape so far, but I heard the salesperson mention that it takes a lot of money to maintain a temperature controlled warehouse/showroom.
When will we see a normal for local businesses?
A man must love a thing very much if he practices it without any hope of fame or money, but even practice it without any hope of doing it well. Such a man must love the toils of the work more than any other man can love the rewards of it. G. K. Chesterton
Well before Covid piano sales were trending downward. Okay there was a spike if you had the money to get a piano/ DP piano with this covid mess. Problem is most counties in this mess haven't reduced property taxes for businesses. Our county didn't and said hey we still got bills to pay! Well okay but you closed us down for almost 3 months! I'm in a totally different business but same crap going on with supply issues and we are hanging on by a straw!
All these years playing and I still consider myself a novice.
Owning part of the earth and then withholding it from those who need it, for the purpose of squeezing ransom out of them has become big business in the US. Like so many other hard working, small business owners, this poor businessman has likely first learned from covid that despite all of his hard work, diligence, and kindness to customers, he was still just a serf who had to satisfy his lord.
I hope this nice man can find a way to peace and contentment, and, a way to meet his and his family's needs.
The container shipping industry is in turmoil due to unprecedented demand for certain goods. I’m not surprised that supply issues are behind the store’s closing.
In my country many if not most small businesses/owners are hanging in the balance or clutching at the proverbial straws as well.
All sorts of government support programs have been deployed over here to help businesses survive the pandemic and protect jobs, yet these are no surefire guarantee and to quite a few it will prove too little too late I'm afraid.
Earlier in my career I have been a business consultant and in several cases unfortunately I had to resort to helping entrepreneurs end their business instead of helping them develop it. Sometimes it just was the wiser path to take.
Almost four years ago, due to a host of circumstances, personal health among these, I had to end my own two businesses, and am still in the process of recovering: physically, emotionally, spiritually, financially.
I do hope to pick things up again hopefully sooner rather than later, yet currently I am weirdly relieved to temporarily not be in business myself at the moment.
All of this is to say that for several reasons I can relate to and feel for everybody who experiences these harsh and personally taxing processes in the current world situation.
My thoughts are with them all and maybe, on this occasion, it is fitting to end the way David usually does:
= God bless. =
HZ
PS One of the guiding lights for myself in keeping my head above the water, keeping myself together, through these times is the spiriting inspiration music brings, and to be more in direct contact with that through... the piano.
The Hi-Fi business is booming like it's the '70s and it's all because people spend much more time at home (and less on the way to somewhere). To keep ourselves entertained, domestic hobbies are at an all-time high. It's weird that musical instruments wouldn't benefit from this either.
Seems like the new normal is going to be the new, new normal. France is spiking again in certain areas, UK has localised problems which won't easily go away despite the vaccination success. Only takes a heartbeat for things to flare up. Large social gatherings may prove impossible to safely host any more. Such interesting times! My piano shop still has a healthy delivery, but some building supplies and cement are becoming a bit thin on the ground . . . But for me and her, being retired, little has changed.
The Hi-Fi business is booming like it's the '70s and it's all because people spend much more time at home (and less on the way to somewhere). To keep ourselves entertained, domestic hobbies are at an all-time high. It's weird that musical instruments wouldn't benefit from this either.
Long live two channel. My stereo system makes every day better, as I get to listen to great music on a wonderful system, while I work. By the way, audiogon.com has great deals on stereo equipment.
My Yamaha Disklavier DYUS-5 also makes work from home more enjoyable. I think the sale of musical instruments has increased during the pandemic, hence supply issues.
Unfortunately it is not the only one case. Stories like that are everywhere. Covid put lots of people out of business. I was almost one of them. We had to take urgent measurements and give up some premises. We changed our main operations and started to focus more on deliveries. The right advertisement here was a key. We used facebook ads + https://savemyleads.com to check how our ads work. Turned out to be the best decision ever.
Very sad for all small business. And in this case, where do the unsold inventory of pianos go? I'm sure whatever storage facility will not be sufficient in properly regulating the temp/humidity requirements.
The Yamaha dealer I bought my N1X from is closing their doors "largely" due to lack of supply because of COVID.
This guy personally sold me my N1X and gave me what I felt was a fair deal on it. I also had a very pleasant experience shopping in his store. Sorry to see him go.
God bless, David
Very sad to see this
Jim was also the dealer who sold my my N3 Avant Grand some years back. And helped me with Yamaha when the instrument developed a problem after its warranty had expired. Good guy.
Jane - expert on nothing with opinions on everything
The Yamaha dealer I bought my N1X from is closing their doors "largely" due to lack of supply because of COVID.
This guy personally sold me my N1X and gave me what I felt was a fair deal on it. I also had a very pleasant experience shopping in his store. Sorry to see him go.
God bless, David
It seems that we potentially heading to that dystopian future where we might have to rely upon virtual reality to test tactical hardware using a midi connection over the Web. Hardly an adequate or appealing way to navigate digital pianos...
Instruments: Current - Kawai MP7SE; Past - Kawai MP7, Yamaha PSR7000 Software: Sibelius 7; Neuratron Photoscore Pro 8 Stand: K&M 18953 Table-style Stage Piano Stand
It seems that we potentially heading to that dystopian future where we might have to rely upon virtual reality to test tactical hardware using a midi connection over the Web. Hardly an adequate or appealing way to navigate digital pianos...
With trysound.com you have an idea of such a service. You book a free session, then play during the session. The MIDI stream is sent to a server which runs a VST and you get the audio stream back. The service is nice in the sense that you have few opportunities to test in a shop the available VST. However, the latency is huge, very huge ! You have the time to play not really hurry 5 notes before you get back the first audio samples !
The service could be enhanced (in theory) and integrates Disklavier model, but a piano (acoustic or digital) is also about the feeling : I would never bought the N1X without the wow effect I had in a shop. If none of my shop existed and I had to buy on Internet, I would surely have bought a less risky model (CLP745 ? Perhaps not : I was skeptical about the advantage of wood in Yamaha’s keyboard before having tested one.., then perhaps a CLP735…)
Then I have chosen a N1X, bought it where I have tested and AvantGrand and hope that this purchase contributes to make the shop still alive when I would be interested in a N1XX, N1Y or whatever its name.
Last edited by Frédéric L; 09/30/2103:05 PM.
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