Chappell of Bond Street

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Chappell of Bond Street
IndustryMusical instruments
Founded1811; 210 years ago (1811) [1]
FounderSamuel Chappell [1]
FateStarted as a store of Chappell & Co. manufacturing company; sold to Kemble & Co. in 1980, being renamed "Chappel of Bond Street"
Headquarters
Number of locations
England
ProductsPianos, guitars, drums, brass, woodwinds, bowed
ParentKemble & Company
(1980–2007)
Websitechappell-bond-st.com

Chappell of Bond Street (aka Chappell's[2]) is a musical instrument and sheet music retail store located in Wardour Street, Soho, London. The store, founded in 1811 by Samuel Chappell as a store to commercialise Chappell & Co. pianos,[1] nowadays commercialises a wide range of instruments including pianos, guitars, drums, brass, woodwinds, and bowed.

History[]

The musical instrument shop has been trading in London since 1811, when the original company, Chappell & Co., was founded. Chappell & Co. also published music, but in 1980 Chappell's piano manufacturing and retail business was sold to Kemble & Company who then continued to run the premises under the same name "Chappell of Bond Street". The publishing business of Chappell Music was later taken over by Warner Brothers becoming Warner Chappell Music. The Bond Street premises were completely refurbished in 1986 to mark the 175th year of trading.

Kemble & Company, a family business, commenced building pianos in the early 1900s and developed into Britain's largest piano manufacturers, moving to a modern factory in Bletchley, Milton Keynes. In 1966 Kemble & Company became distributors for Yamaha electronic organs. As Yamaha became dominant in other product areas a joint venture company, Yamaha-Kemble Music (UK) Ltd, was set further to develop sales in the U.K. market of Yamaha pianos, electronic keyboards, guitars and hi-tech equipment.

In July 2007 the minority Kemble family shareholding was bought out by Yamaha Corporation and the company was renamed "Yamaha Music (U.K.) Ltd" in autumn of 2007.[3][4] In 2010, Yamaha Music (U.K.) Ltd merged with Yamaha Music Europe GmbH; hence "Yamaha Music London" was established as Yamaha Music's own retail store and, as the only retail store owned and operated by Yamaha outside Japan, it is the European flagship store for Yamaha Music.[5]

In November 2006, the then Chappell of Bond Street store closed the 50, New Bond Street shop for the final time, reopening on 11 November 2006 at 152-160 Wardour Street. The new building is Grade II listed and has three retail floors.

Although Yamaha (in its various guises) has owned the business since 1980, the store continued to use the Chappell name partly because the two biggest areas of the business –sheet music and acoustic pianos– were so strongly associated with the name. However, in 2015, the company decided to place more emphasis upon the expansive selection of Yamaha musical instruments it carries, hence the decision to use the globally-known name "Yamaha" was made and the Chappell of Bond Street name retired.

Bibliography[]

  • Husk, William Henry; Cranmer, Margaret; Jones, Peter Ward; and Snell, Kenneth R. "Chappell". Grove Music Online (subscription required). ed. L. Macy. Retrieved on March 7, 2007.
  • Letters of Charles Dickens to Wilkie Collins (1891) - Page 136
  • The Ladies Museum (1831)- Page 91

References[]

  1. ^ a b c World class artists mark 200 years of Chappell of Bond Street and benefit homeless young people on Cision.com, 2011
  2. ^ "ABRSM forums". Forums.abrsm.org. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  3. ^ Yamaha buys out Kemble family Archived 2008-06-09 at the Wayback Machine, MI Pro, July 10, 2007
  4. ^ Cancellation of Joint Venture Contracts for Sales Subsidiaries in U.K. and Spain Archived 2007-11-17 at the Wayback Machine, Yamaha Global website, July 10, 2007
  5. ^ Terms, Policies and procedures, Yamahamusiclondon.com

External links[]

Coordinates: 51°30′54″N 0°08′06″W / 51.5149°N 0.1350°W / 51.5149; -0.1350

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