
We´ve taught four generations of students, including the children and grandchildren of former students, Ziegler said. The store has contracted others to teach as needed. Manager Joe Birchfield has worked for the store for 34 years and teaches guitar lessons. Ziegler´s also has provided musical instruments for local school bandsmen to rent. Ziegler´s not only has kept a large selection of pianos, organs, guitars, violins, amplifiers, keyboards and other instruments, but also sheet music, accessories and various musical gifts.

I had good credit to rebuild but it had to be the Lord looking after me, he said. However, while much of the large inventory - something the store has always kept - was destroyed, Ziegler was able to rebuild and restock. The fire department said it had been burning all weekend when it was discovered on Sunday morning, Ziegler said.
PIANO TUNER LUBBOCK FULL
Ziegler, who bought full interest in the store in the mid-1960s, later operated a store in Hereford for about 10 years as well as one in Lubbock for 10.Ībout 30 year ago, a smoldering fire gutted the building. Spence, who died in 1961, also had stores in Amarillo and Lubbock at one time. Spence, who was handicapped, Ziegler said, She was a wonderful businesswoman. He said he played the organ for the opening of the present Herald building in 1975. ∺ll those people are dead now, he lamented. He and pianist Benny Martin teamed up for several years and he also played in an accordion band.
PIANO TUNER LUBBOCK PROFESSIONAL
In addition to teaching music - he has several professional certifications - he also played in various musical programs and civic functions. I remember playing at a school once and when I asked Who wants to learn the accordion,´ every hand went up, Ziegler chuckled. Spence Music in Plainview - then located at 710 Broadway - needed teachers. In 1951, he met a piano tuner who told him Mary L. He played the accordion and keyboard - he began learning the accordion at age 10 - and found a job at Lamont´s Club, a night spot in Lubbock. I even tried to play the oboe because I wanted to play in an orchestra, a dream he was never able to fulfill.īecause his sister had married an Air Force pilot stationed at Reese in Lubbock, Ziegler came to America in late 1945. We lived along the Rhine and I played in music festivals every summer.


That institution was destroyed during World War II, he sadly relates. Some of my friends, though, think I talk like a West Texan, he said.īorn in Johannesburg, Germany, near Frankfurt, Ziegler studied at the Weisbaden Conservatory of Music where he learned to write music. I have enjoyed the people of West Texas they are very friendly and helpful, Ziegler says with a smile, a twinkle in his eye when he admitted he has never lost his distinct German accent. It´s a bittersweet time for Ziegler, who spoke little English when he emigrated from Germany and moved to Plainview in 1951. I hope I don´t have to have an auction. He will try to sell off as much of the inventory at the store at 613 Broadway as possible between now and the end of the year. ∻usiness just stopped after 9-11 the sales aren´t there anymore, he said. Owner Paul Ziegler says the Plainview market is too small to continue to sustain Ziegler Music Co., which was started in 1934 as Mary L. One of Plainview´s oldest businesses will close its doors at the end of 2004, capping a 70-year history of providing musical instruments and music lessons here.
