About Portland Music Company |
Always a leader, Portland Music Company was the first store offering musical instrument rentals to Oregon's school children. As a way to encourage instrument rentals and musical education in Oregon's schools, Christiansen and his employees would travel from town to town in their shiny black Hearses giving free evening concerts in the local schoolhouse. Once, a farmer from Madras who couldn't meet the payment on his son's instrument rental offered Christiansen a huge truckload of potatoes in trade. Christiansen eventually managed to sell off the potatoes at a local market. He then called it even with the farmer, probably fearing that he would have another load of potatoes to get rid of.
Through a unique business arrangement, Taylor would take the helm of Portland Music Company and donate a decades worth of proceeds and purchase payments to The Christiansen Foundation. The Christiansen Foundation was established to carry on Bob Christiansen's credo: "The richest child is poor without musical education." Portland Music Company, now officially owned by Taylor, continues to grow thanks to the help of Taylor's wife Susan Tsugawa (who manages PMC's sheet music department), partner Doug Metzker and a staff loyal, dedicated employees. Portland Music Company now operates five stores in the Portland area. With a focus that includes everything from sheet music to professional digital recording equipment. Portland Music Company continues to strive to be number one in the country at providing unrivaled customer service to musicians and the musical community. |
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The year was 1927. Times were good and the sultry sounds of the saxophone ignited America's passion for hot jazz. Musician and entrepreneur Bob Christiansen opened The Saxophone Shop, a music store located on 4th and Morrison in the heart of downtown Portland. Christiansen himself was an amazing saxophonist; self-taught and unable to read music, he could still sit in with any band around. Business was booming at The Saxophone Shop until the stock market crash of 1929 brought the Roaring '20's to a grinding halt. In order to keep his business alive during the Great Depression, Christiansen expanded The Saxophone Shop into a full service store thatcarried a wide variety of musical instruments. The name of Christiansen's remodeled store was changed to Portland Music Company. 
After the war, Portland Music Company continued to thrive. In 1974, Christiansen hired Mark Taylor, a long-haired, ex-philosophy and music major who was fresh out of college. Upon completing his three week probation period, Taylor was working for Portland Music Company earning the princely sum of $2.25 an hour. In 1977, when Bob Christiansen and his wife Violet decided to retire after 50 successful years in the music business, Taylor was given the opportunity of a lifetime. 

