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| Produced by Faith Matievich | |
| THE EXPERIENCES OF A BANDMASTER | |
| By John Philip Sousa | |
| During eighteen years spent in playing music for the masses, twelve | |
| years in the service of the United States and six in that of the general | |
| public, many curious and interesting incidents have come under my | |
| observation. | |
| While conductor of the Marine Band, which plays at all the state | |
| functions given by the President at the Executive Mansion, I saw much | |
| of the social life of the White House and was brought into more or less | |
| direct contact with all the executives under whom I had the honor of | |
| successively serving--Presidents Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland and | |
| Harrison. | |
| They were all very appreciative of music, and in this respect were quite | |
| unlike General Grant, of whom it is said that he knew only two tunes, | |
| one of which was "Yankee Doodle" and the other wasn't! | |
| The President's Embarrassing Demand. | |
| I think I may say that more than one President, relieved from the | |
| onerous duties of a great reception, has found rest by sitting quietly | |
| in the corner of a convenient room and listening to the music. | |
| Once, on the occasion of a state dinner, President Arthur came to the | |
| door of the main lobby of the White House, where the Marine Band was | |
| always stationed, and beckoning me to his side asked me to play the | |
| "Cachuca." When I explained that we did not have the music with us but | |
| would be glad to include it in the next programme, the President looked | |
| surprised and remarked: | |
| "Why, Sousa, I thought you could play anything. I'm sure you can; now | |
| give us the 'Cachuca.'" | |
| This placed me in a predicament, as I did not wish the President to | |
| believe that the band was not at all times able to respond to his | |
| wishes. Fortunately, one of the bandmen remembered the melody and played | |
| it over softly to me on his cornet in a corner. I hastily wrote out | |
| several parts for the leading instruments, and told the rest of the band | |
| to vamp in the key of E flat. Then we played the "Cachuca" to the entire | |
| satisfaction of Mr. Arthur, who came again to the door and said: "There, | |
| I knew you could play it." | |
| The ladies of the White House were always interested in the music, and | |
| frequently suggested selections for the programmes, Mrs. Hayes being | |
| particularly fond of American ballads. During the brief Garfield | |
| administration there were no state receptions or dinners given by the | |
| President, and the band did not play at the White House, except for a | |
| few of Mrs. Garfield's receptions immediately after the inauguration. | |
| While Mrs. McElroy was mistress of the Executive Mansion for her | |
| brother, President Arthur, the lighter music was much in favor, as there | |
| were always many young people at the Mansion. | |
| Miss Rose Elizabeth Cleveland was much interested in music, and evinced | |
| a partiality for Arthur Sullivan's melodies. Mrs. Harrison's favorite | |
| music was Nevin's "Good Night, Beloved" and the Sousa marches. The | |
| soundness of Mrs. Cleveland's musical taste was shown by her liking for | |
| the "Tannhauser" overture and other music of that character. | |
| The Marine Band played all the music for President Cleveland's wedding, | |
| which took place in the Blue Room of the White House. The distance from | |
| the room up-stairs to the exact spot where the ceremony was to take | |
| place was carefully measured by Colonel Lamont and myself, in order | |
| that the music might be timed to the precise number of steps the wedding | |
| party would have to take; and the climax of the Mendelssohn "Wedding | |
| March" was played by the band just as the bride and groom reached the | |
| clergyman. | |
| President Cleveland's Veto. | |
| A few days before the ceremony I submitted my musical programme to | |
| Colonel Lamont for the President's approval, and among the numbers was a | |
| quartet called "The Student of Love," from one of my operas. Even in | |
| the anticipation of his happiness Mr. Cleveland was keenly alive to | |
| the opportunities for humorous remarks which this title might afford to | |
| irreverent newspaper men; and he said to his secretary: "Tell Sousa | |
| he can play that quartet, but he had better omit the name of it." | |
| Accordingly, "The Student of Love" was conspicuous by its absence. | |
| When North Carolina celebrated its centenary, the Marine Band was | |
| ordered to Fayetteville to participate in the ceremonies. The little | |
| Southern town was much interested in the advent of the "President's | |
| Band," and the prevailing opinion was that "Dixie" would be tabooed | |
| music with us. Before the exercises a local committee waited upon me and | |
| intimated that "Dixie" was a popular melody in that vicinity. | |
| "Of course," said the spokesman, "we don't want you to play anything | |
| you don't want to, but please remember, sir, that we are very fond of | |
| 'Dixie' here." | |
| Bowing gravely, I thanked the committee for their interest in my | |
| programme, but left them completely in the dark as to whether I intended | |
| to play the loved song of the South or not. | |
| "Dixie," by the President's Band. | |
| The ceremonies opened with a patriotic address by Governor Fowle, | |
| lauding the glories of the American flag and naturally the only | |
| appropriate music to such a sentiment was "The Star-Spangled Banner," | |
| which the crowd patriotically cheered. | |
| The tone of the succeeding oration was equally fervid, but the speaker | |
| enlarged upon the glories of the Commonwealth whose one hundredth | |
| anniversary was being celebrated. The orator sat down, there was a | |
| momentary pause, and then as I raised my baton the strains of "Dixie" | |
| fell upon the delighted ears of the thousands round the platform. | |
| The unexpected had happened, and such a shout as went up from that | |
| throng I have never heard equaled. Hats were tossed in the air, | |
| gray-bearded men embraced, and for a few minutes a jubilant pandemonium | |
| reigned supreme. During the rest of our stay in Fayetteville | |
| the repertoire of the Marine Band was on this order: "Yankee | |
| Doodle,"--"Dixie;" "Star-Spangled Banner,"--"Dixie;" "Red, White and | |
| Blue,"--"Dixie." | |
| In all my experience the acme of patriotic fervor was reached during | |
| a reunion of the Loyal Legion at Philadelphia some years ago. The | |
| exercises were held in the Academy of Music, and the band occupied | |
| the orchestra pit in front of the stage, which was crowded with | |
| distinguished veterans. | |
| I had strung together for the occasion a number of war-songs, | |
| bugle-calls and patriotic airs, and when the band played them the | |
| martial spirit began to stir the people. As we broke into "Marching | |
| Through Georgia," a distinguished-looking old soldier stepped to the | |
| foot-lights and began to sing the familiar words of the famous song in | |
| a loud, clear voice. The entire audience joined in, and as the swelling | |
| volume of melody rolled through the house, the enthusiasm waxed more | |
| intense. | |
| Verse after verse was sung, interrupted with frantic cheers, until it | |
| seemed that the very ecstasy of enthusiasm had been reached. It was | |
| only when physically exhausted that the audience calmed down and the | |
| exercises proceeded. | |
| A Chorus of Ten Thousand. | |
| During the World's Fair at Chicago my present band was giving nightly | |
| concerts in the Court of Honor surrounding the lagoon. On one beautiful | |
| night in June fully ten thousand people were gathered round the | |
| bandstand while we were playing a medley of popular songs. | |
| Director Tomlins, of the World's Fair Choral Associations, was on the | |
| stand, and exclaiming, "Keep that up, Sousa!" he turned to the crowd and | |
| motioned the people to join him in singing. With the background of the | |
| stately buildings of the White City, this mighty chorus, led by the | |
| band, sang the songs of the people-"Home, Sweet Home," "Suwanee River," | |
| "Annie Laurie," "My Old Kentucky Home," etc., and never did the familiar | |
| melodies sound so grandly beautiful. | |
| The influence of music to quiet disorder and to allay fear is quite as | |
| potent as its power to excite and to stir enthusiasm. A case in point | |
| happened at the St. Louis Exposition, where my band was giving a series | |
| of concerts. There was an enormous audience in the music hall when, in | |
| the middle of the programme, every electric light suddenly went out, | |
| leaving the house in complete darkness. | |
| A succession of sharp cries from women, the hasty shuffling of feet, and | |
| the nervous tension manifest in every one, gave proof that a panic was | |
| probably imminent. I called softly to the band, "Yankee Doodle!" and the | |
| men quickly responded by playing the good old tune from memory in the | |
| darkness, quickly following it with "Dixie" on my orders. The audience | |
| began to quiet down, and some scattering applause gave assurance that | |
| the excitement was abating. | |
| "The Star-Spangled Banner" still further restored confidence, and when | |
| we played "Oh Dear, What Can the Matter Be?" and "Wait Till The Clouds | |
| Roll By," every one was laughing and making the best of the gloom. In | |
| a short time the gas was turned on, and the concert proceeded with | |
| adequate lighting. | |
| In the desire to do especial honor to a certain foreign representative | |
| during the World's Fair, I had a particular piece of music in which | |
| he was interested arranged for my band, and agreed to play it at a | |
| specified concert. The music was given to a member of the band with | |
| instructions to copy the parts and deliver them at the band-stand. | |
| The foreign gentleman was present at the concert with a large party of | |
| friends, whom he had invited to hear this particular piece of music. | |
| When the librarian asked the musician for the parts, he could not find | |
| them, and a search high and low for the missing music was without | |
| avail. Much to my chagrin, it was necessary to omit the number and send | |
| explanations and regrets to the dignitary whom it was designed to honor. | |
| At the end of the concert, when the men were packing to go home, the | |
| player found the missing band parts stuck in the bell of his instrument, | |
| where he had placed them for safe-keeping. | |
| In a little Michigan town my band was booked for an afternoon concert, | |
| and on our arrival the local manager assured us that we should have a | |
| good house, although there was no advance sale. He explained this by | |
| saying that the townspeople did not like to buy their tickets until the | |
| last minute. | |
| The theatre was on the second floor of the town hall, the ground floor | |
| being given over to the fire department, the especial pride of the | |
| community. Twenty minutes before the concert a large crowd had gathered | |
| round the box-office to buy tickets when the fire-alarm sounded, and the | |
| entire population promptly deserted the muse of music and escorted the | |
| engine and hose-cart to the scene of action, leaving the band absolutely | |
| without an audience. | |
| A Tuneful Locomotive. | |
| Once when we were playing during warm weather in a theatre situated near | |
| a railroad, the windows were left open for ventilation. The band | |
| was rendering a Wagner selection, and at the climax was playing with | |
| increasing force. The last note to be played was a unison B flat, and | |
| as I gave the sign to the musicians to play as strong as possible the | |
| volume of sound that followed fairly astonished me. I had never heard | |
| fifty men play with such force before and could not account for it, but | |
| the explanation soon became manifest. As the band ceased playing, | |
| the same note continued in the blast of a passing locomotive that had | |
| opportunely chimed in with us in unison. | |
| The Marine Band was once doing escort duty on Pennsylvania Avenue in | |
| Washington to a body of citizen soldiery returning from camp. It was | |
| at night and the parade was preceded by a wagon-load of fireworks which | |
| were to be discharged at appropriate intervals along the line of march. | |
| By some accident or design the entire load of pyrotechnics was | |
| simultaneously ignited, and the street immediately filled with a perfect | |
| fusillade of rockets and Roman candles. | |
| A stampede followed and the parade faded away. I stood my ground | |
| until my eye-glasses were knocked off, and then I groped my way to the | |
| sidewalk. When the confusion had subsided, all that could be discovered | |
| of my band was the drum-major in front and the bass-drummer in the rear | |
| rank. Their comrades had fled, but these men were good soldiers, and | |
| having received no orders to disperse had stood their ground manfully. | |
| A Tale of the White House | |
| One more story of the White House. At the time of the unveiling of the | |
| statue of Admiral Farragut in Washington, it was suddenly proposed | |
| to have a reception at the Executive Mansion in honor of the many | |
| distinguished visitors. The informal invitations were issued while I was | |
| participating in the parade that was part of the ceremonies. | |
| At seven o-clock in the evening, when I was at home, tired out after | |
| the long march, word came to me to report at the Marine Barracks. I | |
| went there and was ordered to take the band to the White House at eight | |
| o'clock p.m. | |
| The bandmen did not live in barracks, and it was practically impossible | |
| to get them together at that time of night, as they were scattered all | |
| over the city. | |
| "Well, those are my instructions and those are your orders," said the | |
| commanding officer. | |
| So we sent the band-messengers out to the men's lodgings, and they found | |
| just one musician at home, and he was the bass-drummer. | |
| At eight o'clock, arrayed in all the gorgeousness of my scarlet and gold | |
| uniform, I sat in front of the band platform in the White House lobby, | |
| and the bass-drummer stationed himself back in the semi-obscurity of his | |
| corner. There was a dazzling array of music-stands and empty chairs, but | |
| no musicians! The President evidently saw the humorous side of it, and | |
| when I explained the situation he said it could not be helped. All the | |
| evening we sat there and listened to humorous remarks from the guests. | |
| We had "reported for duty," though, and the drummer and I stayed till | |
| the reception was over. | |