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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
April
New Sousa archivist
revitalizing collection, planning monthlong musicfest
Andrea Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
4/13/04
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| Photo
by Bill Wiegand |
| American
music Archivist
Scott Schwartz is reorganizing the library’s
John Philip Sousa collection and band archives, which
he has renamed the Sousa Archives and Center for American
Music. Schwartz plans to expand the collection into
a vital repository representative of the breadth of
American music. He also is organizing a monthlong
celebration for November, which is American Music
Month, to mark the 150th anniversary of Sousa’s
birth. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — The John
Philip Sousa collection at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
is marching to the beat of a different drummer, and by all appearances,
it is a quick march.
The drummer in this case is an archivist, Scott Schwartz. On board as
the new Sousa archivist since last fall, Schwartz has wasted little
time in reorganizing Sousa’s large collection at Illinois and
organizing an ambitious celebration of and for the beloved American
band leader-musician-composer known as “The March King.”
In five months, Schwartz has re-energized, refocused and renamed the
archives – a major band music collection and museum. The new incarnation
is called the Sousa Archives and Center for American Music. Schwartz
also is well into plans for a monthlong celebration of American music
in November in honor of the 150th anniversary of Sousa’s birth.
An archivist and classical guitarist, Schwartz also is an author with
wide-ranging interests. He has written extensively on the business and
music practices of Duke Ellington and on the music and culture of the
Appalachian serpent- and fire-handling believers of eastern Kentucky.
Previously at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of
American History, Schwartz said he sees the new job as “an opportunity
to grow a program from the ground up, to turn a diamond in the rough
into a world-class archive and repository.”
His plan is to expand the Sousa collection from “what might have
been described as a shrine to Sousa’s legacy, instruments and
papers, into a vital repository.” He also wants to use the revitalized
repository as a base from which to “show the breadth of American
music.”
Although ambitious, these ideas are do-able. Schwartz discovered that
Illinois has hidden treasures in “three major music collections”:
wind band material – the Sousa Archives being the core; electronic
and computer music; and “an incredible ethnomusicology collection.”
“These three collections,” Schwartz said, “make us
truly unique, and are the reason why we now have a mission statement
that defines us as collecting American music and documenting the legacy
and heritage in these three areas.”
Schwartz said he believes that “being an outsider who has represented
a national and international perspective” at the NMAH has helped
him see the various pieces of the puzzle – that is, the music
collection strengths at Illinois – and how they could be put together
to make a world-class center for American music.
“That’s the reason they brought me here. That’s the
reason I moved my family – and my sailboat from the Chesapeake.”
Schwartz already has taken several steps toward realizing his goals,
the first step being to begin developing close working collaborations
with people across campus.
“The School of Music,
the Library, University
Bands, Intercollegiate
Athletics and many other units, divisions and schools across campus
will have to work together if we are going to create a center for American
music,” Schwartz said.
Similarly, Schwartz has begun developing collaborative relationships
with the other major U.S. music repositories that document American
music. He believes that this kind of linkage eventually will lead to
a sharing of resources among archives, museums and research centers
both within and outside Illinois, including the Library of Congress
and the National Museum of American History.
“The idea is to become a confederation, so to speak,” Schwartz
said. “We can’t – and shouldn’t – try
to collect all aspects of American music. That can’t – and
shouldn’t – be done by any single repository. Sharing is
the name of the game.”
Already, Schwartz and his staff – three graduate students and
three undergraduates – are inventorying and processing Sousa holdings
and redesigning the Web site. He also is planning the physical renovation
of the archive and small museum, including the creation of a researcher-friendly
reading room.
Moreover, he is tapping friends and colleagues across campus and the
country to help put together a first-rate Sousa Sesquicentennial Celebration
in November.
The timing couldn’t be better, Schwartz said. November also is
American Music Month, “so the Sousa Sesquicentennial will be a
celebration of America’s music.”
Already booked are Illinois’ University Band, which will re-create
a Sousa concert; the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra, a concert
and one-day residency to give master classes; Alan Jabbour, the past
director of the Library of Congress Folklife Center, the keynote lecture
on preserving America’s music legacy; Alison Brown, a Grammy award
winner for the five-string banjo, and Andrea Zonn, recently named one
of country music’s top 10 acts, a talk on women in music and a
performance on “the music mama taught me”; Sousa and American
music exhibits and displays at the NMAH and three sites on the U. of
I. campus.
“So we’ve got jazz, we’ve got traditional, we’ve
got wind band, and I’d love to see us connect with a gospel group
to highlight a part of America’s religious music heritage,”
Schwartz said. “Our intent is to illustrate the incredibly diversified
nature of America’s music. And what we don’t get this year,
we’ll get next year.”
Schwartz said he also would like his colleagues across the country to
follow suit, “so this becomes a huge national effort – and
all on the anniversary of Sousa’s birth. How much more American
can you get? Sousa and America and American music.”
A question that always comes up is why Sousa’s papers are at Illinois.
The answer is friendship and professional admiration.
In the early 1900s, Sousa struck up what would become a 30-year friendship
with A.A. Harding,
Illinois’ first director of bands.
According to Paul Bierley, the primary Sousa biographer, Sousa greatly
admired Harding’s work and believed that “the University
of Illinois Band was the best college band in the world.” Sousa
even composed a “University of Illinois March” in 1929 and
performed it on the Illinois campus the next year; on that occasion
he was made an honorary conductor of Illinois’ concert band.
Sousa promised Harding he would bequeath most of his band music library
to Illinois, and following his death in March of 1932, his widow kept
that promise: 18,000 pounds of music in 39 trunks were delivered to
the campus.
The U. of I. holds 74 percent of the extant Sousa materials, including
original scores and parts, published music and manuscripts, personal
papers, photographs, programs, news clippings, broadsides, memorabilia
and one of Sousa’s batons, a pair of his white kid gloves, which
he always wore while conducting, his music stand and podium.
Among the manuscripts are the band parts for Sousa’s Christmas
Day 1896 composition “The Stars and Stripes Forever,” which
101 years later would be declared the national march of the United States.
The Sousa Archives and Center also has a good selection of band instruments
and uniforms, Native American instruments and some unidentified instruments.
The collection, in the Harding
Band Building and under the aegis of the University Library, has
grown to include the music, instruments and artifacts of many former
Sousa band members, including first cornetist Herbert L. Clarke and
vocal soloist Virginia Root.
Sousa’s biographer described Sousa as “an incredible genius”
and “truly an American phenomenon.”
“He was to the march what Johann Strauss was to the waltz,”
Bierley wrote. Over his lifetime, Sousa composed 137 marches –
including “The Washington Post March” and “Semper
Fidelis,” later adopted by the Marine Corps. He also wrote 15
operettas, five overtures, 11 suites, 11 waltzes, 13 dances, 28 fantasies
and 322 arrangements.
The son of immigrants and the third of 10 children, Sousa was born Nov.
6, 1854, in
Washington, D.C. When he was 13, he tried to run away from home to join
a circus band, but his father apprenticed him to the U.S. Marine Band.
At 24, Sousa became leader of that band, and held the job for 12 years.
Sousa’s band, which stirred hearts for 39 years, made annual transcontinental
tours from 1892 to 1931, four tours of Europe and a world tour in 1910-1911.
But being a concert band, they only marched seven times.
Sousa also wrote seven books. He was an athlete who adored baseball,
a husband, father and self-made millionaire. Sousa died on March 6,
1932, in Reading, Pa., following a band rehearsal. The last piece he
conducted was “The Stars and Stripes Forever.”
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