Making the March King: John Philip Sousa's Washington Years, 1854-1893

Making the March King: John Philip Sousa's Washington Years, 1854-1893

by Patrick Warfield
Making the March King: John Philip Sousa's Washington Years, 1854-1893

Making the March King: John Philip Sousa's Washington Years, 1854-1893

by Patrick Warfield

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

John Philip Sousa's mature career as the indomitable leader of his own touring band is well known, but the years leading up to his emergence as a celebrity have escaped serious attention. In this revealing biography, Patrick Warfield explains how the March King came to be by documenting Sousa's early life and career. Covering the period 1854 to 1893, this study focuses on the community and training that created Sousa, exploring the musical life of late nineteenth-century Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia as a context for Sousa's development.

Warfield examines Sousa's wide-ranging experience composing, conducting, and performing in the theater, opera house, concert hall, and salons, as well as his leadership of the United States Marine Band and the later Sousa Band, early twentieth-century America's most famous and successful ensemble. Sousa composed not only marches during this period but also parlor, minstrel, and art songs; parade, concert, and medley marches; schottisches, waltzes, and polkas; and incidental music, operettas, and descriptive pieces. Warfield's examination of Sousa's output reveals a versatile composer much broader in stylistic range than the bandmaster extraordinaire remembered as the March King.

In particular, Making the March King demonstrates how Sousa used his theatrical training to create the character of the March King. The exuberant bandmaster who pleased audiences was both a skilled and charismatic conductor and a theatrical character whose past and very identity suggested drama, spectacle, and excitement. Sousa's success was also the result of perseverance and lessons learned from older colleagues on how to court, win, and keep an audience. Warfield presents the story of Sousa as a self-made business success, a gifted performer and composer who deftly capitalized on his talents to create one of the most entertaining, enduring figures in American music.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780252081835
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Publication date: 01/25/2016
Series: Music in American Life
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 360
Product dimensions: 5.80(w) x 8.80(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Patrick Warfield is an associate professor of music at the University of Maryland and the editor of John Philip Sousa: Six Marches.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix

Acknowledgments xiii

Prelude. A Triumph on the Waves xv

Part I The Apprentice

Chapter 1 A Capital Boyhood 3

Chapter 2 Into the Pit 25

Chapter 3 A Nineteenth-Century Musical Career 49

Part II The Professional

Chapter 4 The Centennial City 67

Chapter 5 A Presidential Musician 100

Chapter 6 Civilian Music in Washington 124

Part III The March King

Chapter 7 America's Court Composer 149

Chapter 8 Making the Sousa Band 180

Chapter 9 Theater on the Bandstand 226

Epilogue. Marching Along 263

Notes 273

Bibliography 297

Index 313

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