Clifton Webb and Ruth Hussey as Mr. and Mrs. Sousa standing with the High School Cadets Band during filming in 1951. Scott Schwartz Clifton Webb posing as John Philip Sousa for a promotional ...
Music for President's Day continues with music in the White House. The ensemble that played in the executive mansion not long after it was built in 1800 has played a role in music at the White House ...
The most famous marching band leader in the world, John Philip Sousa, gave a concert at the Hippodrome Theater in Pottsville on Aug. 18, 1918. Coming three months before the end of World War I, the ...
On Aug. 15, 1928, the Manitowoc Herald-News reported “America’s March King” John Philip Sousa and his band was to play “Two Golden Jubilee Concerts” at the Capitol Theatre on Saturday, Sept. 15. The ...
If you knew Sousa -- Sousa's Washington (1854-1874) -- There's no business like show business (1874-1881) -- Semper fi (1881-1892) -- Sousa's peerless concert band ...
What would the Fourth of July be without the music of John Philip Sousa? From his iconic “The Stars & Stripes Forever” to stirring marches such as “The Washington Post,” “Semper Fidelis” and “The ...
Mar. 26—EDITOR'S NOTE — This story is part of a series commemorating the 100th anniversary of the current Corn Palace building, which opened in 1921. By 1925, John Philip Sousa had learned to love ...
Jane van Middlesworth Sousa, ca. 1880s. Scott Schwartz John Philip Sousa at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center in 1917. Sigmund 'The Great Lafayette' Neuberger as John Philip Sousa in 1911. The ...
Think of holiday parades, think of strutting bands and John Philip Sousa’s stirring martial music such as “Stars and Stripes Forever” and “Semper Fidelis.” “John Philip Sousa (1854-1932) has traveled ...
As the hour of all-American music continues, we're in concert at the Grand Teton Music Festival in Wyoming to hear the "First Essay for Orchestra" by Samuel Barber. David Lockington is the conductor.
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