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Stars and stripes forever
Stars and stripes forever











stars and stripes forever stars and stripes forever

John Philip Sousa (1854 - 1932) - The Stars and Stripes Forever (Royal Artillery Band Keith Brion, cond.) Naxos 8.559093 On This Day Birthsġ885 - German conductor and composer, Otto Klemperer, in Breslau ġ917 - American composer Lou Harrison, in Portland, Ore. And in its now 100+ year history, it’s become one of the most frequently performed pieces of American music worldwide. Sousa crafted a touring patriotic pageant involving hundreds of performers, which ended with “The Stars and Stripes Forever!” playing, as soldiers from all three branches of the military marched on-stage with flags unfurled, culminating in the entrance of an attractive local beauty decked out in red, white, and blue.ĭespite the thousands of times Sousa and his band were required to play “The Stars and Stripes Forever!” they claimed they never tired of it. It was the outbreak of the Spanish-American War in 1898, the subsequent national eruption of patriotic fervor, and some cagey showmanship on Sousa’s part that catapulted “The Stars and Stripes Forever!” into its unique status. The 1897 premiere of the march went over well, but at first sales didn’t surpass the other Sousa marches available at the time. Gilmore, whose favorite toast was, "Here's to the Stars and Stripes forever!” The work’s title was a tribute to one of Sousa’s mentors, another legendary bandmaster named Patrick S. On today’s date in 1897, John Philip Sousa was in Philadelphia and leading his band in the premiere performance of “The Stars and Stripes Forever!” Sousa wrote his most famous march on Christmas Day, 1896, in a New York hotel room-completing the score, he said, in just a couple of hours.













Stars and stripes forever