Stumbled upon an important Sousaphone reference
Posted: Sat Aug 29, 2020 5:54 am
Hi all,
As much as I am grateful for digital search mechanisms, they don't always work. For years now I've scoured various online newspaper sites to find the earliest references to the Sousaphone, and this popped up today in an entirely unrelated search:
It is from the February 11, 1896 edition of The Helena Independent (Montana), and it is now the earliest known reference to a Sousaphone in the press.
Sousa's Band had just given a concert in Helena the day before, and featured in the bass section was an odd looking helicon bass with a huge upright bell. The reporter, understandably, found it worth commenting on, as no such instrument had ever been seen before - at least in Helena!
The remarkably tall man who wielded the monster was none other than Herman Conrad, who had indeed been with Gilmore's Band, starting in 1888, after immigrating to America from Germany, and who had joined Sousa in early 1893, a handful of months after Gilmore's death.
The Sousaphone featured on this tour, which began on January 1, 1896, had been built by J. W. Pepper at some point in 1895 - over two years before C. G. Conn built his Sousaphone (although, to this day, Conn-Selmer still wrongly claims to have built the first Sousaphone the world had ever seen).
Okay, probably more than you wanted to know, but this stuff gets me excited!
For the only known photo of this historic horn on that 1896 Sousa Band tour, see this post: http://tubapastor.blogspot.com/2015/10/ ... -1896.html
[And yes, that's the very same horn in my avatar above!]
Enjoy!
Dave
As much as I am grateful for digital search mechanisms, they don't always work. For years now I've scoured various online newspaper sites to find the earliest references to the Sousaphone, and this popped up today in an entirely unrelated search:
It is from the February 11, 1896 edition of The Helena Independent (Montana), and it is now the earliest known reference to a Sousaphone in the press.
Sousa's Band had just given a concert in Helena the day before, and featured in the bass section was an odd looking helicon bass with a huge upright bell. The reporter, understandably, found it worth commenting on, as no such instrument had ever been seen before - at least in Helena!
The remarkably tall man who wielded the monster was none other than Herman Conrad, who had indeed been with Gilmore's Band, starting in 1888, after immigrating to America from Germany, and who had joined Sousa in early 1893, a handful of months after Gilmore's death.
The Sousaphone featured on this tour, which began on January 1, 1896, had been built by J. W. Pepper at some point in 1895 - over two years before C. G. Conn built his Sousaphone (although, to this day, Conn-Selmer still wrongly claims to have built the first Sousaphone the world had ever seen).
Okay, probably more than you wanted to know, but this stuff gets me excited!
For the only known photo of this historic horn on that 1896 Sousa Band tour, see this post: http://tubapastor.blogspot.com/2015/10/ ... -1896.html
[And yes, that's the very same horn in my avatar above!]
Enjoy!
Dave