RIP Jesse Allen
Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2023 9:18 pm
This is my high school mentor (adulting and tuba playing) who was the son of a railroad widow, lived in a two bedroom house with a gravel driveway, never had one tuba lesson, auditioned into the Army in the 12th grade (with a Conn 36K fiberglass sousaphone), and was kicked upstairs into Pershing's Own the next year.
A fellow D.C. bandsman had this to say upon news of his passing:
"wonderful man, a fine musician. I learned a great deal about character from Jesse. Love to his family."
He saved money from his military pay, and bought a new 186 B-flat.
When in Pershing's Own, he was handed a Hirsbrunner C tuba, shrugged his shoulders, and played it.
His teenage life goals were to get in to some sort of military band (surely...?? so as to avoid being sent to Vietnam), marry his high school sweetheart, move to Nashville, and get some sort of decent-paying job. After one stint in Pershing's Own, he had accomplished all of those, and then went on to raise a beautiful family and provide for them. (When he left the Army, he immediately handed me that 186, and asked me to sell it for him. A few decades later, he decided to play the tuba and euphonium once again.)
He was such an extremely GOOD person, that it was just a bit humbling to be in his presence.
...a life extremely well-lived.
A fellow D.C. bandsman had this to say upon news of his passing:
"wonderful man, a fine musician. I learned a great deal about character from Jesse. Love to his family."
He saved money from his military pay, and bought a new 186 B-flat.
When in Pershing's Own, he was handed a Hirsbrunner C tuba, shrugged his shoulders, and played it.
His teenage life goals were to get in to some sort of military band (surely...?? so as to avoid being sent to Vietnam), marry his high school sweetheart, move to Nashville, and get some sort of decent-paying job. After one stint in Pershing's Own, he had accomplished all of those, and then went on to raise a beautiful family and provide for them. (When he left the Army, he immediately handed me that 186, and asked me to sell it for him. A few decades later, he decided to play the tuba and euphonium once again.)
He was such an extremely GOOD person, that it was just a bit humbling to be in his presence.
...a life extremely well-lived.