John Philip Sousa Foundation

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John Philip Sousa Foundation
Formation1980
TypeNon-profit foundation
HeadquartersLafayette, IN, United States
President & CEO
Lowell E. Graham
Key people
  • Jay Gephart
  • Douglas Harter
  • Gerald Guilbeaux
  • Tim Rhea
  • Roy Holder
  • Michael Colburn
Revenue (2015)
$91,026[1]
Expenses (2015)$89,745[1]
Websitewww.sousafoundation.net

The John Philip Sousa Foundation is a non-profit foundation dedicated to the promotion of band music internationally. The foundation administers a number of projects and awards supporting high quality band performance, conducting, and composition.

The foundation is named for John Philip Sousa, a prominent composer of American band music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Successor to the Sousa Memorial Committee, the organization was reorganized as the John Philip Sousa Foundation in 1980 with support from Louis Sudler, a Chicago real estate developer and arts patron for whom many of the foundation's awards are named.[2][3]

Projects[edit]

Projects of the Sousa Foundation include funding for the main stage at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., honor bands, conducting competitions, awards for outstanding performing ensembles, and bringing attention to historic sites in band history. Many of the foundation's awards are funded through an endowment from Louis and Virginia Sudler, and are collectively known as the "Louis Sudler Awards of Merit".

The Sousa National High School Honors Band[edit]

Founded in 1981, the Sousa National High School Honors Band is an ensemble made up of roughly 100 high school junior and senior musicians, selected from the top applicants worldwide. The band performs semi-regularly at a variety of locations around the United States.

The Sudler Flag of Honor[edit]

The Sudler Flag of Honor is an award bestowed to identify, recognize and honor high school band programs internationally that have demonstrated particularly significant high standards of excellence in concert activities over a period of several years. No school may win the award twice under the same director. The official description of a deserving band is:

The band must have achieved and maintained a high standard of excellence in the concert area over a period of several years. The concert band will have placed itself in situations where there has been opportunity for evaluation by qualified persons or has been rated "superior" at state, regional, or national levels in concert activities. The band program must offer its participants a complete and balanced program of musical activities including concert, solo, ensemble, and marching areas. The band should have performed at regional, state, national, and professional meetings of significance. These can include but are not limited to state music conventions, regional or national MENC meetings, and state or national band association conventions. The director must have been incumbent in his/her position for at least seven years, including the current year. A number of the students in the band should have participated in district and all-state honor bands or similar all-area groups.[4]

The Sudler Flag of Honor is typically considered to be the highest award a high school band can achieve. Sudler Flag laureate bands are automatically included on the Historic Roll of Honor. The following are the recipients of the Sudler Flag since its inception in 1983:[4]

The Sudler Cup[edit]

The Sudler Cup is an award bestowed to identify, recognize and honor junior high and middle school concert band programs that have demonstrated particularly significant high standards of excellence in concert activities over a period of several years. The official description of a deserving band is:

The band must have achieved and maintained a high standard of literature in the concert area over a period of several years. The concert band will have placed itself in situations where there has been opportunity for evaluation by qualified persons or has been rated "superior" at state, regional, or national levels in concert activities. The band should have performed at regional, state, national, and professional meetings of significance. These can include but are not limited to state music conventions, regional or national MENC meetings, and state or national band association conventions. The director must have been incumbent in his/her position for at least seven years, including the current year. A number of the students in the band should have participated in district and all-state honor bands or similar all-area groups. The total program of music should exemplify what is considered a sound viable, music education program for this level of endeavor.[5]

The following are the recipients of the Sudler Cup since its inception in 1985:[5]

Sudler Trophy[edit]

UMass' Sudler Trophy, awarded in 1998

The Sudler Trophy is an award bestowed on one university marching band. It was awarded annually from 1982 to 2007 and biannually since then. Described by a Los Angeles Times reporter as "[t]he Heisman Trophy of the collegiate band world",[6] the award does not represent the winner of any championship, but rather a band surrounded by great tradition that has become respected nationally. No school may be honored with the award twice. According to the official description of the trophy:

The purpose of the Sudler Trophy is to identify and recognize collegiate marching bands of particular excellence who have made outstanding contributions to the American way of life. The Sudler Trophy is awarded annually to a college or university marching band which has demonstrated the highest musical standards and innovative marching routines and ideas, and which has made important contributions to the advancement of the performance standards of college marching bands over a period of years.

The trophy measures exactly 22.5 inches (57 cm) from the base to the tip of the drum major's mace; precisely the size of a standard 8 to 5 step in marching.[7][8]

The following are the recipients of the Sudler Trophy since its inception in 1982:[7]

List of Sudler Trophy recipients
Year Marching band University
1982 Michigan Marching Band University of Michigan
1983 Marching Illini University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
1984 The Ohio State University Marching Band Ohio State University
1985 Marching 100 Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University
1986 Longhorn Band University of Texas at Austin
1987 Pride of Oklahoma University of Oklahoma
1988 Spartan Marching Band Michigan State University
1989 Marching Jayhawks University of Kansas
1990 Hawkeye Marching Band University of Iowa
1991 Sun Devil Marching Band Arizona State University
1992 Wildcat Marching Band Northwestern University
1993 Bruin Marching Band University of California, Los Angeles
1994 Marching Royal Dukes James Madison University
1995 All-American Marching Band Purdue University
1996 Cornhusker Marching Band University of Nebraska–Lincoln
1997 Mountaineer Marching Band West Virginia University
1998 Minuteman Marching Band University of Massachusetts Amherst
1999 Goin' Band from Raiderland Texas Tech University
2000 Georgia Redcoat Marching Band University of Georgia
2001 Fightin' Texas Aggie Band Texas A&M University
2002 Tiger Marching Band Louisiana State University
2003 Million Dollar Band University of Alabama
2004 Auburn University Marching Band Auburn University
2005 Penn State Blue Band Pennsylvania State University
2006 Razorback Marching Band University of Arkansas
2007 Marching Hundred Indiana University Bloomington
2009 Pride of the Mountains Western Carolina University
2011 Band of the Fighting Irish University of Notre Dame
2013 The Pride of the Sunshine University of Florida
2015 The Pride of Wildcat Land Kansas State University
2017 Iowa State University Cyclone Football 'Varsity' Marching Band Iowa State University
2019 "Incomparable" Golden Rams Marching Band West Chester University of Pennsylvania
2022 The Marching Southerners Jacksonville State University
2024 The Pride of Arizona University of Arizona

The Sudler Shield[edit]

The Sudler Shield recognizes outstanding high school marching bands.

The following are the recipients of the Sudler Shield:[9]

The Sudler Silver Scroll[edit]

The Sudler Scroll recognizes and honors those community bands that have demonstrated particularly high standards of excellence in concert activities over a period of several years, and which have played a significant and leading role in the cultural and musical environment in their respective communities.

Those community concert bands which have won the award include:[10]

The Sudler International Composition Competition[edit]

The Sudler International Composition Competition is a biennial competition for wind band composition.

The following are the winners of the competition since its inception in 1983:

Year Composition Composer
1983 Concerto for Wind Ensemble Karel Husa
1985 Winds of Nagual Michael Colgrass
1987 Piece of Mind Dana Wilson
1989 Symphony No. 1 "The Lord of the Rings" Johan de Meij
1991 American Games Nicholas Maw
1993 Passacaglia (Homage on B-A-C-H) Ron Nelson
1997 Dance Movements Philip Sparke

Sousa/Ostwald Award[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "John Philip Sousa Foundation" (PDF). Foundation Center. Retrieved 19 February 2018.
  2. ^ Paul E. Bierley, John Philip Sousa: American Phenomenon (Alfred Music Publishing, 2001), ISBN 978-0-7579-0612-1, p, 207. Excerpt available at Google Books.
  3. ^ "Louis C. Sudler, 89, Savior of a Symphony", The New York Times, August 28, 1992.
  4. ^ a b "The Sudler Flag of Honor". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  5. ^ a b "The John Philip Sousa Foundation Sudler Cup". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  6. ^ Deborah Schoch, "The game's other score: Football matters on New Year's Day, sure, but a second set of rivals will march onto the field in Pasadena: the schools' bands." Los Angeles Times, December 31, 2006.
  7. ^ a b "The Sudler Trophy". John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  8. ^ Wayne, Bailey; Caneva, Thomas (2003). The Complete Marching Band Resource Manual. University of Pennsylvania Press, Incorporated. p. 4. ISBN 9780812218565. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  9. ^ "The Sudler Shield". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  10. ^ "The Sudler Silver Scroll". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.

External links[edit]