John Philip Sousa Foundation
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.
Formation | 1980 |
---|---|
Type | Non-profit foundation |
Headquarters | Lafayette, IN, United States |
President & CEO | Lowell E. Graham |
Key people |
|
Revenue (2015) | $91,026[1] |
Expenses (2015) | $89,745[1] |
Website | www.sousafoundation.net |
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
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
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 biennially in New Orleans, Louisiana, and is conducted by former United States Marine Band conductor Col. John R. Bourgeois.
The Sudler Flag of Honor
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]
- 1983 - Alice High School Band, Alice, Texas
- 1983 - L. D. Bell High School Band, Hurst, Texas
- 1983 - Georgetown High School Band, Georgetown, Texas
- 1983 - North Hills High School Band, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- 1983 - Papillion-La Vista Senior High School Band, Papillion, Nebraska
- 1983 - Richardson High School Band, Richardson, Texas
- 1983 - Wheat Ridge High School Band, Wheat Ridge, Colorado
- 1984 - Lloyd V. Berkner High School Band, Richardson, Texas
- 1984 - Glenbard East High School Band, Lombard, Illinois
- 1984 - Hardaway High School Band, Columbus, Georgia
- 1984 - Reynoldsburg High School Band, Reynoldsburg, Ohio
- 1984 - Oconomowoc High School Band, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
- 1985 - Clear Lake High School Band, Houston, Texas
- 1985 - Grand Ledge High School Band, Grand Ledge, Michigan
- 1985 - South Lakes High School Band, Reston, Virginia
- 1985 - Stevens High School Band, Rapid City, South Dakota
- 1985 - Valparaiso High School Band, Valparaiso, Indiana
- 1986 - J.J. Pearce High School Band, Richardson, Texas
- 1986 - Lakeland High School Band, Lakeland, Florida
- 1987 - Auburn High School Band, Auburn, Alabama
- 1987 - Lake Highlands High School Band, Dallas, Texas
- 1988 - Duncanville High School Band, Duncanville, Texas
- 1988 - Lassiter High School Band, Marietta, Georgia
- 1988 - Mason City High School Band, Mason City, Iowa
- 1989 - Coronado High School Band, El Paso, Texas
- 1989 - James Madison High School Band, Vienna, Virginia
- 1989 - Sumter High School Band, Sumter, South Carolina
- 1990 - Herndon High School Band, Herndon, Virginia
- 1991 - Marian Catholic High School Band, Chicago Heights, Illinois
- 1991 - Pearl City High School Band, Pearl City, Hawaii
- 1991 - Robert E. Lee High School Band, Midland, Texas
- 1992 - J.W. Robinson High School Band, Fairfax, Virginia
- 1993 - Lakeland High School Band, Lakeland, Florida
- 1993 - George C. Marshall High School Band, Falls Church, Virginia
- 1994 - Clements High School Band, Sugar Land, Texas
- 1994 - Lake Braddock Secondary School Band, Burke, Virginia
- 1994 - The Colony High School Band, The Colony, Texas
- 1994 - Westfield High School Band, Houston, Texas
- 1995 - W.T. Woodson High School Band, Fairfax, Virginia
- 1995 - Spring High School Band, Spring, Texas
- 1996 - Norcross High School Band, Norcross, Georgia
- 1997 - Klein Forest High School Band, Houston, Texas
- 1997 - Langham Creek High School Band, Houston, Texas
- 1997 - Owasso High School Band, Owasso, Oklahoma
- 1997 - Westmoore High School Band, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
- 1998 - Jack C. Hays High School Band, Buda, Texas
- 1998 - Westlake High School Band, Austin, Texas
- 1999 - Irmo High School Band, Irmo, South Carolina
- 2000 - Leon High School Band, Tallahassee, Florida
- 2000 - J.J. Pearce High School Band, Richardson, Texas
- 2000 - McLean High School Band, McLean, Virginia
- 2002 - Buchholz High School Band, Gainesville, Florida
- 2003 - North Hardin High School Band, Radcliff, Kentucky
- 2003 - The Woodlands High School Band, The Woodlands, Texas
- 2004 - Dobyns-Bennett High School Band, Kingsport, Tennessee
- 2004 - Lloyd V. Berkner High School Band, Richardson, Texas
- 2005 - J.W. Robinson High School Band, Fairfax, Virginia
- 2005 - Parkview High School Band, Lilburn, Georgia
- 2006 - Friendswood High School Band, Friendswood, Texas
- 2006 - Harrison High School Band, Kennesaw, Georgia
- 2007 - Wando High School Band, Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina
- 2007 - John Hersey High School Band, Arlington Heights, Illinois
- 2008 - William Mason High School Band, Mason, Ohio
- 2008 - Lockport Township High School Band, Lockport, Illinois
- 2008 - Poteet High School Band, Mesquite, Texas
- 2008 - Permian High School Band, Odessa, Texas
- 2009 - Neuqua Valley High School Band, Naperville, Illinois
- 2010 - None selected
- 2011 - James Madison High School Band, Vienna, Virginia
- 2011 - Hebron High School Band, Carrollton, Texas
- 2011 - W.T. Woodson High School Band, Fairfax, Virginia
- 2012 - Roxbury High School Band, Succasunna, New Jersey
- 2013 - Marcus High School Band, Flower Mound, Texas
- 2014 - Lafayette High School Band, Lexington, Kentucky
- 2015 - Midlothian High School Band, Midlothian, Texas
- 2015 - Plano East Senior High School Band, Plano, Texas
- 2016 - Brazoswood High School Band, Clute, Texas
- 2017 - Lake Braddock Secondary School Band, Burke, Virginia
- 2017 - McLean High School Band, McLean, Virginia
- 2018 - None selected
The Sudler Cup
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]
- 1985 - Morehead Junior High, El Paso, Texas
- 1985 - Asheville Junior High, Asheville, North Carolina
- 1985 - Gunn Junior High, Arlington, Texas
- 1985 - Oconomowoc Junior High, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
- 1986 - Adamson Junior High, Rex, Georgia
- 1986 - Southwest Junior High, Lakeland, Florida
- 1987 - Morrow Junior High, Morrow, Georgia
- 1988 - Scottsbluff Junior High, Scottsbluff, Nebraska
- 1989 - Richardson North Jr. High, Richardson, Texas
- 1989 - David Crokett Junior High, Odessa, Texas
- 1990 - Murchison Middle School, Austin, Texas
- 1990 - Thoreau Intermediate School, Vienna, Virginia
- 1990 - Westwood Junior High, Dallas, Texas
- 1992 - McAdams Middle School, Dickinson, Texas
- 1992 - Wm. Adams Junior High, Alice, Texas
- 1993 - Highlands Intermediate School, Pearl City, Hawaii
- 1993 - Hodges Bend Middle School, Houston, Texas
- 1994 - DeSoto West Middle School, DeSoto, Texas
- 1994 - Pittman Middle School, Hueytown, Alabama
- 1995 - Prairie Middle School, Hutchinson, Kansas
- 1995 - Herndon Middle School, Herndon, Virginia
- 1997 - Nimitz Jr. High School, Odessa, Texas
- 1997 - Robinson Middle School, Fairfax, Virginia
- 1997 - The Colony Middle School, The Colony, Texas
- 1999 - Longfellow Middle School, Falls Church, Virginia
- 2000 - Irmo Middle School, Columbia, South Carolina
- 2000 - Space Center Intermediate School, Houston, Texas
- 2001 - Gordon A. Bailey Middle School, Austin, Texas
- 2001 - Robert Frost Middle School, Fairfax, Virginia
- 2001 - Lake Braddock Secondary School, Burke, Virginia
- 2002 - First Colony Middle School, Sugar Land, Texas
- 2003 - Coyle Middle School, Rowlett, Texas
- 2003 - Grisham Middle School, Austin, Texas
- 2004 - North Ridge Middle School, N Richmond, Texas
- 2004 - Holub Middle School, Houston, Texas
- 2005 - L.J Alemann Middle School, Lafayette, Louisiana
- 2005 - Cooper Middle School, McLean, Virginia
- 2006 - Oliver McCracken Middle School, Skokie, Illinois
- 2007 - Cedar Park Middle School, Cedar Park, Texas
- 2008 - Fort Settlement Middle School, Sugar Land, Texas
- 2010 - Artie Henry Middle School, Cedar Park, Texas
- 2010 - Forbes Middle School, Georgetown, Texas
- 2010 - Space Center Intermediate School, Houston, Texas
- 2011 - Kealing Middle School Wind Ensemble, Austin, Texas
- 2012 - Fort Clarke Middle School Symphonic Band, Gainesville, Florida
- 2012 - West Ridge Middle School Wind Ensemble Band, Austin, Texas
- 2013 - Indian Springs Middle School Band, Keller, Texas
- 2014 - Rice Middle School Wind Ensemble, Plano, Texas
- 2016 - Adelle R. Clark Middle School Band, Frisco, Texas
- 2017 - Canyon Ridge Middle School, Austin, Texas
- 2017 - Cockrill Middle School, McKinney, Texas
- 2017 - Riverwatch Middle School, Suwanee, Georgia
- 2017 - Shadow Ridge Middle School, Flower Mound, Texas
- 2018 - TA Howard Middle School Middle School, Mansfield, Texas
- 2019 - Arbor Creek Middle School, Carrollton, Texas
Sudler Trophy
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 22½ inches 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:
The Sudler Shield
The Sudler Shield recognizes outstanding high school marching bands.
The following are the recipients of the Sudler Shield:[9]
- 1987 - Enterprise High School, Enterprise, Alabama
- 1987 - Federal Hocking High School, Stewart, Ohio
- 1987 - Mountain Crest High School, Hyrum, Utah
- 1987 - Tenri Seminary High School, Nara, Nara, Japan
- 1988 - Cambridge High School, Cambridge, Ohio
- 1988 - Clovis High School, Clovis, California
- 1988 - John Overton High School, Nashville, Tennessee
- 1989 - Grove City High School, Grove City, Ohio
- 1989 - Mills E. Godwin High School, Richmond, Virginia
- 1989 - Manzano High School, Albuquerque, New Mexico
- 1989 - Mt. Juliet High School, Mount Juliet, Tennessee
- 1989 - Neuces Canyon High School, Barksdale, Texas
- 1989 - Newton High School, Pleasant Hill, Ohio
- 1989 - Norwin High School, North Huntingdon Township, Pennsylvania
- 1990 - Clinton High School, Clinton, Mississippi
- 1991 - Lafayette High School, Lexington, Kentucky
- 1992 - Coronado High School Band, El Paso, Texas
- 1992 - John Overton High School, Nashville, Tennessee
- 1992 - North Hardin High School, Radcliff, Kentucky
- 1992 - Pope High School, Marietta, Georgia
- 1993 - Fred C. Beyer High School, Modesto, California
- 1993 - Sumter High School, Sumter, South Carolina
- 1994 - McGavock High School, Nashville, Tennessee
- 1996 - Paul Laurence Dunbar High School, Lexington, Kentucky
- 1997 - Marian Catholic High School, Chicago Heights, Illinois
- 1998 - Duncanville High School, Duncanville, Texas
- 1998 - Lafayette High School, Lexington, Kentucky
- 1998 - Lassiter High School, Marietta, Georgia
- 1998 - Pupuk Kaltim School, Bontang, Kaltim, Indonesia
- 1999 - Broken Arrow High School, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma
- 1999 - Harrison County High School, Cynthiana, Kentucky
- 1999 - Westfield High School, Houston, Texas
- 2000 - Aimachi Marching Band, Handa, Aichi, Japan
- 2000 - Lawrence Central High School, Indianapolis, Indiana
- 2001 - James F. Byrnes High School, Duncan, South Carolina
- 2002 - Kashiwa City High School, Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan
- 2002 - Kennesaw Mountain High School, Kennesaw, Georgia
- 2002 - Yokohama Marching Band, Yokohama, Japan
- 2003 - Allen High School, Allen, Texas
- 2003 - Seminole High School, Seminole, Florida
- 2004 - Collins Hill High School, Suwanee, Georgia
- 2004 - L.D. Bell High School, Hurst, Texas
- 2004 - Owasso High School, Owasso, Oklahoma
- 2005 - James Bowie High School, Austin, Texas
- 2005 - Show and Marchingband Kunst & Genoegen, Leiden, Netherlands
- 2005 - Paul Laurence Dunbar High School, Lexington, Kentucky
- 2005 - Ronald Reagan High School, San Antonio, Texas
- 2006 - Cedar Park High School, Cedar Park, Texas
- 2006 - Langham Creek High School, Houston, Texas
- 2007 - Avon High School, Avon, Indiana
- 2007 - Marcus High School, Flower Mound, Texas
- 2008 - Broken Arrow High School, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma
- 2008 - Coppell High School, Coppell, Texas
- 2008 - Musica Grato High School, Himi, Toyama, Japan
- 2008 - Tarpon Springs High School, Tarpon Springs, Florida
- 2009 - American Fork High School, American Fork, Utah
- 2009 - Chonkanyanukoon High School, Amphur Muang, Chomburi, Thailand
- 2009 - Walton High School, Marietta, Georgia
- 2009 - The Woodlands High School, The Woodlands, Texas
- 2010 - Hebron High School, Carrollton, Texas
- 2010 - Westlake High School, Austin, Texas
- 2011 - Sultanah Asma Marching Band, Kedah, Malaysia
- 2011 - Homestead High School, Fort Wayne, Indiana
- 2011 - William Mason High School, Mason, Ohio
- 2012 - Carmel High School, Carmel, Indiana
- 2012 - Plano East Senior High School, Plano, Texas
- 2013 - Blue Springs High School, Blue Springs, Missouri
- 2013 - Calgary Stampede Showband, Calgary, Alberta
- 2013 - James Bowie High School, Austin, Texas
- 2013 - Kanagawa Prefecture Shonandai High School, Fujisawa, Kanagawa, Japan
- 2014 - Claudia Taylor Johnson High School, San Antonio, Texas
- 2014 - Dobyns-Bennett High School, Kingsport, Tennessee
- 2014 - Franklin High School, Franklin, Tennessee
- 2014 - Round Rock High School, Round Rock, Texas
- 2015 - Broken Arrow High School, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma
- 2015 - Keller High School, Keller, Texas
- 2016 - Castle High School, Newburgh, Indiana
- 2016 - Chien Kuo Senior High School, Taipei City, Taiwan
- 2016 - Keat Hwa Secondary School, Alor Setar, Kedah, Malaysia
- 2016 - Russell County High School, Russell Springs, Kentucky
- 2016 - Vista Murrieta High School, Murrieta, California
- 2017 - Flower Mound High School, Flower Mound, Texas
- 2017 - Greendale High School, Greendale, Wisconsin
- 2017 - Morton High School, Morton, Illinois
- 2017 - Vista Ridge High School, Cedar Park, Texas
- 2018 - Adair County High School, Columbia, Kentucky
- 2018 - Carmel High School, Carmel, Indiana
- 2018 - North Lamar High School, Paris, Texas
- 2018 - The Woodlands High School, The Woodlands, Texas
- 2019 - Mineola High School, Mineola, Texas
- 2019 - Vandegrift High School, Austin, Texas
The Sudler Silver Scroll
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]
- Northshore Concert Band, Evanston, Illinois (1987)
- Lawrence City Band, Lawrence, Kansas (1988)
- Kiel Municipal Band, Kiel, Wisconsin (1990)
- Tacoma Concert Band, Tacoma, Washington (1990)
- Allentown Band, Allentown, Pennsylvania (1990)
- Naperville Municipal Band, Naperville, Illinois (1991)
- Sarasota Mobile Home Band, Sarasota, Florida (1993)
- Austin Symphonic Band, Austin, Texas (1993)
- Racine Municipal Band, Racine, Wisconsin (1994)
- Lansing Concert Band, Lansing, Michigan (1994)
- Texas Wind Symphony, Arlington, Texas (1995)
- Medalist Concert Band, Bloomington, Minnesota (1995)
- Kent Stark Concert Band, Canton, Ohio (1996)
- Scottsdale Concert Band, Scottsdale, Arizona (1996)
- Ridgewood Concert Band, Ridgewood, New Jersey (1996)
- Tara Winds Concert Band, Hampton, Georgia (1996)
- Coastal Communities Concert Band, San Diego, California (1997)
- Lakeland Civic Band, Kirtland, Ohio (1997)
- Twin City Concert Band, West Monroe, Louisiana (1997)
- San Jose Wind Symphony, San Jose, California (1998)
- Corpus Christi Wind Symphony, Corpus Christi, Texas (1998)
- Community Band of Brevard, Brevard County, Florida (1999)
- Lafayette Concert Band, Lafayette, Louisiana (1999)
- Virginia Grand Military Band, Arlington, Virginia (2000)
- Allentown Band, Allentown, Pennsylvania (1990)
- Lafayette Citizens Band, Lafayette, Indiana (2001)
- Pensacola Civic Band, Pensacola, Florida (2002)
- Tempe Wind Ensemble, Tempe, Arizona (2002)
- Atlanta Wind Symphony, Atlanta, Georgia (2003)
- Houston Symphonic Band, Houston, Texas (2003)
- Penn Central Wind Band, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania (2004)
- City of Fairfax Band, Fairfax, Virginia (2004)
- West Michigan Winds, Muskegon, Michigan (2005)
- Knightwind Ensemble, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (2005)
- South Jersey Area Wind Ensemble, Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey (2006)
- Oregon Symphonic Band, Portland, Oregon (2007)
- Tennessee Concert Band, Knoxville, Tennessee (2007)
- East Winds Symphonic Band, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (2008)
- Minnesota Symphonic Winds, Edina, Minnesota (2009)
- Cobb Wind Symphony, Marietta, Georgia (2009)
- Savannah River Winds, North Augusta, South Carolina (2010)
- Virginia Wind Symphony, Norfolk, Virginia (2011)
- Lone Star Symphonic Band, Houston, Texas (2012)
- Lake Oswego Millennium Concert Band, Lake Oswego, Oregon (2013)
- Concord Band, Concord, Massachusetts (2013)
- East Texas Symphonic Band, Longview, Texas (2014)
- Metropolitan Wind Symphony, Boston, Massachusetts (2015)
- Sierra Nevada Wind Orchestra, Gold River, California (2015)
- Montgomery County Concert Band, Hatfield, Pennsylvania (2017)
- Waukesha Area Symphonic Band, Oconomowoc, Wisconsin (2017)
- Carrollton Wind Symphony, Frisco, Texas (2017)
- Buffalo Niagara Concert Band, Buffalo, New York (2018)
The Sudler International Composition Competition
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
References
- "John Philip Sousa Foundation" (PDF). Foundation Center. Retrieved 19 February 2018.
- 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.
- "Louis C. Sudler, 89, Savior of a Symphony", The New York Times, August 28, 1992.
- "The Sudler Flag of Honor". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- "The John Philip Sousa Foundation Sudler Cup". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- 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.
- "The John Philip Sousa Foundation Sudler Trophy". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- Wayne, Bailey; Caneva, Thomas (2003). The Complete Marching Band Resource Manual. University of Pennsylvania Press, Incorporated. p. 4. ISBN 9780812218565. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- "The Sudler Shield". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- "The Sudler Silver Scroll". The John Philip Sousa Foundation. The John Philip Sousa Foundation. Retrieved 23 April 2020.