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John Philip Sousa Quotes


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John Philip Sousa
November 6, 1854 - March 6, 1932
Nationality: American
Category: Musician
Subcategory: American Musician

Any composer who is gloriously conscious that he is a composer must believe that he receives his inspiration from a source higher than himself.

   

I still feel the impulse to give young writers a hearing, and I believe I have played more unpublished compositions than any other band leader in the country.

   

I firmly believe that we have more latent musical talent in America than there is in any other country. But to dig it out there must be good music throughout the land, a lot of it. Everyone must hear it, and such a process takes time.

   

I have always believed that 98% of a student's progress is due to his own efforts, and 2% to his teacher.

   

Jazz will endure just as long people hear it through their feet instead of their brains.

   

America can well expect to develop a goodly amount of composers for she has a goodly number of people.

   

There is one thing that freezes a musician more than the deadliest physical cold, and that is the spiritual chill of an unresponsive audience!

   

No nation as young as America can be expected to become immediately a power in the arts.

   

My success is not due to any personal superiority over other people.

   

To the average mind popular music would mean compositions vulgarly conceived and commonplace in their treatment. That is absolutely false.

   

Governmental aid is a drawback rather than an assistance, as, although it may facilitate in the routine of artistic production, it is an impediment to the development of true artistic genius.

   

The average music-lover hears only the production under prevailing conditions.

   

Is it not the business of the conductor to convey to the public in its dramatic form the central idea of a composition; and how can he convey that idea successfully if he does not enter heart and soul into the life of the music and the tale it unfolds?

   

Anybody can write music of a sort. But touching the public heart is quite another thing.

   

Remember always that the composer's pen is still mightier than the bow of the violinist; in you lie all the possibilities of the creation of beauty.

   

I am happy now, to recall that I was no only his son but his companion, and whenever there was a hunting expedition or any other pleasure, I was always with him.

   

American teachers have one indisputable advantage over foreign ones; they understand the American temperament and can judge its unevenness, its lights and its shadows.

   

The movements which I make I cannot possibly repress because, at the time, I am actually the idea I am interpreting, and naturally I picture my players and auditors as in accord with me. I know, of course, that my mannerisms have been widely discussed.

   

There is much modern music that is better adapted to a wind combination than to a string, although for obvious reasons originally scored for an orchestra. If in such cases the interpretation is equal to the composition the balance of a wind combination is more satisfying.

   

From childhood I was passionately fond of music and wanted to be a musician. I have no recollection of any real desire ever to be anything else.

   

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