Edward A. Lefebre - Doctorado Manhattan Achool of Music PDF
Edward A. Lefebre - Doctorado Manhattan Achool of Music PDF
Edward A. Lefebre - Doctorado Manhattan Achool of Music PDF
LEFEBRE (1835*-1911):
PREEMINENT SAXOPHONIST OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
by
JAMES RUSSELL NOYES
Submitted to
The Manhattan School of Music
in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of
Doctor of Musical Arts
and approved by
________________________________
________________________________
________________________________
May 2000
Dedicated to my parents,
for teaching me
the true meaning of
love and generosity.
ABSTRACT
As the saxophone continues to play an everincreasing role in music throughout the world, interest
has begun to shift to its earlier traditions and
legacies.
develop and promote the saxophone, and his nineteenthcentury European legacy has been well documented.
Much
It
ii
Lefebre was
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ABSTRACT...............................................ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.......................................vi
PREFACE..............................................viii
TIME LINE: LEFEBRES PROFESSIONAL CAREER.............xiii
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION.............................1
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CONCLUSION.............................188
iv
APPENDIX A
PERFORMANCES...........................194
Solo...................................194
Chamber................................197
Variations with Band...................198
APPENDIX B
PUBLICATIONS...........................199
Solos..................................199
Duets..................................203
Quartets...............................203
APPENDIX C
APPENDIX D
APPENDIX E
ADDENDUM
BIBLIOGRAPHY..........................................243
INDEX.................................................252
LEFEBRES LAST BAND, SAXOPHONE SYMPOSIUM 26 (2001)....255
POST-ADDENDUM
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The
vi
vii
PREFACE
In the fall of 1997, while enrolled in my first
semester at the Manhattan School of Music, I settled on
The History of the Classical Saxophone Quartet as my
doctoral thesis topic.
The
viii
To my
ix
Nearing the
Could it
and his resentful son Edward Jr., who, with his mother,
had raised the family in his fathers absence, was truly
remarkable.
xi
Saxophone King.2
James R. Noyes
New York, Spring, 2000
xii
Edward A. Lefebre
Professional Career
(c.1855-1911)
55-678960-12345678970-12345678980-12345678990-12345678900-12345678910 1
(Paris)
Cape Town
The Hague
London
U.S.A.
Parepa Rosa English Opera Company
Gilmore Band
New York Saxophone Quartette Club
Caryl Florio
Lyceum Concert Club
Harry Rowe Shelley
Carl Fischer
C. G. Conn
Sousa Band
Elkhart
Conn Conservatory
Trumpet Notes Band
Conn Wonder Quartette
Lefebre Quartet
Freelance
(Ill)
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
However,
As
But
Were there
Lefebre.
He was also a
In 1915,
CHAPTER II
ADOLPHE SAX AND THE BIRTH OF THE SAXOPHONE
c.1840-1857
It is
Adolphe Sax.5
By 1845, saxophones were incorporated into the
instrumentation of French military bands, and in 1846, a
saxophone patent was granted Sax by the French
government.
It is
In 1851 Limander de
By this
Indeed,
6
7
8
9
According to Halvy:
10
Ibid, 295.
Ibid, 295.
12
As told to Paul Cohen by Sigurd Rascher.
13
Harry Hindson, Aspects of the Saxophone in American Musical
Culture, 1850-1980 (Ph.D. diss., University of Wisconsin - Madison,
1992), 1-2.
11
souvenirs de Paris.14
14
10
It is
18
19
20
11
On
Ibid, 51.
Ibid.
Ibid.
12
Up to this point,
Saxophonists performed
13
Other
The American
It is perhaps
14
Composers,
28
15
CHAPTER III
LEFEBRES MISSION BEGINS, c.1855-1873
It
16
but one can assume it was in the 1850s (his career from
1859-1911 is well documented).
By
4
5
6
17
South Africa
E. A. Lefebre traveled to Cape Town, South Africa in
1859.
He also
During his
It is reasonable to
Both compositions
His wife,
18
The first
E. A. Lefebre
19
While not
It is unknown if the
13
20
21
Other
In 1871 he was
Subsequently, Lefebre
As part of their
Their repertoire
21
22
Ibid.
23
In
27
Ibid, 3-4.
Edward A. Lefebre, American Art Journal XXXIX no. 1 (April 28,
1883): 3.
29
Hemke, The Early History..., 402.
30
Frank J. Cipolla, Gilmore, Patrick S., in The New Grove
Dictionary of American Music, eds. H. Wiley Hitchcock and Stanley
Sadie, 1986.
31
Ibid.
28
24
32
25
He soon
36
26
CHAPTER IV
LEFEBRE THE SAXOPHONE KING, 1873-1894
Gilmore
Having built a brief, yet solid reputation as a
saxophonist in the United States, Lefebre was asked in
the fall of 1873 to join the newly reorganized Twentysecond Regiment National Guard Band, based in New York
City, under its new director, Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore.
The addition of an entire SATB saxophone section (Lefebre
was the alto saxophonist and soloist), indicates Gilmore
had learned about military band instrumentation from the
Garde Rpublicaine.
been waiting.
When one
27
One
28
29
Lefebre, seeking
Singelees
Both
30
soprano saxophone
Edward A. Lefebre
alto saxophone
Henry Steckelberg
tenor saxophone
F. William Schultze
baritone saxophone12
After moving to
31
17
18
19
32
Lefebre,
20
21
22
33
The band
An
23
Printed
Ibid.
Gilmore Band Program (uncatalogued), Tremont Temple/Boston
Theatre, 30-31 January 1875, Library for the Performing Arts, New
York Public Library, New York.
25
Ibid.
26
Benhams Musical Review, vol. 10, no. 3, March 1875.
24
34
Audience
By April
35
The second of
Originally written
Other solo
30
Knowing
Ibid.
Gilmore Band Programs, Centennial Grounds, Philadelphia, 25 and 26
May 1876, private collection of Barry Furrer, Bound Brook, New
Jersey.
32
Ronkin, The Music for Saxophone..., 23-4.
31
36
It is also not
Riviere
37
Perhaps
this was due to the fact there werent four of the same
instrument in the saxophone section.
European Tour
The Twenty-second Regiment Band began its European
tour in May of 1878, including stops in Dublin,
Liverpool, Glasgow, Brussels, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, and
The Hague (Lefebres place of birth).37
Two
Another description
36
38
It was common
soprano saxophone
Edward A. Lefebre
alto saxophone
Henry Steckelberg
tenor saxophone
F. William Schultze
baritone saxophone
44
45
46
39
47
48
49
40
Gilmores band
Lefebre
50
51
41
This
His immediate
42
It is entirely
Indeed,
He
At the same
43
Thus, a
58
44
Europe.
61
45
65
66
67
46
Mr.
Of the
Concertante Quintet.69
47
48
49
Jackson
Florios
The
The whereabouts of
50
It is
However,
On this
51
Scherzo.78
52
By
It is
53
In July of
With the
86
87
88
54
saxophone soloist
J. Norrito
flute soloist
Benj. B. Dale
Flgelhorn (manager)
J. Hausknecht
contra fagotto
F. Wallrabe
soprano saxophone
alto saxophone
H. Steckelberg
tenor saxophone
C. Lunyack
baritone saxophone90
55
A concert club or
The
91
Thomas W. Smialek, Jr, Clay Smith and G.E. Holmes: Their Role in
the Development of Saxophone Performance and Padagogy n the United
States, 1905-1930 (D.M.A. diss., University of Georgia, 1991: 2-3.
92
Ibid, 3.
56
One may
An Octette for
The
soprano saxophone
Lefebre
alto saxophone
ter Linden
tenor saxophone
Schultze
baritone saxophone
Mundwyler
sarusophone
Sauer
bassoon
Rupp
bassoon
Kavanagh
contra bassoon93
93
57
One
Lyceum Concert Club and the woodwind octet of the Twentysecond Regiment Band epitomized the spirit of musical
innovation and are to be commended for their collective
efforts to heighten awareness of these new and
underrepresented musical instruments.
By some
94
Ibid, 29 August
Ibid, 10 August
96
George Thornton
Southworth Press,
95
1883.
1886.
Edwards, Music and Musicians of Maine, (Portland:
1928), 158.
58
A rather prolific
97
Here,
59
Such a designation
In fact, the
Die Walkre.
102
60
Mecklem, a
61
See
A reviewer
62
113
114
115
63
On 19 November
This
One
There
Secondly,
64
According to the
Musical Courier:
A rather motley crowd assembled in Steinway
Hall on Saturday evening last, to hear E. A.
Lefebres benefit concert. It is impossible to
speak seriously of any of the performers other
than Mr. Lefebre himself. The selections were
rendered in the most melancholy style, and
considerably depressed cultivated listeners.
Moreover, as is always the case with poor
performers, long pieces were selected, some of
them be being badly sung, appearing
interminable. Mr. Lefebres selections were,
on the contrary, well interpreted and of only
average length, by which he placed himself in
exact contrast to the rest of the performers.
It is hard to conceive how Mr. Lefebre could
have surrounded himself with such incompetent
drawbacks.121
The American Art Journal offered a more thoughtful
recounting of events:
The eminent saxophonist, M. E. A. Lefebre, was
tendered a benefit concert at Steinway Hall
last Saturday evening, which was not as well
patronized as it should have been, considering
the rarity of the opportunity afforded to hear
this beautiful instrument in solos, and the
excellent reputation of the performer. Mr.
Lefebre stands foremost in the ranks of
saxophone players, and his delightful solo
120
121
65
66
122
67
Both Lefebre
68
Gilmores season-ending
126
127
128
69
the same fate as Lefebre who by this time had been with
the Twenty-second Regiment Band for over a decade.
129
70
133
71
72
73
As was
142
143
144
74
According to
Harpers Weekly:
Gilmore is greatly attached to [the French
horn], and employs it extensively. At the
church service held every Sunday morning in the
amphitheatre at Manhattan Beach the French
horns take the place of an organ. The
rendition of four-part songs has been for years
quite a feature in Gilmores programmes. A
charming effect is produced by a solo
instrument accompanied by the quartet of horns,
among which Harry Weston is an incomparable
performer.146
Between the years 1887-92, Lefebre performed four
different solos in this context: Rolling Bark by Kucken,
One program on
75
Carnival de Venice.
Such
148
76
his abilities.
Three of
151
152
153
77
Soon, as a
78
in September of 1888.156
On
156
79
Other works
158
80
Death of Gilmore
The final decade of the nineteenth century saw many
changes within the ranks of the wind band.
John Philip
163
81
Scott
continues:
Saxophones
Will not send any names, unless specifically
desired, as, upon later enquiry, find that
there is no Bb Soprano in Chicago, and the
Alto, Tenor and Bass are not quite up to the
mark.166
Here, one cannot be sure whether Scott was referring to
the saxophonists or the saxophones themselves!
Blakely
One
165
82
167
By the fall of
83
M. Davidson, M. J. Moreing
E. A. Lefebre, E. Martinez
171
84
E. Schaap, H. Wahle
F. W. Schultze, J. Kneip
L. Knittel
On 26
174
85
Reeves
Sousas
178
86
Samuel Schaich
Alto Saxophone
Thomas F. Shannon
Tenor Saxophone182
Rudolphe Becker
Baritone Saxophone183
87
88
Anther
The saxophonist
89
Others who
190
191
192
Ibid.
Ibid.
Musical Courier (New York), 11 January 1893, 23.
90
193
91
One can
Blakely states:
195
92
Judging from
196
93
for three weeks on the road, down from the previous $80
per week-on-the-road offer of 28 February.
Lefebre
Reeves, commander of
94
A Card
The undersigned, late solo members of
Gilmores Band, but now members of Sousas
Band, have observed with amazement the circular
issued to the public, signed Gilmores Band,
attacking Sousas organization in general and
the undersigned in particular, and
characterizing us as fossiled and worn out
members of Gilmores Band. Perhaps no person
on earth, were he living, would be more
astounded and indignant than Mr. Gilmore
himself to see such an attack made upon the men
who occupied his first chairs when he died, and
whom he took pleasure in advertising as his
favorite soloists. Mr. Reeves, the present
leader of Gilmores Band, who has written this
circular and who claims to be Mr. Gilmores
friend, could hardly have inflicted a deadlier
insult to his memory than to stigmatize him as
having chosen and led, up to the time of his
death, what Mr. Reeves characterizes as
fossiled and worn out men. This is
sufficient to say of this part of Mr. Reeves
circular.
The undersigned left Gilmores and took an
engagement with Mr. Sousa because his band had
been chosen to succeed Gilmores band for the
long engagements of St. Louis Exposition, the
Manhattan Beach and the Worlds Fair, and in
addition, long tours of concerts, thus
affording his musicians a continuous and
extended engagement. It was also a great
pleasure for us to enroll ourselves under the
leadership of so thoroughly accomplished and
exceptionally successful leader as John Philip
Sousa, whose brilliant band it is an honor to
any musician to belong to.
It only remains to question the right of Mr.
Reeves to sign the name of Gilmores Band to
any circular, or in any connection, considering
the fact that the band is now not only
destitute of its late brilliant and lamented
leader, but most of the soloists who aided him
in making it famous, and of the engagements
which had been so long identified with his
successful career. These soloists and these
198
95
199
96
Another
200
97
Moving Shannon to
alto saxophone
Samuel Schaich
tenor saxophone
Rudolphe Becker
baritone saxophone
Lefebre
204
98
alto saxophone
Charles W. Kruger
tenor saxophone
Thomas F. Shannon
baritone saxophone209
207
208
209
210
On both
99
It seems
His
Brilliante by Demersseman.215
211
Ibid, 23.
Blakelys business ledger, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
213
Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 23 February 1911.
214
Day after David Blakely, New York to Edward Lefebre, Brooklyn, 13
February 1894, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public
Library, New York.
215
Hester, Saxophone Soloists with Sousa..., 24.
212
100
In a letter
Ibid.
C. G. Conn Co.s Truth, vol. 5, no.12, (March 1905): 9.
218
Hester, Saxophone Soloists with Sousa..., 40.
219
David Blakely, New York, to Arthur Pryor, 6 February 1894, Blakely
Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
217
101
102
In other
His mention of
103
disgust.
In a
222
104
This
105
1.
I will say this if you pay me while on the
road $45.00 (anyways outsight of N.Y.) per week
at Manhattan $40.00 per week and if you play
for a long time at the Garden $30.00 per week I
should accept and continue with pleasure.
Hoping to hear from you
I am Yours Resp.
E. A. Lefebre
P.S. piano lessons I have to give during the
day time keep me away from N.Y. otherwise I
would have called personal.
P.S. If it does not take to much of your
valuable time just read this what I copied from
a Elizabeth paper Febr 4th/94 and for which
private soire I get always $25.00 and which
shows that I am able yet to hold my listeners
as any time whenever I play solo.
Elizabeth febr. 5th 1894
Superb Music [for Charitys Sake.]
Editor Journalthe writer had the good
fortune of listening to an unusually fine
concert which was given last night at the
residence of Mr. George [T.] Meyer, by the
celebrated Saxophone Virtuoso Mr. E. A.
Lefebre, formerly principle Soloist of
Gilmores Band. Mr. Lefebre was asisted by Mr.
Rauchfuss flutist, Miss Meyer acting as
acc[ompani]st. The program was an excellent
one, consisting of Classical music, and
embracing many of the most beautifull and most
difficult pieces ever written for the
Saxophone.
The great virtuoso was in excellent
spirits, executing the most difficult passages
with ease, grace and artistic interpretation,
as only a Lefebre is capable of, and those who
to him will remember the great musical treat.
etc. etc..223
223
106
Thus,
224
107
depression.
Blakelys response to Lefebre can also be seen
through the eyes of a businessman tired of the constant
negotiations with each and every player, some fifty-five
total men.
Ibid.
108
109
However, one
To
According
Lefebre had
227
110
42 Heart Street
Brooklyn febr. 13th 1894
D. Blakely. Esqr.
N. Y.
Dear Sir,
Yours I received this Ev at 1.35. but it
is impossible for me to accept your terms.
While on the road, I couldnt very well
support my large family. Of course, from the
10 month and one week engagement you, offer,
the Band will be most the time on the road.
Whosoever you engage in my place, this man
hasnt got the reputation I got all over the
N.A. and spasialy at the Beach and St. Louis,
where Lefebre has great number of admirers and
who are always glad to see me back again, the
late Gilmores Soloist are beloved at the
Manhattan Beach and St. Louis if you will
consider once more my conditions I stated in my
letter of the 12th inst. and will favor me with
accept I shall be pleased to continue with
Sousas Band.
And I remain Yours Resp.
E. A. Lefebre229
Lefebres quick exit from the Sousa Band and
Moeremans subsequent arrival has clouded the
circumstances surrounding Belle Mahone, the only solo
saxophone work ever written by John Philip Sousa.
Composed in 1885, Belle Mahone was a theme and variations
solo supposedly written for E. A. Lefebre.230
By all
229
111
This account is as
However, had
231
232
233
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.
112
234
235
236
113
Considering
237
238
239
114
A former
Later in 1890,
240
241
242
243
244
245
115
1894.246
It is clear that
116
249
117
CHAPTER V
LEFEBRES MISSION IS ACCOMPLISHED, 1888-1911
Carl Fischer
By the late 1880s, Edward A. Lefebres name became
associated with saxophone pedagogy.
Otto Langeys
Pastorale.1
Celebrated Tutors.3
118
Gilmore Band.4
By 1898,
Twenty of
Of these
These
119
Schaeffer).8
Lefebres
Carl
120
10
121
Regrettably, these
Thus,
C. G. Conn
In the early 1890s, Lefebre began his association
with the band instrument manufacturer, Charles Gerard
Conn of Elkhart, Indiana.
14
Ibid, 137.
Fred Williams, Philadelphia, PA, phone conversation with the
author.
16
Conn Saxophone Catalogue, c.1919.
15
122
17
After leaving
123
heading,
TO
MAKE
SAXOPHONES
IN
THIS
COUNTRY.
124
24
125
Curiously,
investigating.
25
26
126
According to the
127
In a letter to C. G. Conn,
29
30
128
A subsequent letter
by cable.32
By February of 1895, Conn announced:
The Wonder Saxophone is now a Necessary
Instrument in the American Military Band.
Five years ago the Saxophone was almost an
unknown instrument in the United States, and
its beautiful voice could be heard only in the
very largest band organizations of metropolitan
cities.
The Saxophone, however, had a few very
earnest, enthusiastic and energetic champions,
through whom the adaptability and beauty of the
instrument was made known to musicians in the
smaller cities of America.
Among the great exponents of the Saxophone
in America, Mons. E. A. Lefebre is easily the
most prominent, during his long association
with Gilmores famous band as the principal
Saxophone soloist and his connection with the
concert companies of the Entertainment Bureaus,
he has played in all the important, and nearly
all the small cities in the United States and
Canada, and the result is, that a goodly
portion of the reed and brass bands now include
in their instrumentation one or more
31
129
33
130
Elkhart, Indiana
After nearly four decades as a saxophone soloist, Lefebre
moved to Elkhart, Indiana in the fall of 1895 and began
working full-time at the Conn factory.
Gus Bueschers
34
35
131
E. A. Lefebre
The World-Famed Saxophone Virtuoso
Uses the Celebrated Wonder Alto Saxophone
Manufactured by C. G. Conn
Elkhart, Ind., Worcester, Mass.
Brooklyn New York
Mr. C. G. Conn
Elkhart, Ind.
It gives me much pleasure to express my
entire approval of the Wonder Saxophone, which
you made for me. I have used during my career,
Saxophones manufactured by the best European
instrument makers, and which were formerly
considered the best in the world. In your
Wonder Saxophones, however, I recognize a
triumph over the best products of European
manufacturers, for your instrument is
handsomer, has a better key system, is more
perfectly in tune, and has a most wonderful
tone. I shall never use any other Saxophone,
for I realize it is the only perfect one made,
and no manufacturer either in Europe or America
can improve upon it.
Yours Truly,
E. A. Lefebre36
36
132
Ibid.
133
Needing a
39
134
Conn Conservatory
By the fall of 1896, the scope of Lefebres duties
in Elkhart had been broadened to include instruction at
the Conn Conservatory of Music, a spacious building,
containing ten class rooms, and a large recital hall.43
Jules Levy, the preeminent cornet soloist of the late
nineteenth-century was hired as principal instructor of
cornet and all other valved wind instruments, while E.
A. Lefebre, who shared similar stature as a saxophone
soloist, was hired as the principal saxophone instructor.
Other classes were offered in flute, clarinet, voice,
piano, zither, and harmony.44
42
43
44
135
Lima, Indiana
Homer W. Dickenson
Coldwater, Michigan
P. W. Waite46
Sturgis, Michigan
He
As
At
45
46
47
48
136
Indiana.49
Lefebre certainly
He
Other students of
Prochaska performed
49
Ibid.
Gilmore Band program, Music Hall, Cleveland, OH, 8 December 1888,
Library for the Performing Arts, New York Public Library, New York.
51
C. G. Conns New Invention Saxophones, 1 September 1915.
52
Murphy, Early Saxophone Instruction..., 89-90.
53
Murphy, Early Saxophone Instruction..., 87.
54
Ibid, 24, 29.
55
Ibid, 147.
56
Ibid, 113-4.
50
137
Institutions and
1882-88
1898-1902
New England Conservatory
1882-89
1886-87
Dana Musical Institute (OH)
1890-1941
Broad Street Cons. (Phil.)
1891
Chicago Conservatory
1893
Conn Conservatory
1896-1900
Ithica Conservatory
c.1900
Freelance
Teaching duties kept the Saxophone King close to
Elkhart and the Middle West where he remained an active
freelancer.
57
138
Lefebre
The Conn
Thus, it is
63
64
65
66
Ibid.
Ibid.
C. G. Conns New Invention Saxophones, 1 September 1915.
Murphy, Early Saxophone Instruction..., 171.
139
Engagements in 1899
and with the Conn Wonder Quartet and the Elks Quartet,
whose members were one and the same.69
Lefebre was also a prominently featured member of
the Trumpet Notes Band, C. G. Conns factory band
(1890-1911).
67
140
141
142
143
However, specific
One
According to
78
144
Gilmore Band
J. S. Libornio
Jean Moeremans
Sousa Band
H. Morin
Innes Band
E. Schaap
Innes Band
Vincent Rangone
Innes Band80
80
145
146
Edward A. Lefebre
Will R. Yeaglea
Clarence Bartlett
tenor saxophone
James F. Boyer
baritone saxophone85
Lefebres
group,
was
billed
as
147
great
musical
Boyer
86
87
88
89
148
According to Lefebres
promotional brochure:
Two years ago [1901]95 Mr. Lefebre organized a
select quartet of saxophones, which made a
remarkable tour from ocean to ocean rendering
adaptations of popular and classical music for
the public and revealing conclusively the
90
149
150
Ibid.
151
Florio Correspondence
In 1902, Lefebre contemplated retirement.
His
These
98
152
Nov. 6, 1902
Mr. Carl Florio,
Artist Musician New York City
Dear Friend Florio
For several years I have been writing to my
friends at New York to find out were I could
reach you. This all happened while I was
living in Elkhart, Ind.
Two years ago I notified and since reside
again at New York I organised a Saxophone
Quartette, and have been travelling from ocean
to ocean.
Last week I returned from a western tour of
Ten Weeks with my quartette; I may go South in
about four from today. If not then I go to
Europe. Before leaving I intend to give a far
well concert and most likely to be my last
appearance before the American public. They
have heard me playing the Saxophone for over 30
years. Although I am very successful yet, I
believe my self to retire.
If I give my farwell concert, I have then an
Orchestre of 50, the quartette and I may
perform such as quartett Lucia, quartett
Riogoletto, Duet for Cornet and Sax. etc.
For my European programme, I would like to
have the quintette of yours; but how to get it
that is the great question. Years ago you
promised me a copy, but to copy it your self
your time I recognise to be valuable to devote
to copying, if you still have the idea to let
me have that valuable composition of yours? Let
me copy it. Give me again a chance to present
it before the public. I promise to have it
performed in good style so as to do justice to
the talented composer.
Yester day I met Mr. Kaltenborn he spoke
about you and then I went to Ponds music house
were I got your address.
If this comes to hand, please drop me a line
informing me when I can see you at home to talk
this matter over about your quintett, with
which you will oblije.
153
99
154
155
Cantrell
156
Ibid.
157
As a
While this feature was published in 1907, much of the text comes
from Lefebres promotional brochure. The brochure has the date 9
January 1905, although it is likely the brochure was regularly
updated to include Conns newest advertisements. The article also
mentions for thirty-two years he has been charming Americans...
By adding 32 years to 1871, the year Lefebre came to America (with
Rosa), one arrives at 1903. (See also above).
158
While these
105
159
His brochure
108
109
Ibid.
Ibid.
160
Myron
He was assistant
110
As
161
January 1903:
E. A. Lefebre, the far-famed Saxophone
Virtuoso, gave a delightful and very successful
Saxophone recital at the Academy of Music,
Kansas City, Jan. 29th. He was assisted by his
pupil, Miss Florence LaFolette Mackay, one of
the most accomplished saxophone soloists of the
gentler sex, and a choice company of musical
artists. Lefebre has accepted contracts which
occupy all the Summer season for his Saxophone
quartette, which consists of two altos, tenor
and baritone, but he is considering the
advisability of substituting the Contra Bb Bass
Giant Saxophone for one of the Altos. He
believes the general effect will be improved,
the big instrument, aside from being an
attractive novelty, has a richness in the lower
register that is incomparable.115
114
162
163
May 27,1903
Here, the
Absent are
The
164
era.
The
Homer Dickenson
Mac H. Hall
tenor saxophone
James F. Boyer
baritone saxophone
121
165
(This was
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
Letters from
C. G. Conns
Ibid.
C. G. Conns
Ibid, 35.
Ibid, 30
True Tone 9,
C. G. Conns
166
A Lefebre
167
One of Lefebres
According to C. G.
168
Others
The timing of
A quartet
169
140
141
Inspired by Lefebres
170
In 1895, an
Prior to
Ibid.
Cohen, The New York Saxophone Quartette Club, 8.
G. C. Conns Truth, vol. 3, no. 5, (January 1896): 7.
G. C. Conns Truth, vol. 3, no. 2, (June 1895): 7.
Cohen, The New York Saxophone Quartette Club, 8.
G. C. Conns Truth, vol. 3, no. 5, (January 1896): 7.
171
148
149
172
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
Ibid, 21.
G. C. Conns Truth, vol.4, no. 2, (April 1898): 15.
G. C. Conns Truth, vol.5, no. 3, (September 1902): 7.
G. C. Conns Truth, vol.6, no. 1, (July 1905): 3.
Murphy, Early Saxophone Instruction..., 51.
Ibid.
G. C. Conns Truth, vol.5, no. 6, (July 1903): 9.
C. G. Conns Truth 5, no. 10 (September 1904): 9.
C. G. Conns Truth 6, no. 1 (July 1905): 3.
173
Comprised of 18
174
In September, he
These
Conns Truth:
163
Ibid.
175
A possible
164
176
Thompson later
According to a published
As an educator, she
She
As a soloist with
177
178
Lefebre continued to
179
Within the
One is again
180
178
181
182
Lefebres
180
183
By
This
182
183
Ibid, 21.
184
The concert
185
gladiator.190
The personnel of this final quartet was:
Edward A. Lefebre
Katheryne Thompson
Ida Weber
Tenor Saxophone
186
Ventura.
His relationship to
These private
Funeral services
There is no headstone
191
187
CHAPTER VI
CONCLUSION
himself, Lefebre (who had met the inventor) did more than
any single individual to bring acceptance to the
saxophone, promoting its use around the world.
His
Evidence of a
Musical Truth:
THOUSANDS OF ORDERS HAVE BEEN FILLED IN 1921.
We are building the largest number of
Saxophones per month on the years average than
has ever been dreamed as possible.
1
188
C. G. Conn, Limited, Muscial Truth 11, no. 29, October 1921, n.p.
189
This translates to a
190
Ibid.
C. G. Conns Truth (Elkhart), supplement to December 1903, 3.
10
See also chapter V.
11
True-Tone XIII, no. 7, 1913, 15.
9
191
12
192
Lefebres
His hope
17
193
Lefebres faith
APPENDIX A
PERFORMANCES
SOLO PERFORMANCES
DATE
4/17/63
10/18/73
1/15/74
4/11/74
4/12/74
1/30/75
1/31/75
7/1/75
8/30/75
10/31/75
12/4/75
4/12/76
5/25/76
5/26/76
6/3/76
5/28/77
5/28/77
8/7/[77?]
7/13/81
1/13/82
2/3/83
2/3/83
7/3/83
7/7/83
7/18/83
7/20/83
7/25/83
8/11/83
8/12/83
8/13/83
8/18/83
F
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
F
F
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
LOCATION
TITLE
COMPOSER
L. J. Lefbre
Singele
Lefebre
Bellini
Singele
Lefebre
Bellini
Unknown
Lefebre
Praeger
Bellini
Bellini
Savari
Bellini/Singele
Singele/Lefebre
Bellini
Bellini
Savari
Savari
Paganini
Lefebre
Unknown
Savari
Balfe
Wallace
Bellini
Balfe
Shubert
Vieuxtemps
Weber/[Savari]
Weber/[Savari]
8/20/83
8/26/83
8/27/83
8/28/83
5/14/85
8/18/85
9/12/85
9/17/85
9/19/85
7/15/86
7/17/86
7/22/86
7/24/86
7/31/86
7/31/86
8/18/86
9/2/86
9/11/86
9/16/86
3/16/87
6/27/87
7/16/87
7/25/87
8/20/87
8/31/87
9/8/87
9/17/87
6/20/88
7/5/88
7/7/88
7/21/88
7/26/88
8/1/88
8/13/88
8/16/88
8/28/88
8/30/88
9/8/88
9/12/88
9/14/88
9/15/88
6/9/89
8/2/89
G
G
G
G
F
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
F
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Church of the Puritans
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Steinway Hall
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Kansas City*
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Mechanics Building, Boston
Manhattan Beach*
Benedict
Vieuxtemps
Weber/[Savari]
Murio-Celli
Bartlett(?)
Savari
Savari
Riviere
Savari
Lefebre
Savari
Damersmann
Hartmann
Weber/[Savari]
Weber/[Savari]
Norrito
L. J. Lefebre
Paganini
Weber/[Savari]
Unknown
Weber/[Savari]
Blumenthal
Pacini
Blumenthal
Blumenthal
Lefebre
Wallace
Norrito
Rode
Weber/[Savari]
Singelee
Benedict
Robert Thallon
Singelee
Weber/[Savari]
Hartmann
Singelee
Shelley
Singelee
Thomas?(Balfe?)
Shelley
Shelley
Weber/[Savari]
8/10/89
8/17/89
6/29/90
7/10/90
7/26/90
6/17/91
7/18/91
8/18/91
8/20/91
9/1/91
9/3/91
7/24/92
8/18/92
8/28/92
8/29/92
Unknown
Unknown
7/5/93
7/6/93
7/19/93
8/2/93
8/7/93
9/7/93
12/3/93
1/18/94
2/4/98
10/7/98
11/8/98
12/5/98
6/29/99
7/30/99
12/4/99
1900-9
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
S
S
S
S
S
S
S
S
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
F
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Madison Square Garden
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach*
Manhattan Beach*
Grand Opera House
Toledo
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
Manhattan Beach
St. Louis Exposition
Brooklyn
Brooklyn
Benefit to Vonna Fitzgerald
Company E 157th, Indiana, U.S.V.
Lefebre's Grand Concert [Elkhart]
St. John's Church [Elkhart]
Music Teacher's Assn. [Indiana]
Island Park Concert [Indiana]
Elks Memorial Service [Elkhart]
United States and Canada
Wallace
Norrito
Cavalini
Keine
Bellstedt
Singelee
Bellstedt
Stahl
Keirulf
Stahl
Norrito
Unknown
Weber/[Savari]
Shelley
Bellini
Balfe
Norrito
Elyne Renaud
Weber/[Savari]
Shelley
Demersseman
Robyn
Unknown
Shelley
Shelley
Singele
Singele
[Gounod]
Unknown
Weber/[Savari]
Unknown
Unknown
Various
F
F
F
LOCATION
Nationale Zangschool, The Hague
De Cursus, The Hague
De Cursus, The Hague
1/15/74
5/27/77
4/30/80
4/30/80
11/18/82
2/3/83
8/19/83
G
G
F
F
F
F
G
8/29/83
Manhattan Beach
10/19/85
10/19/85
6/27/86
7/10/86
F
F
G
G
8/21/86
7/13/87
8/6/87
8/11/87
8/13/87
8/27/87
9/3/87
9/8/87
9/8/87
1/16/88
8/25/88
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
Manhattan
Manhattan
Manhattan
Manhattan
Manhattan
Manhattan
Manhattan
Manhattan
Manhattan
Tremont Temple,
Manhattan
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Beach
Boston Area
Beach
TITLE/INSTRUMENTATION
Meditation (saxophone, piano, organ)
Aria (tenor voice, saxophone, piano)
An das Bildniss einer abwesenden Mutter
(piston, saxophone, piano)
Quartet for Saxophones (SATB)
Quartet for Saxophones (SATB)
Allegro de Concert (SATB saxophone quartet)
Concertante Quintet (piano, SATB saxophone quartet)
Duet for Saxophone and Cornet
My Heart Ever Faithful (saxophone obligato)
Untitled Octet
(SATB saxophones, 2 bassoons,
sarusophone, contra fagotti)
Nearer My God to Thee
(octet as above)
Concertante Quintet (piano, SATB saxophone quartet)
Menuet and Scherzo (saxophone quartet)
The Wanderer's Night Lied (w/soprano saxophone)
Colored Camp-Meeting
(octet as above w/alto saxophone solo)
Swan Song (w/flute)
Rolling Bark (w/4 horns)
Image of the Rose (w/4 horns)
Rolling Bark (w/4 horns)
Image of the Rose (w/4 horns)
Image of the Rose (w/4 horns)
Elegie (w/4 horns)
Light of Heaven (w/flute, piano)
Evening Serenade (w/flute, piano)
Image of the Rose (w/4 horns)
Image of the Rose (w/4 horns)
COMPOSER
Gounod
Stradella
Andr
Singele
Savari
Florio
Florio
Unknown
Bach
Foster
Mason
Florio
Florio
Rubenstein
ter Linden
Rubenstein
Kucken
Reichardt
Kucken
Reichardt
Reichardt
Vivian
Gounod
Thallon
Reichardt
Reichardt
2/2/89
2/2/89
5/2/89
4/17/90
5/5/90
5/25/90
8/23/90
11/26/90
8/13/91
8/28/91
10/10/91
10/18/91
11/5/91
11/5/91
5/19/92
10/24/-1/9/93
1/9/93
1/9/93
1897-00
1901-9
5/6/09
F
Mason & Hamlin Organ and Piano Co.
F
Mason & Hamlin Organ and Piano Co.
G
Battery "B" Armory, Pittsburgh*
G White's Opera House, Concord, Mass*
G
Temple Opera House, Elizabeth
G
Albaugh Opera House, Wash., D.C.
G
Manhattan Beach
G Allen's Opera House, New Castle, PA*
G
Manhattan Beach
G
Manhattan Beach
G
Grand Opera House, Colorado Spr.
G
St. Louis Exposition
G
Tabernacle, Salt Lake City
G
Tabernacle, Salt Lake City
G
Bath, Maine*
G
Central Music Hall
F
Lefebre Benefit, Hardman Hall, NY
F
Lefebre Benefit, Hardman Hall, NY
F
Lefebre Benefit, Hardman Hall, NY
F
Elks and other Social Functions
Conn Wonder Quartette,
Elks Quartette
F
United States and Canada
Lefebre Saxophone Quartette
F
Lefebres
Los Angeles Saxophone Quartette
Shelley
Gounod
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Robandi
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Reichardt
Shelley
Kiehl
Shelley
Various
Various
Various
LOCATION
G
Academy of Music
G
Gilmore Garden
G
Gilmore Garden
G
Unknown
G
Broadway Theatre
G
Broadway Theatre
G
Columbia Opera House*
G
Kansas City*
G
Manhattan Beach
G Battery "B" Armory, Pittsburgh*
G Grand Opera House, Harrisburg*
G
Mechanics Building, Boston
G
Portland, Maine*
G
Chicago Exposition*
G
Tabernacle, Salt Lake City
G
Manhattan Beach*
G
Boston Theatre
TITLE
Grand Divertimento on the Airs of All Nations
Grand Concert Air & Variations
Grand Concert Air & Variations
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 6
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Le Carnival de Venice, var. 5
Columbia
Columbia
Columbia
COMPOSER
Jullien
Riviere
Riviere
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Paganini
Gilmore
Gilmore
Gilmore
G = Gilmore
*Barry Furrer Collection
The Majority of Gilmore Programs are located at the Library for the Performing Arts,
New York Public Library, New York.
APPENDIX B
PUBLICATIONS
SOLO TRANSCRIPTIONS/ARRANGEMENTS
YEAR
1898
TITLE
Adagio (Concerto Militaire)
COMPOSER
C. Khn
FORMAT
Eb
<1898
<1898
Verdi
Eb, Bb
Air Varie
H. Painpar
Eb
<1898
Album Leaf
S. Jadassohn
Eb
<1905
Album Leaf
R. Wagner
Eb
SOURCE
UM
<1898
Alexandria
J. Levy
Eb, Bb
<1905
J. Ascher
Eb
<1898
Alla Mazurka
G. Goltermann
Eb
1889
Andante Pastorale
E. A. Lefebre
Eb
CFNRE
SSR
1908
Annie Laurie
unknown
Eb
<1898
Arie Concertante
Ackermann
Eb
<1898
H. Round
Eb
<1905
Ave Maria
C. Gounod
Eb
<1898
Ave Maria
L. Luzzi
Eb
<1905
Ballade
De Swert
Eb
1904
C. Gounod
Eb
<1905
C. Le Theire
Eb
1904
B. Godard
Eb
<1898
P. de Ville
Eb, Bb
1906
various
Eb
UM, SSR
UM, SSR
SSR
<1898
S. J. Cox
Eb
1898
Cantilena
G. Goltermann
Eb
SCA
1900
Caprice-Gavotte
E. Gillet
Eb
UM
1898
Cavatine
J. Raff
Eb
SCA
1888
Balfe
Eb
CFNRE, SSR
<1905
Elegie
H. W. Ernst
Eb
1898
J. B. Singelee
Eb
<1898
Fantasie Pastorale
J. B. Singelee
Eb
1900
Flower Song
G. Lange
Eb
<1898
Gipsy's Warning
unknown
Eb
1905
traditional
Eb
<1905
T. M. Tobani
Eb
1904
Hungarian Dance
J. Brahms
Eb
<1898
unknown
Eb
<1905
Intermezzo Sinfonico
P. Mascagni
Eb
<1898
Killarney
Balfe
Eb
<1905
La Paloma
Yradier
Eb
1898
L. Diehl
Eb
1898
Laendler
C. Bohm
Eb
1904
unknown
Eb
<1898
H. Prendiville
Eb, Bb
<1905
A. Sullivan
Eb
<1898
H. Round
Eb
<1898
J. Hartmann
Eb
<1905
A. Sullivan
Eb
<1898
Love Song
Prochazka
Eb
<1905
J. L. Molloy
Eb
<1905
S. Foster
Eb
<1898
H. Round
Eb
SCA
UM
SSR
SCA
<1905
F. Abt
Eb
<1898
H. Prendiville
Eb, Bb
<1905
My Heaven on Earth
E. Neumann
Eb
<1905
S. Foster
Eb
1904
F. Chopin
Eb
<1898
Beethoven
Eb
<1905
S. Foster
Eb
1900
On the Meadow
Lichner
Eb
<1905
Only a Dream
W. V. Wallace
Eb
SCA
SSR
SCA
<1905
Palms, The
J. Faure
Eb
1898
R. Wagner
Eb
<1898
Polish Dance
X. Scharwenka
Eb
<1898
A. Thomas
Eb
1908
unknown
Eb
SSR
1890
Romance
Beethoven
Eb
SSR
<1905
Rubinstein's Melodie in F
H. Wagner
Eb
<1898
H. Round
Eb
1904
Serenade
F. Schubert
Eb
SSR, UM
1908
Louis Gregh
Eb
SSR
<1898
Balfe
Eb
<1905
Simple Aveu
F. Thome
Eb
1898
Somnambula, Fantasia
J. B. Singelee
Eb
<1905
Sweet By and By
Webster
Eb
1889
E. A. Lefebre
Eb
1906
Un Ballo in Maschera
Verdi
Eb
<1898
Wedding Procession
A. Terschak
Eb
<1898
H. Round
Eb
<1905
W. Nessler
Eb
SCA
SSR
DUETS
<1905
Forget Me Not
unknown
Duet, Eb
1898
Pleasant Companions
E. A. Lefebre
Duet, Eb
<1898
A. Labitzky
Duet, Eb
QUARTETS
1912
>1905
c.1904
1904
<1905
<1905
Allegro de Concert
Hunting Song
Quartette from Rigoletto
Ballet Music from Faust
Soldier's March from Faust
Wedding Procession
J. B. Singelee
Lefebre?
G. Verdi
C. Gounod
C. Gounod
A. Terschak
AATB
SATB, AATB, SAAT, AAAT
SATB, AATB, SAAT, AAAT
AATB
AATB
AATB
H. Eisen
Davidson, M. J. Moreing
A. Lefebre, E. Martinez
Schaap, H. Wahle
W. Schultze, J. Kneip
Knittel
E
B
E
B
E
B
sopranino saxophone
soprano saxophone
alto saxophone
tenor saxophone
baritone saxophone
bass saxophone
APPENDIX E
LEFEBRE FAMILY HISTORY
thus, Edward Jr. had to work to help support his mother and
siblings.
236
He led an
Stewart George,
Edward Jr.s cousin, retrieved E. A. Lefebres 1903 goldplated Conn alto saxophone and kept it for 25 years.
Upon
Edward Henry
Upon
237
In 1993, E. A. Lefebre
238
ADDENDUM
EDWARD A. LEFEBRE AND BESSIE MECKLEM
This was
Mecklem also
(Other chamber
239
This
The Saxophone
On 6 June
240
One account
241
242
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Books
Bierley, Paul E. John Philip Sousa, American Phenominon,
Revised Edition. Columbus: Integrity Press, 1973.
Carman, Harry J., and Harold C. Syrett. A History of the
American People, vol. II, since 1865. New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1955.
Edwards, George Thornton. Music and Musicians of Maine.
Portland: Southworth Press, 1928.
Gee, Harry. Saxophone Soloists and Their Music, 1844-1985.
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986.
Horwood, Wally. Adolphe Sax 1814-1894.
Ergon, 1983.
Baldock, England:
243
Vintage Saxophones Revisited The New 19thCentury Saxophone, Part II. Saxophone Journal 16, no.
5 (March/April 1992): 8-11.
.
______________.
The Metronome.
Trumpet Notes 2,
244
1 April 1885.
March 1875.
23 February 1911.
1913-15, 1927.
1892-1904.
1905-1909.
1910-1921.
16 August 1903.
7 February 1894.
6 April 1934.
25 February 1892.
6 April 1890.
245
15 January 1881-
10 January 1892.
Philadelphia Inquirer.
16 June 1873.
5 August 1896.
10 February 1872.
Music
Chant de Marie.
Boston: L. E. Whipple,
New York:
Catalogues
246
247
Frank Cipolla
248
Ph.D.
249
250
251
INDEX
Aledo, M. F., 138
Arbuckle, Matthew, 33, 35-6
Bartlett, Clarence, 146-8
Bartlett, Homer N., 72-3
Becker, F. R., 87, 99, 101, 173
Beebe, Henriette, 47, 49
Biese, Paul, 137
Blakely, David, 81-4, 91-4, 98, 101-11
Bode, A., 86, 90-1, 93-4, 96
Boyer, James, 136, 138-9, 146-9, 165, 176
Brooke, Thomas Preston, 115-6, 137, 166
Buescher, Ferdinand August, 123-4, 131
Campanini, Cleofonte, 160-2
Cappa, Carlo A., 64, 90
Clark, H. L., 93, 96
Conn, C. G., (C. G. Conn Company), 35, 78, 97, 99, 113-4,
122-149, 162-179
Conway, Patrick, 115, 137, 168
Cook, J. D., 138
Dale, Benjamin B., 55-7
Davidson, M., 74, 84
Davis, Hobart, 139, 176
Dickenson, Homer, 136, 165-7, 181
DIppolito, Lewis J., 177
Dotson, Carol, 169-71
Eisen, W. H., 84
Fischer, Carl, 21, 74, 118-21
Florio, Caryl, 43-52, 152-8, 165
Geiss, Henry, 136, 139
Gilmore, Patrick S., (22nd Regiment Band), 2, 24-5, 27-43,
45-6, 50-1, 53-4, 56-9, 62-6, 68-81, 84-97, 103, 106,
111-2, 191-2, 114-6, 185
Hall, Harry A. (A. C.), 81-2, 138
Hall, Mac H., 165-6
Hausknecht, J., 55-6
Henton, H. Benne, 168, 177, 181
Holmes, G. E., 179, 181, 183-4
Kavanagh, 57
Kimball, Frank Willard, 171-3
Kimball, John Albion, 172
Kneip, J., 85, 235
Knittel, Louis, 82-3, 85
Kruger, Charles W., 99
Kryl, Bohumir, 168
Lacalle, J., 91-3, 96
252
253
Stockigt, 91, 93
Strasser, Eustach, 31, 39, 45
Tichenor, Edwin, 138
Timmons, Edward, 83-4, 138
Thayer, O. P., 174-5
Thompson, Katheryne, 138, 176-7, 186
Thursby, Emma, 33
Traxler, Aaron, 137
Trognitz, R. E., 83
Urbain, 90-1
Vereecken, Ben, 121, 181, 185
Wahle, H., 85
Wait, J. Paul, (a.k.a. P. W. Waite?), 136-7
Walden, Frank W., 172
Wallrabe, Franz, 31-2, 45, 51-2, 55-7, 155
Wadsworth, F. W., 90-1, 96
Weber, Ida, 176, 186
Whitney, Myron, 160-1
Wiedoeft, Rudy, 121
Yeaglea, Will R., 136, 146-8
Young, Barnie G., 145
254
soprano saxophone
Edward Lefebre
alto saxophone
Henry Steckelberg
tenor saxophone
255
baritone saxophone3
F. William Schultze
Gilmore also featured for many years saxophone quartet chamber performances on select
programs. The first of these quartet appearances was on 15 January 1874, at the Brooklyn
Academy of Music, where the above performed Andante and Allegro, by Jean-Baptiste
Singele (appendix 1).4 This was likely the opening movement of Singeles Premier Quatour,
Op. 53, the first saxophone quartet ever written, composed in 1857 for the inaugural saxophone
class at the Paris Conservatory. Gilmores saxophone section also freelanced as the New York
Saxophone Quartet Club from 1873-85, during which time they performed numerous original
compositions written by Singele, Savari, and New York composer Caryl Florio. Perhaps the
most interesting use of saxophones on Gilmore Band programs was in a chamber octet
comprising soprano, alto, tenor, and baritone saxophones, two bassoons, contrabassoon, and
contrabass sarrusophone!5 In the late 1880s Gilmore augmented the saxophone section to a
sextet, including B-flat bass (SATTBBs).
Death of Gilmore
Gilmores ranks swelled to one hundred musicians in 1892, including 36 eminent
soloists, the elite of the musical profession.6 The impetus behind amassing such a force came
directly from Gilmores strong showing at the St. Louis Exposition in the fall of 1891. In a letter
to David Blakely, Gilmores tour manager who would later contract tours of the Marine Band
and Sousas civilian band, dated 18 October 1891, Gilmore writes:
We had an enormous success here this year, so much so that the President and
Directors of the Exposition have engaged us One Hundred Strongon my own
All letters are unedited, with spelling and grammar reproduced exactly as in the original manuscripts.
256
terms for two years more. I will give concerts in cities that can bear it, with the
full band one hundred members after we finish here next year and Ill bet you an
even $5000, I will make it pay big money.7
The Gilmore 100 played Madison Square Garden, beginning on 30 May 1892.8 By the fall,
and billed as The Famous One Hundred Men, the Gilmore Band performed at the St. Louis
Exposition in September 1892, supporting a ten-piece saxophone section whose members were:
W. H. Eisen
M. Davidson, M. J. Moreing
E. A. Lefebre, E. Martinez
E. Schaap, H. Wahle
F. W. Schultze, J. Kneip
L. Knittel
This perfect one hundred piece band, organized at the request of the administrators of the St.
Louis Exposition, had been together for only a few months when Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore died
suddenly in St. Louis on 24 September 1892. Gilmore, whose career had spanned nearly the
entire second half of the nineteenth-century and featured countless grand concerts and jubilees,
was universally accepted as the greatest bandleader of his generation. On 26 September 1892,
two days after Gilmores death, Sousas New Marine Band gave its first performance at the
Stillman Music Hall in Plainfield, New Jersey, ushering in the next and last great era of the
professional touring band.10
Three weeks following Gilmores death,11 while still engaged in St. Louis, the Twentysecond Regiment Band drafted the following letter of invitation to David Wallace Reeves:
St. Louis, October 12
Mr. D. W. Reeves:
At a meeting of the band you were unanimously elected leader and
conductor of Gilmores Band. Knowing you to be the only man in America
257
worthy of keeping the band up to its high standard, and following in the footsteps
of our lamented Mr. Gilmore, we extend to you, air, a hearty welcome and
support, and beg you to name a day when you can meet the band.
C. W. Freudenvoll,
E. A. Lefebre,
A. Bode,
Carl O. D. Chiara,
John Sheridan,
Committee appointed by the band.12
Reeves was a likely choice to succeed Gilmore. Since 1866 he had led the American Band of
Providence, Rhode Island, and he was a well-known and respected composer, having written
over one hundred marches. Sousa once referred to Reeves as the Father of American March
Music.13 Unfortunately for Reeves, the aforementioned hearty welcome and support quickly
evaporated.
By November, six of Gilmores best men (including Raffayolo, solo euphonium, and
Stengler, solo clarinet) had signed on with Sousa.14 Rumors circulated that Reeves planned to
cut personnel,15 and as dissent among the ranks grew, the famed cornetist Jules Levy announced
his candidacy to lead the Gilmore Band, stating:
Mr. Reeves is not, as many people suppose, the leader of the Twenty-second
Regiment Band but was simply the choice of the members of the band as the one
who should fill out the remainder of the seasons tour.16
Levy, a soloist past his prime and forever burdened by self-inflicted financial woes, may have
attempted such a coup in an effort to salvage his sagging career.
The Gilmore Band was faltering under Reevess leadership. One account stated:
Ever since Reeves took the baton there has been trouble. There was not a man
in the organization who did not know the band repertoire better than Reeves.
They had all played it to the magic wand of the late Gilmore, and, as no two men
were ever known to beat time in exactly the same way, they were a trifle
unfamiliar with Reevess leadership. What wonder, then, that there should be an
occasional jangling discord? Instead of marking Reevess time, some played as if
Gilmore were still there, and the result was far from pleasing to the auditor.
A POSSIBLE EXPLANATION
258
259
Lefebres Benefit Concert of 1893 (one of many benefits over the years, the proceeds
of which presumably went to Lefebre, although this is uncertain) took place on 9 January, at
Hardman Hall on Fifth Avenue and Nineteenth Street, Manhattan (appendix 3).20 The
saxophonist performed Reverie by Kiehl, as well as Evening Prayer and Resurrection by Harry
Rowe Shelley (the composer performing on organ). Shelley made saxophone adaptations of
previous works, one an orchestral romanza, the other for voice. Each was first performed with
the Gilmore Band in September of 1888.21 A student of Stoeckel, Buck, and Dvork22, Shelley
was once a household name, and was considered one of the best melodists of his day.23
Others who performed that evening were vocalists Ida Klein, soprano, Victor Clodio, tenor,
George H. Wiseman, baritone, and the violinist, van Praag, who performed various works of
Mendelsohn, Handel, Meyerbeer, Goltermann, Wieniawski, and Verdi.24
Lefebre Joins Sousa
The pool of saxophone talent for Sousa to choose from in the summer of 1892 was small,
but had included: Louis Knittel25 and F. A. Majinol26 of Alessandro Liberatis Band; Charles W.
Kruger27 and Stanley Lawton28 of the United States Marine Corps Band (Sousas former
employer); W. F. Schensley of Buffalo Bills Wild West;29 Edwin S. Timmons of the 2nd
Regiment Band of Chicago;30 and R. E. Trognitz.31 None of the above saxophonists were ever
formally contracted to play with Sousa at this time. Knittel was soon hired to play the bass
saxophone with Gilmore, and eventually served under Sousas baton for the European tour of
1900.32 Kruger and Lawton joined Sousa in 1893 (see below), and Schensley was a member of
Sousas saxophone section from 1904 to 1916.33 Timmons, formerly an alto saxophonist with
Frederick Innes in Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, and Brooklyn,34 became a featured saxophonist at the
1893 Columbian World Exposition in Chicago, performing with the Exposition orchestra and a
260
professional band.35 He was listed as the saxophone instructor at the Chicago Conservatory of
Music in August 1893.36 Trognitz became a soloist with Arthur Pryors Band and the City
Guard Band of San Diego.37
Saxophonists T. F. Shannon and E. A. Lefebre of the Gilmore Band also came calling on
Sousa. David Blakely, Sousas tour manager, attempted to clarify this awkward situation to
Patrick Gilmores widow. In a letter dated 8 March 1893, Blakely explained:
I desire most emphatically to say, that I never made an overture to any one of
Gilmores men before he died either directly or indirectly, except upon the
proviso of his own consent. Mr. Shannon applied for the position of Sergeant of
the Band immediately when he heard of its formation. I said to him that under no
circumstances would I take him into the Band, unless he would secure Mr.
Gilmores willing consent to his release. He subsequently came to me, and said
that he arranged with Mr. Gilmore to come with our Band, provided he would
leave his instrument with Mr. Gilmore for some other musician to use. It was
upon this assurance, and this alone, that I hired Mr. Shannon. Lefebre and Lacalle
also applied to me, and I declined to employ either of them. Lefebre, I knew Mr.
Gilmore would not wish to lose, and I declined him outright.38
Indeed, Lacalle had applied to join Sousa on 3 August 189239, later using his application as
leverage with Gilmore for an increase in salary.40 Judging from Blakelys comments Lefebre
also applied to Sousa at this time, although no documented evidence exists of such an overture.
By September 1892, Sousas saxophone section (for the first nine-week tour) was
composed of the following performers:
Samuel Schaich
Thomas F. Shannon
Tenor Saxophone42
Rudolphe Becker
Baritone Saxophone43
Schaich, a clarinetist formerly with Simon Hasslers band in Philadelphia, signed with Sousa in
early September.44 (Edwin Timmons, a candidate for saxophone soloist, was unable to travel to
New York for examination, and unable to tour before January 1893.)45 Shannon was
261
Gilmores former bass saxophonist and Becker was formerly with the Wanamaker Band in
Philadelphia. Mr. L. Jabon, a Belgian bassoonist with the New Orleans French Opera, helped to
broaden the saxophone search by forwarding the address of certain Belgian Saxophones to
Sousa in late August.46 Jean Moeremans first correspondence with Sousa came six weeks later:
Montral October 15th/92
To Mr. John P. Sousa
Dear Sir
I received from Mr. Jabon your first Basson (sic), a letter in which he asks me to
join your band as Alto Saxophone Soloist. He also asks me to find him a Tenor
Saxophone Soloist, which I can do. But, I wish to tell you that I and other
gentleman, we both occupy a good position, and we do not care to leave it for $35
per week. That would be impossible. I, as Alto Saxophonist have just left the
first Guides of Belgium, where I have been during 8 years as Soloist and carried
by a unanimous verdict the medal and diploma as Soloist at the international
competition held at CourbevouieParis. I have also played with the late Mr.
Gilmore as Soloist. (The Tenor Saxophonist that I would present to you, is a
Gold Medalist from the Conservatory of LiegeBelgium; which Conservatory is
a very important one. If you should also wand a good Clarinettist, I have one at
your disposal, first prize with Medal, from the Conservatory of GandBelgium
and an ex-solo Clarinet at the Opera of the same city. I also wish to tell you that
we could not join your band before next March; on account of our engagement in
Montral. Consequently, if you will pay us $50 per week, we will be at your
disposal from next March. Please let us know as quick as possible, because then
we could procure the instruments in the required [low] pitch. You will also oblige
me greatly by letting me know if you will want a Clarinettist. Hoping for an
answer I remain Yours Truly,
Jean Moeremans
Saxophone Soloist
Shorner Park. or St. Louis Street.5.
Montral Canada
Moeremans connection to Gilmore is unknown, however he may have performed as a guest
soloist with the Gilmore Band during their 1875 European tour, which had included Brussels.
Moeremans sent a second letter two months later:
Montral 26 December 1892
My Dear Sir
Having received no answer to the letter, I would ask by the present letter if
you have decided to engage me as Alto Saxophone Soloist in your band. Please
let me know as quick as possible whether my conditions suit you, as I am offered
another engagement with a band for the Worlds Fair. I also have at your disposal
262
263
men must have suffered the same fate as Lefebre who by this time had been with the Twentysecond Regiment Band for over a decade. By the end of his career, Lefebres deafness was total:
The last two years that this noble old musical gladiator did solo work, he was so
deaf that he couldnt hear a sound, and he played his numbers, leaning with one
arm on the piano, so in this way he could detect the vibrations of the piano
enough to keep fairly well in tune with it.54
Gilmores guns of the Anvil Chorus took a terrible toll, yet Lefebres mission continued.
In January 1893 the Musical Courier announced that the Sousa Band had been contracted
for the St. Louis Exhibition (a seven-week engagement in the Gateway to the West) with a
suggestion that Sousa is today the most conspicuous figure in the band world since the deaths of
Gilmore and Cappa.55 Lefebre and other Gilmore men soon concurred. On 15 February 1893,
the Musical Courier disclosed further defections from the Twenty-second Regiment Band:
The [Sousa] band begins its spring tour April 10, and including its Beach
and St. Louis engagements, and its tours throughout the country and California,
will be continuously engaged for nine months, thus giving its musicians an
uncommonly long and continuous term of employment.
The band has just added to its original strength such names from
Gilmores Band as Wadsworth, first flute; Bode, the first coronet [sic]; Lefebre,
the distinguished saxophone soloist; Lecalle, Eb clarinet; Miller, the popular
manipulator of the snare drum, tympani, and traps; Urbain, Bb clarinet, and
others. Raffayolo, the famous euphonium player; Stengler, solo clarinet, and
others of Gilmores Band, had previously been enrolled amongst the stars of the
Sousa galaxy.56
While all of the performers listed above did eventually sign on with Sousa, this article was
premature in announcing Lefebres addition to Sousas ranks. Moeremans was still under
consideration:
Montral 20-2-93
Dear Sir
In Answer to your last letter in wish (sic) you ask me what my conditions
are as Alto Saxophone Soloist my conditions are there. $50 per week when
travelling and $40 when in the city.
I remain Sir, Yours Truly,
Jean Moeremans
264
Artiste Musician
St. Louis Street, No. 5
Montral Canada
In the end, Blakely appears to have to reconsidered Lefebres usefulness:
February 28, 1893
E. A. Lefebre, Esq.,
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Dear Mr. Lefebre.I promised to inform you of my conclusion regarding your going with the
Band, and I do so now. I have determined, that I could not, under any
circumstances, pay over $60. [sixty] on the road, and $50 at the Beach and
Expositions. If you will accept this sum, I should be glad to have you as a
member of the band. You will find in it all the valuable members of the Band,
including Stengler, Stockigt, Raffayolo, Bode, Wadsworth, Miller, Urbain,
LaCalle, Conrad, and others. I should be glad to enroll with these, the name of
the distinguished saxophone, Lefebre; but I cannot do so except upon the offer
now made. And if this is unsatisfactory, you will please consider the matter
closed. Regretting that I cannot reach your views in the matter, I am,
Very cordially yours,
D. Blakely57
rd
Philadelphia March 3 /93
David Blakely Esqu. N.Y.
Dear Sir
Yours of Febr. 28th forwarded came to hand. Since I signed agreement on
refusall, and heard nothing after the same expired, I considered my self engaged
however, your offer now to me is somewhat different. I hope to return to N.Y.
next Sunday, if I have no delay at Westfield, Plainfield and Elisabeth, N.J. which
may be; but anyway I hope to call at your office Monday or Tuesday to talk the
matter over.
As I have been informed Mr. Sousa uses the lowe Pitch in that case I shall
have to order a lowe Pitch saxophone as the Gold Sax. I play upon now is high
Concert p. also my Silver one. As a new instrument to order will cost me at least
$125.00 and new Solos to play during the Summer and Fall Season will cost me
at least another $40.00 this brings me into enormous expence.
Mr. Glimore payed me at the Beach $50.00, St. Louis and on the road
$60.00 and he payed for novell solos which he wanted me to play on the Beach
(he payed) and since the last five years I played no fireworks which previllege he
only had given to me. Now to see that you only offer me $50.00 per week at
Chicago and St. Louis, is more astonishing to me than anything else, this wouldnt
pay Lefebre, and neither is a pay for my reputation I got all over the U.S.A. I
couldnt do this to receive lower pay. By inclosed you can see that I do different
business than any of the late Soloist of the Gilmore Band, and this line of business
I can increase, if I should not become a member of Mr. Sousas Band, and leave
the old Concern.
265
I want also say that If Mr. Gilmore had offered me $50 at St. Louis I
would have never played there.
I hope to have the pleasure to talk with you by next Monday or Tuesday
and Remain
Yours Resp.
E. A. Lefebre58
The discussion of high pitch (A=457Hz) and low pitch (A=440Hz) instruments refers to the two
competing tuning systems in use in the late nineteenth century. In 1914, low pitch became the
international standard. Jean Moeremans fee of $50 per week on the road (and $40 in the city)
likely increased Blakelys bargaining leverage with Lefebre, resulting in the somewhat
different offer mentioned above. As Lefebre made sure to point out, his reputation all over the
U.S.A. as the reigning Saxophone King would bring unrivaled status and credibility to Sousas
new outfit.
Brooklyn March 5th/93
D. Blakely Esqu. N.Y.
Dear Sir
I hearby wish to say to you yes and accept the Salary you offered. I
wish to be a member of Mr. Sousas New Marine Band and injoi his splendid
conducting of which I have been informed by interned friends of mine.
I hope to call personal at your office Monday aft., or Tuesday Morning
March 7th.
Yours Resp.
E. A. Lefebre
The mass defections from Gilmore to Sousa produced tension and controversy. Blakely
explained his side of the story to Mrs. Gilmore:
Now then, when Mr. Gilmore died, and you decided to have no pecuniary
connections with the Band, I felt that no man living was more entitled to the
goodwill of the organization than I was myself. I felt that if those men who had
been so long in the joint employment of Mr. Gilmore and myself, wished to
follow me in any like venture, that is was right and proper that they should do so...
So far as the inducements held out by me to Gilmores men are concerned, I
have to say that in no instance have I paid greater salaries than the men were
receiving, and in most cases, considerably less. Lefebre finally came into the
office on Monday [6 March], and I closed a contract with him at $50. a week for
six months of the engagement, and $60. a week for three weeks only. Stengler
received $5. a week less than he did with Gilmore. Stockigt receives $50. a week
266
only. Bode has $5. per week less. Clark, $20. less, if he tells the truth, and so
on.59
Whatever the truth of the matter, Reeves and those loyal to the Gilmore Band felt betrayed. On
15 March, an open letter, having been circulated some days earlier, appeared in the Musical
Courier, bitterly attacking the fossiled and worn-out members of Gilmores Band, who had left
that organization for greener pastures. The letter, likely written by Reeves and signed as
Gilmores Band, does not mention Sousa specifically. However, there was deep resentment
toward the latter for having obtained exclusive playing engagements at the St. Louis Exposition
and Chicago Worlds Fair, engagements, which had traditionally been reserved for the 22nd
Regiment Band under Gilmore.60 The so-called fossils, including Lefebre and Bode, both
previously on the committee that had invited Reeves to lead the Gilmore Band, responded with
the following:
A Card
The undersigned, late solo members of Gilmores Band, but now members of
Sousas Band, have observed with amazement the circular issued to the public,
signed Gilmores Band, attacking Sousas organization in general and the
undersigned in particular, and characterizing us as fossiled and worn out
members of Gilmores Band. Perhaps no person on earth, were he living, would
be more astounded and indignant than Mr. Gilmore himself to see such an attack
made upon the men who occupied his first chairs when he died, and whom he
took pleasure in advertising as his favorite soloists. Mr. Reeves, the present
leader of Gilmores Band, who has written this circular and who claims to be Mr.
Gilmores friend, could hardly have inflicted a deadlier insult to his memory than
to stigmatize him as having chosen and led, up to the time of his death, what Mr.
Reeves characterizes as fossiled and worn out men. This is sufficient to say of
this part of Mr. Reeves circular.
The undersigned left Gilmores and took an engagement with Mr. Sousa
because his band had been chosen to succeed Gilmores band for the long
engagements of St. Louis Exposition, the Manhattan Beach and the Worlds Fair,
and in addition, long tours of concerts, thus affording his musicians a continuous
and extended engagement. It was also a great pleasure for us to enroll ourselves
under the leadership of so thoroughly accomplished and exceptionally successful
leader as John Philip Sousa, whose brilliant band it is an honor to any musician to
belong to.
267
It only remains to question the right of Mr. Reeves to sign the name of
Gilmores Band to any circular, or in any connection, considering the fact that
the band is now not only destitute of its late brilliant and lamented leader, but
most of the soloists who aided him in making it famous, and of the engagements
which had been so long identified with his successful career. These soloists and
these engagements being now in possession of Sousas Band, and its management
being the same as that which piloted Gilmore so successfully through the last five
years of his great career, itwould seem as if the question might be an open one
whether Sousas organization, if he wished it, could not lay greater title to being
Gilmores Band than the organization whose leader, by his wanton and
gratuitious attack upon the favorite musicians of Gilmore, has so belied the
latters character as a competent judge of the qualifications of the musicians
whom it was his pleasure to employ.
M. Raffayolo, euphonium soloist.
E. A. Lefebre, solo saxophone.
A. Bode, first cornet.
H. L. Clark, cornet soloist.
F. W. Wadsworth, first flute.
A. P. Stengler, first clarinet.
F. Urbin, first clarinet.
J. Lacalle, first clarinet.
Thos. F. Shannon, bass saxophone.
Hermann Conrad, tuba-helicon.
Ernst Mueller, drum and tympani.61
The Gilmore Band continued to play engagements for a few years to come, under the direction
of Victor Herbert. Wallace Nimms took Lefebres place as saxophone soloist.62 Before joining
the Gilmore Band, Nimms had been the E-flat clarinetist and saxophone soloist of the Overman
Wheel Company Band in Springfield, Massachusetts.63
The Sousa Bands Grand Colombian Tour began in New Jersey on 20 April 1893 and
culminated at the Colombian Exposition at the Chicago Worlds Fair in late May and June.
David Blakely indicated Thomas Shannon was now playing first clarinet on this tour.64 Moving
Shannon to the clarinet section allowed for the following, a likely configuration of the saxophone
section in Sousas Band from April through October 1893:
Edward A. Lefebre
alto saxophone
Charles W. Kruger
tenor saxophone
268
Stanley Lawton
baritone saxophone
Kruger and Lawton were both very anxious to go with [Sousa] on his first tour in September
189265 and had applied for discharge from the United States Marine Corps at that time,66 but
were delayed until 1893. Krugers service was uninterrupted until he left the band prior to the
European tour of 1900. Lawton was with the band in 1893,67 1895 to 1903, and again from 1909
to c.1912.68
A Colombian Exposition brochure included a photograph of E. A. Lefebre, a soloist who
endorsed Conn saxophones.69 Conns Wonder saxophones were awarded a diploma and gold
medal at the 1893 Colombian Exposition.70 Conn began manufacturing saxophones in 1892 and
presented Lefebre with a gold-plated [high-pitch] saxophone at the Elkhart factory on 6 February
1892.71 (He likely received a low-pitch instrument from Conn when he joined Sousa.)
Beginning in July 1893, Sousa and his men performed for two months at Manhattan
Beach. Lefebre performed [Elgie] by Elyne Renaud during the 3:30 matinee on 5 July.
Subsequent solo appearances by Lefebre include selections from Der Freischtz on 6 July,
Elgie by Reynaud (saxophone solo with French horn quartet) on 15 July72, Resurrection by
Harry Rowe Shelley on 19 July, and Chant Relegieux by Jules Demersseman on 2 August 1893
(appendix 4).73 The Sousa Band returned to the Midwest for an engagement at the St. Louis
Exposition, which commenced on 6 September 1893. Lefebre performed an unknown solo on 7
September, and records of subsequent solo appearances in St. Louis remain to be found.
Lefebre soloed with Sousa in Brooklyn on 3 December 1893, and again at a charity
concert at the Metropolitan Opera House, known as the greatest popular concert ever given in
Brooklyn, on 18 January 1894. On both occasions, Lefebre performed Shelleys Resurrection.74
Further Brooklyn dates included Sunday concerts on 21 and 28 January at Kochs Railroad, as
269
well as an occasion at the Emerald Ball, Brooklyn, 31 January 1894.75 It seems only fitting that
Lefebres final appearances with Sousa would be in his American hometown of Brooklyn,
N.Y. where he lived with his wife, Anna. It was here that Mr. and Mrs. Lefebre raised four
daughters and three sons. Lefebre was also a Mason, a member of the Brooklyn Lodge of Elks,
and a member of the Musical Mutual Protective Union.76
270
me; and my present income of my pupils for the piano and Saxophone are better
then what this new interprice offers me.
With Cordial Regards
I am Yours Resp.
E. A. Lefebre
P.S. When ever you wish to have a private musical at your Rooms just inform me
and I would invite talent for the occasion, and I have no doubt a lover of music as
you are will injoi it.78
One year earlier, Lefebre had vigorously negotiated with Blakely before accepting a salary of
$50.00 per week ($60.00 for three weeks). From the tone of this letter, Lefebre clearly felt the
present offer (c.$31.75 per week)79, little more than half his previous years salary, did not
dignify a counter-offer. In other words, Lefebre was saying, Who in their right mind would
accept such an offer that would only cover the cost of lodging and incidental expenditures? His
mention of piano and saxophone lessons can be seen as an attempt to provide a stark contrast
between teaching, an occupation in which musicians of any ability can secure, and concertizing
as a soloist, a career in which only the most talented and proficient of musicians are retained. By
writing in such a tone, Lefebre surely hoped Blakely would provide him with a more reasonable
offer. According to later correspondence, however, Sousa had apparently construed Lefebres
comments regarding the new enterprise which does not require for my benefit to think about,
as arrogant and believed the Saxophone King had no further interest in performing with the band
due to other glorious prospects. Lefebres initial shock and amazement over the first offer
turned toward bitterness and disgust when Blakely never responded. Four days later, a shaken
Lefebre looked to settle this unpleasant business with the Sousa Band, but his pride would not
allow him to address Blakely or anyone else in the organization in person.
42 Heart Street
Brooklyn febr. 10th 1894
D. Blakely. Esqr.
N. Y.
Dear Sir,
271
Mr. Lion your Librarian has got my books, and score and parts of The
Resurection by Shelley, If he will delivery the books at 44 East 12th Street N.Y. I
will have the Saxophone over there, and the same will be returned when he
delivers my music.
The Saxophone when I received there was no case or bagg to it, and I
would not risk to express it this way, my friend who has his store at 44 East he
will take it along, so it will come safe in hand.
Resp.
E. A. Lefebre80
One can easily understand Lefebres exasperation at what he perceived to be unfair and wrongful
treatment. In a final attempt at reconciliation, Lefebre expressed his true feelings to Blakely,
providing thoughtful explanations for why he had rejected the initial salary offer outright (and a
conciliatory excuse for why he hadnt come in personally). He even showed his sense of loyalty
and desire to stay with Sousa, by coming closer to Blakelys terms. This document offers deep
insight into Lefebre the man, his aspirations, his convictions, and his integrity.
42 Heart Street
Brooklyn febr. 12th/94
D. Blakely. Esqr.
N. Y.
Dear Sir,
According to what I heard from Mr. Shannon that I expressed myself as I
didnt care to play any more with Mr. Sousas Band. I must say, was not my
meaning. Contrairy, I always had the greatest respect for you. I know all the
business was made by Mr. D. Blakely even at the time when our Dear Patrick
Gilmore was alive, was always carried through succesfully by the Blakely Bros as
your brother knows I made those speeches before the Band I work for you and
Mr. Sousa with the greatest respect and pleasure. And will gladly continue but
even now, and for the time to come I wish you financial success.
Also I wish this for my self at least so much that I can exist over 23 years I
work to become a man of reputation by solo playing and to make the Saxophone
popular, this I have done with success.
When ask to join Mr. Sousas Band I left an organization which I had
served for over 19 years.
Now after I served Mr. Sousas Band only about 10 month, and already to
cut my pay as offered while others who never have made any reputation where
offered more this broke my heart. I never come amongst the musicians at the
Union, but once I was there and they informed me about the rumors etc.. and that
you had made different offers.
272
273
the Panic of 1893, there was a rush to exchange treasury certificates for hard currency,
reducing the nations gold reserve from $190 million in 1890 to $65 million by 1894.83 It
appeared the U.S. would be forced to abandon gold payments, which caused an international
collapse in U.S. currency, resulting in numerous business failures, widespread unemployment,
and severe personal hardship.84 Indeed, the nation was in the throes of a depression.
Blakelys reply can also be seen through the eyes of a businessman tired of the constant
negotiations with each and every player, some fifty-five total men. Lefebre was the final holdout
of the entire group, just as he had been exactly one year earlier. Nevertheless, Blakely
begrudgingly came up with an extra $3.25 per week added to his previous offer, extending a
courtesy to Lefebre by holding off on signing the musician selected to take [Lefebres] place.
(This unnamed musician was certainly Jean Moeremans, who had first been in touch with Sousa
sixteen months earlier in October 1892.) Blakelys last-minute concession in an attempt to retain
Lefebre indicates a certain loyalty to the saxophone soloist. A glimpse of the relationship
between Lefebre and Blakely comes from Lefebres letter of 12 February, where he stated:
I know all the business was made by Mr. D. Blakely even at the time when our
Dear Patrick Gilmore was alive, was always carried through succesfully by the
Blakely Bros as your brother knows I made those speeches before the Band I
work for you and Mr. Sousa with the greatest respect and pleasure.
Lefebre had spoken on more than one occasion to the entire Gilmore Band on Blakelys behalf
and it was now Blakelys turn to show his loyalty to Lefebre. A weeklong engagement at
Madison Square Garden beginning 26 February was fast approaching and the subsequent tour to
the west and the San Francisco Exposition necessitated a quick conclusion to this matter.
Feb. 13, [1894]
E. A. Lefebre Esq.
Brooklyn N.Y.
My dear Lefebre:-
274
Your note is received. Mr. Shannon had agreed to give an answer to the
musician selected to take your place this morning. But learning from him that
you would come in to-day, I requested him to wait before closing, your visit here.
Your letter, however, answers the same purpose.
I cannot answer at further length this morning, than to say that it is
impossible for me to accept your terms. To show my disposition in your favor,
and my desire is to retain you, I will so far add to my proposition made the other
day, as to pay you $35 per week for the entire time of our next engagement, which
is expected to begin Feb. 23, and end about Dec. 8, and will constitute about 41
weeks. For this time, the amount will be $1435 instead of $1300 for the year
which I offered before, and which I did not entertain to change. If you prefer to
have this amount paid at the rate of $30 for one-half the time, when we shall be in
New York and Manhattan Beach, etc., and $40 for the other half, which will
comprise mainly the road half, it will be equally agreeable to me. But I wish you
to understand that this is the outside figure that I can, under any circumstances,
offer.
I will therefore thank you the moment you receive this to reply by wire,
simply saying yes, or no. Mr. Shannon has promised the player who is to
take your place in case you decline that he shall positively have his answer tomorrow. And I cannot any longer postpone a decision.
I wish to add that no matter what anybody says to you, no discrimination
has been made against you. The salaries have been re-arranged throughout the
Band, with the purpose of making it self-supporting. This either had to be done,
or the enterprise abandoned altogether and I am happy to say that all the old
members of but you have willingly accepted the situation. The times are such that
sacrifices have to be made in all branches of business. And the musicians of our
Band have reason to congratulate themselves that in spite of existing conditions,
they will have a longer term of employment and in the end more money than they
had during the preceding year.
Should I receive no reply from you, by noon to-morrow, I shall consider
that you have declined my proposition as I cannot ask your successor to wait
longer.
Hoping that Lefebre will continue to be enrolled as a member of Sousas
Band, I am, as in any case I shall continue to be
[Very cordially yours,
D. Blakely]85
Considering Sousas trombone soloist, Arthur Pryor, was offered $1500 per year,86
Blakelys final offer to Lefebre of $1435 was comparable. Nevertheless, Lefebre had a
much wider reputation throughout the world in 1894 than Pryor, a man less than half the
age of the seasoned saxophone soloist. According to Lefebres own account, rumors of
different offers may have made him acutely aware of such discrepancies, and thus he
275
felt disrespected and unfairly treated. Lefebre had worked years to build his reputation,
but he would no longer remain with Sousa under such terms.
42 Heart Street
Brooklyn febr. 13th 1894
D. Blakely. Esqr.
N. Y.
Dear Sir,
Yours I received this Ev at 1.35. but it is impossible for me to accept
your terms.
While on the road, I couldnt very well support my large family. Of
course, from the 10 month and one week engagement you, offer, the Band will be
most the time on the road.
Whosoever you engage in my place, this man hasnt got the reputation I
got all over the N.A. and spasialy at the Beach and St. Louis, where Lefebre has
great number of admirers and who are always glad to see me back again, the late
Gilmores Soloist are beloved at the Manhattan Beach and St. Louis if you will
consider once more my conditions I stated in my letter of the 12th inst. and will
favor me with accept I shall be pleased to continue with Sousas Band.
And I remain Yours Resp.
E. A. Lefebre87
By 15 February, Lefebre was gone, Moeremans was on, and Blakely had cleared away
all the cobwebs.88 The saxophone section now consisted of:
Jean Moeremans
alto saxophone
Charles W. Kruger
tenor saxophone
Rudolphe Becker
baritone saxophone
Moeremans was engaged for ten years as Sousas saxophone soloist (1894-99, 1902-5) and his
first known solo appearance was on 26 May, at Madison Square Garden, performing Fantasie
Brilliante by Demersseman.89 Jules Demersseman (1833-1866) was a Belgian flute virtuoso and
composer, who wrote nearly a dozen works for saxophone, including the aforementioned Chant
Religieux played by Lefebre, during the years in which Adolphe Sax was the Professor of
Saxophone and Military Music at the Paris Conservatory (1857-70).90 Moeremans last months
with Sousa, during the spring of 1905 featured his solos accompanied by a quartet of saxophones
276
composed of William Schensley, alto saxophone, Fred Paul, alto saxophone, Samuel Schaich,
tenor saxophone, and Rudolph Becker, baritone saxophone.91 Moeremans final performance
with Sousa was on 10 June 1905 at Willow Grove, near Philadelphia.92
Belle Mahone
Lefebres quick exit from the Sousa Band and Moeremans subsequent arrival has
clouded the circumstances surrounding Belle Mahone, the only solo saxophone work written by
John Philip Sousa. Composed in 1885, Belle Mahone was a theme and variations solo
supposedly written for E. A. Lefebre.93 The particulars regarding the commission and/or
dedication of the work remain unknown, and Lefebre never performed it with either Gilmore or
Sousa. Jean Moeremans premiered Belle Mahone in the summer of 1894 (first known
performance on 30 July), less than six months after Lefebres departure.94 If this composition
had been completed in the 1880s, why didnt Lefebre perform it with Sousa in 1893? One
unverified anecdote, as told by Harold Stephens (Sousas saxophone soloist during the 1925-26
season), alleges that Moeremans had purchased the work from someone in upstate New York
shortly after joining the Sousa Band.95 Sousas statement regarding the matter (also alleged by
Stephens) was that, Lefebre died owing him [payment] for [composing] the solo.96 If Lefebre
had owed Sousa money from 1885, this debt would likely have been settled in 1893 within the
terms of Lefebres contract when he became one of Sousas employees. If payment for Belle
Mahone were still at issue in 1894 (and until Lefebres death in 1911 according to Stephens),
why was no mention made in Lefebres or Blakelys correspondence? If Sousa were bitter
toward Lefebre about owing him money, why was the last-minute retaining offer of $1435 made
in spite of there being a musician to take [Lefebres] place? By all appearances, money was
not the critical issue.
277
The timing of Lefebres departure and Moeremans almost immediate premiere of Belle
Mahone has had an appearance of being more than just a coincidence. According to
contemporaries G. E. Holmes and Clay Smith, Lefebre [performing in the last two decades of his
life] was not a great soloist technically, but the beautiful quality of tone, individual style of
phrasing, and unequaled interpretations, have never been excelled by any modern performer.97
This is corroborated by Lefebres published transcriptions and arrangements which are decidedly
cantabile (many being adaptations of popular operatic melodies), ideally suited to highlight the
vocal tone color of the saxophone. Did Belle Mahone demand bravura and virtuosity beyond
Lefebres technical limits? It was the last work on the final program to close the two-month
engagement at Manhattan Beach on 2 September 1894, which suggests it was a brilliant
showcase piece.98 The speed and facility with which Moeremans played his own variations on
Carnival of Venice, recorded in 1902 (and performed frequently with Sousa), offers dramatic
proof of his technical expertise. By the 1890s, Lefebre had lost the hearing of one ear (and
presumably suffered some hearing loss in the other), which, in Blakelys own words had very
much impair[ed] his usefulness [as a soloist]. A lack of technical facility (likely due to age)
exacerbated by partial deafness emerges as the most plausible reason for why Lefebre never
performed Belle Mahone. While the work may have been composed for Lefebre (whether he
was capable of playing it or not), once he resigned from Sousas Band, it stands to reason that
Lefebre forfeited his rights of performance to his successor, Jean Moeremans. The complete
truth of the matter may never be known and unfortunately Belle Mahone has been lost.
However, had Lefebre had the chance and had he been physically able during the 1893-4 season
to showcase that which eventually became the most popular and significant work performed by
278
Moeremans,99 one can be assured Lefebre would not have missed the opportunity to premiere
the work.
Now sixty years old (but hardly fossiled and worn out), Lefebre found new
opportunities to further promote the saxophone over the next fifteen years. On the production
end, he worked as a consultant at the C. G. Conn factory in Elkhart, Indiana, from 1895-1900,
and as a pedagogue, he taught at the Conn Conservatory from 1896-1900, while publishing
dozens of transcriptions and arrangements with Carl Fischer between 1888 and 1908. As a
performer, he led the Lefebre Saxophone Quartet, the first to make a transcontinental tour of the
United States and Canada between 1901 and 1903, and he freelanced as a soloist until 1909.
While ill for the last two years of his life, he continued to give private concerts from time to
time at his home until his death in 1911.100
Conclusion
The death of Patrick Gilmore, the rise of John Philip Sousas civilian band, the guns of
the Anvil Chorus, and the second worst economic depression in American history provided the
backdrop for a unique and unsettled chapter in the life of saxophonist Edward A. Lefebre. His
long-time employer, Patrick Gilmore, had been Lefebres strongest ally, a proponent of
saxophones in the wind band. From early performances featuring saxophone quartet alone, to his
last band, engaging an entire corps of ten saxophonists from sopranino to bass, Gilmore saw
saxophones as essential to his 22nd Regiment Band; and, for twenty years, Lefebre was the
section leader, soloist, and reigning Saxophone King. Sousa, however, retained Lefebre for one
season only. While Lefebres usefulness had been partly at issue, it was his pride and
stubbornness that played the decisive role in the failed negotiations and his perception of being
singled out and unfairly treated by the Sousa organization ultimately left him heartbroken.
279
Unsatisfied with Sousas terms, yet assured that his solid reputation and glorious prospects
would continue, Lefebre moved on.
1
Gilmore Band Program (uncatalogued), Music Hall (Cleveland), 8 December 1888, Library of Performing Arts,
New York Public Library, New York.
2
Conn Saxophone Catalog, c.1919.
3
Ibid, Academy of Music (Brooklyn), 15 January 1874.
4
Ibid.
5
Ibid, Manhattan Beach, 19 and 29 August 1883, 10 August 1886.
6
New York Times, 21 August 1891, 17.
7
Patrick Gilmore, Saint Louis, to David Blakely, New York, 18 October 1891, David Blakely Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
88
Musical Courier (New York), 18 Mayt 1892, 10.
9
Harry Hindson, Aspects of the Saxophone in American Musical Culture, 1850-1980, (Ph.D. diss, University of
Wisconsin Madison, 1992), 10.
10
Michael Hester, A Study of the Saxophone Soloists with the John Philip Sousa Band, 1893-1930, (D.M.A. diss,
University of Arizona, 1995), 17.
11
Baritone saxophonist F. William Schultze accompanied Gilmores body on its return to New York.
12
Musical Courier (New York), October 26, 1892, p. 15.
13
Joseph Murphy, Early Saxophone Instruction in American Institutions, (D.M.A. diss, Northwestern University,
1994), 14-5.
14
David Blakely, New York, to Theodore Thomas, Chicago, 11 November 1892, Blakely Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
15
Musical Courier (New York), 23 November 1892, 17.
16
Ibid, 14 December 1892.
1717
D. W. Reeves, unidentified newspaper clipping in P. S. Gilmore Clippings File, Library for the Performing Arts,
New York Public Library, New York.
18
Gilmore Band Program (uncatalogued), Boston Theatre, Boston, 18 December 1892, Library for the Performing
Arts, New York Public Library, New York.
19
This specific lower woodwinds instrumentation is indicated on other Gilmore Band programs.
20
Lefebres Benefit Concert Program (with uncatalogued Gilmore programs), Hardman Hall (New York), 9
January 1893, Library for the Performing Arts, New York Public Library, New York.
21
Gilmore Band Programs (uncatalogued), Manhattan Beach, 8 and 15 September 1888, Library for the Performing
Arts, New York Public Library, New York.
22
Dvork, living in New York City at this time, completed drafts of the first three movements of his New World
Symphony by mid-January 1893.
23
William Osborne, Shelley, Harry Rowe, in The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, eds. H. Wiley
Hitchcock and Stanley Sadie, 1986.
24
Ibid.
25
Louis Knittel, St. Louis, to David Blakely, New York, 15 July 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New
York Public Library, New York.
26
Note Card of David Blakely, c.July 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library, New
York.
27
Charles W. Kruger, Washington, D.C., to John Philip Sousa, New York, 12 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
28
Stanley Lawton, Washington, D.C., to John Philip Sousa, New York, 12 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
29
Schensley business card, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
30
Edwin S. Timmons, Chicago, to David Blakely, New York, 10 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
31
Note Card of David Blakely, c.July 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library, New
York.
280
32
Sousa Band photo with names of band members handwritten on back, Hamburg Germany, 30 May 1900, (housed
at the University of Illinois).
33
Murphy, Early Saxophone Instruction..., 22.
34
Edwin S. Timmons, Chicago, to David Blakely, New York, 10 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
35
Ibid, 32.
36
The Musical Courier (New York), 23 August 1893, 12.
37
Joseph Murphy, Early Saxophone Instruction..., 28.
38
David Blakely, New York, to Mrs. Patrick Gilmore, New York, 8 March 1893, Blakely Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
39
J. Lecalle, Brooklyn, to David Blakely, New York, 3 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New
York Public Library, New York.
40
Note Card, 7 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
41
Sousas New Marine Band, promotional booklet by David Blakely for the Washington State Opera House, 3
December 1892.
42
Hester, Saxophone Soloists with Sousa..., 17.
43
Frederick Hemke, The Early History of the Saxophone, (D.M.A. diss., University of Wisconsin, 1975), 414.
44
Note Card, 4 September 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
45
Edwin S. Timmons, Chicago, to David Blakely, New York, 30 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
46
Howard Pew, New York, to John Philip Sousa, Boston, 31 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
47
Jean Moeremans, Montral, to David Blakely, New York, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public
Library, New York.
48
David Blakely, New York, to Frank Gaienne, Saint Louis, 14 February 1893, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
49
Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Saxophone Soloist Dead, 23 February 1911.
50
Musical Courier (New York), 5 September 1883, 135.
51
Gilmore Band Program (uncatalogued), Manhattan Beach, 9 September 1885, Library for the Performing Arts,
New York City Public Library, New York.
52
Ibid.
53
Musical Courier (New York), 5 September 1883, 135.
54
G. E. Holmes and Clay Smith, The Saxophone is Coming Fast, (Buescher) True Tone X, no. 2, (1915): 4.
55
Musical Courier (New York), 11 January 1893, 23.
56
Ibid, 15 February 1893, 18.
57
David Blakely, New York, to Edward Lefebre, Brooklyn, 28 February 1893, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
58
Edward A. Lefebre, Brooklyn, to David Blakely, New York, 3 March 1893, Blakely Papers, Special Collections,
New York Public Library, New York.
59
David Blakely, New York, to Mrs. Patrick Gilmore, New York, 8 March 1893, Blakely Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
60
Musical Courier (New York), 15 March 1893.
61
Ibid.
62
C. G. Conns Truth, vol. 2, no. 9 (March 1894): 7.
63
Wallace Nimms, Springfield, Massachusetts, to David Blakely, New York, c. July 1892, Blakeley Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
64
David Blakely, New York, 17 March 1893, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library, New
York.
65
E. Williams, Washington, D.C., to John Philip Sousa, New York, 12 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special
Collections, New York Public Library, New York.
66
Charles W. Kruger, Washington, D.C., to John Philip Sousa, New York, and Stanley Lawton, Washington, D.C.,
to John Philip Sousa, New York, 12 August 1892, Blakely Papers, Special Collections, New York Public Library,
New York.
67
Varela photo, St. Louis Exposition 1893.
281
68
282
POST-ADDENDUM
LEFEBRES BIRTH RECORD
16
8 Septembre 1835 Leeuwarden
courtesy Jean-Marie Londeix
288