Gilmore, Patrick Sarsfield
1829-1892
Popular American bandmaster of Irish birth. Went to
Canada with an English band, of which he was a member, and from there to Salem,
Massachusetts, where he soon became a military band leader. In 1859 he went to
Boston, where he organized the celebrated Gilmore's band, which he brought to
an excellent standard of playing. In 1864, during the Civil War, he gave a
festival at New Orleans, where he was a bandmaster in the Federal army,
utilizing a number of military bands as one, and producing the effect of gigantic
drums with guns fired by electricity. This same device was later used in the
National Peace Jubilee at Boston, in 1869, where he organized an orchestra of
one thousand and a chorus of ten thousand; and in the World's Peace Jubilee,
1872, also in Boston, just doubling the previous number of players and singers.
Cannons, a powerful organ, a drum eight feet in diameter, anvils, and chimes of
bells were also added to the stupendous whole. The festival occupied five days.
Patriotic airs, selections from the great works of Handel, Mozart, Mendelssohn,
Gounod, and the best opera composers were mingled in the programs, that of the
fourth day being wholly classical, and including the Gloria from Mozart's
Twelfth Mass and Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, given by the orchestra.
On the fifth day, Saturday, a chorus of ten thousand
school children gave the greater part of the program, assisted by the orchestra
and the soloists. These performances, humorously characterized by Louis Elson,
in his National Music of America as "art by the wholesale,"
nevertheless were an ultimate influence for good music throughout the United
States in general, as many singers from the villages and country districts who
had scarcely heard the names of Mozart and Beethoven, flocked to join the huge
choruses, and received impressions that remained with them and later
benefited their home choirs and
schools. Their more immediate result was to make Gilmore's reputation
international. He next went to New York, and there became leader of a large military
band with which he toured the United States, and, in 1878, Europe. It is said
that his band was the first to play the Tannhauser overture. He had charge of
bands or orchestras in various New York gardens, and at summer resorts in that
vicinity. Many of his compositions, including military and dance music and
songs, became very popular; he also arranged numerous works for band, and wrote
a history of the Peace Jubilee of 1869, and a work on scales for the cornet.
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