Imperial Edward

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Year1902
GenreMarch
DedicationKing Edward VII of the United Kingdom
Published1902, Cincinnati
Imperial Edward
by John Philip Sousa
Year1902
GenreMarch
DedicationKing Edward VII of the United Kingdom
Published1902, Cincinnati
PublisherJohn Church Company
Audio sample
United States Marine Band performing the march

"Imperial Edward" is an American military march composed in 1902 by John Philip Sousa, dedicated to Edward VII, King of the United Kingdom.[1] Sousa received permission to dedicate the march to the king during a conversation with the royal family following his command performance concert at Sandringham on December 1, 1901.[1] Sousa's band premiered the march in Montreal on May 21, 1902.[1] Sousa would later conduct the piece for King Edward in January 1903 during a performance at Windsor Castle.[2]

Edward VII and Sousa

In 1901, the Sousa Band took a tour of England. On December 1, 1901, at Sandringham House, Sousa and his band played a command performance in honor of Queen Alexandra’s birthday. After the performance, in a conversation with the royal family, Sousa "requested and received permission" to dedicate a march to King Edward VII.[1][2] Edward became king eleven months prior, following the death of his mother Queen Victoria in January. On December 2⁠, the day after the concert⁠, King Edward decorated Sousa with the Medal of the Royal Victorian Order.[3][4] Sousa's tour was mildly caricatured in Harper's Weekly as the "American invasion, or rag time at the Court of St. James."[5]

The first draft of "Imperial Edward" was finished in April 1902 while Sousa was on vacation in Hot Springs, Virginia, and the march was premiered by the Sousa band on May 21, 1902 during a concert in Montreal.[1] "Imperial Edward" was published by John Church Company, Cincinnati, in 1902.[6] The cover of the John Church sheet music states that the march is "Respectfully dedicated by special permission to His Most Gracious Majesty Edward VII."[6] John Church Company also created what has been described as a "beautiful" illuminated manuscript of the march.[1] This illuminated manuscript was brought to England by George Frederick Hinton, manager of the Sousa Band, and is currently held at the British Museum.[1] Sousa would meet Edward VII again in 1903, when he undertook another command performance at Windsor Castle on January 31. Beginning at 10 PM, this concert was attended by the royal family in addition to "several foreign dignitaries" and the band of the Scots Guards, who were invited by King Edward to attend Sousa's performance.[2] "Imperial Edward" was among the pieces performed, along with "El Capitan," "Hands Across the Sea," “The Stars and Stripes Forever,” and "God Save the King."

"Imperial Edward" has been performed twice at The Proms in London, in September 1903 and August 1904; on both occasions the performances were at Queen's Hall in Langham Place, later destroyed in 1941 during the Blitz.[7] Sir Henry Wood conducted both performances.[8][9]

Sousa's opinion of the march

Sousa himself, "for some reason," voiced his unhappiness with "Imperial Edward" nearly twenty-two years after the march was written, in the Sousa Band programs at Willow Grove in 1923.[1] The 1923 Willow Grove program bore the following passage:

I have never written a piece of music that I did not feel the inspiration. I have never turned out but one piece that I consider in any manner mechanical. That was “Imperial Edward,” the march I dedicated to King Edward on my second [sic] command to play before him—and that had to be finished in a hurry. For a part of it I felt an inspiration. For the rest, instead of digging down to the vein of gold, I struck a vein of ashes and used it.

John Philip Sousa, 1923 Sousa Band programs at Willow Grove[1]

Musical structure

See also

References

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