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Today, a salute to a remarkable American composer and performer — cornet virtuoso Herbert Lincoln Clarke.
Clarke was born in Wolburn, Massachusetts on September 12, 1867, into a peripatetic musical family. He began to play his brother’s cornet and was soon earning fifty cents a night playing in a restaurant band. At 19, he won first prize at a cornet competition in Indiana, and, in 1893, after many years on the road, he got the call from John Philip Sousa to join his illustrious organization as its star soloist, a position he held for over 20 years.
From 1900 on, Clarke began to compose and make recordings of his own music. In 1904, while on a return voyage from England with the Sousa Band, he completed one of his best-known pieces, originally titled Valse Brilliante. While waiting to dock in New York, however, at Sousa’s suggestion, he changed the title to Sounds from the Hudson.
Clarke eventually settled in California and died there on today’s date in 1945. But the much-traveled composer and performer was buried on the opposite coast — in the Congressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C. — near the grave of his lifelong friend, John Philip Sousa.
Herbert L. Clarke (1867-1945): Sounds from the Hudson (Valse Brillante); Wynton Marsalis, cornet; Eastman Wind Ensemble; Donald Hunsberger, conductor; CBS 42137
By American Public Media4.7
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Today, a salute to a remarkable American composer and performer — cornet virtuoso Herbert Lincoln Clarke.
Clarke was born in Wolburn, Massachusetts on September 12, 1867, into a peripatetic musical family. He began to play his brother’s cornet and was soon earning fifty cents a night playing in a restaurant band. At 19, he won first prize at a cornet competition in Indiana, and, in 1893, after many years on the road, he got the call from John Philip Sousa to join his illustrious organization as its star soloist, a position he held for over 20 years.
From 1900 on, Clarke began to compose and make recordings of his own music. In 1904, while on a return voyage from England with the Sousa Band, he completed one of his best-known pieces, originally titled Valse Brilliante. While waiting to dock in New York, however, at Sousa’s suggestion, he changed the title to Sounds from the Hudson.
Clarke eventually settled in California and died there on today’s date in 1945. But the much-traveled composer and performer was buried on the opposite coast — in the Congressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C. — near the grave of his lifelong friend, John Philip Sousa.
Herbert L. Clarke (1867-1945): Sounds from the Hudson (Valse Brillante); Wynton Marsalis, cornet; Eastman Wind Ensemble; Donald Hunsberger, conductor; CBS 42137

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