National Intercollegiate Band

{{Short description|American intercollegiate concert band}}

{{good article}}

{{Infobox musical artist

| name = National Intercollegiate Band

| alias = NIB

| image = National Intercollegiate Band logo.svg

| image_size = 191

| origin = Stillwater, Oklahoma, United States

| genre = Concert band music, concert marches

| years_active = {{start date|1947}}–present

| label = Mark Records, Century Records

| associated_acts = {{Plainlist|

  • Kappa Kappa Psi
  • Tau Beta Sigma
  • Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Band
  • Atlantic Coast Intercollegiate Band
  • North Central District Intercollegiate Band

}}

| website = {{URL|nib.kkytbs.org}}

| current_members = Organizational Directors
Anthony Falcone
Dr. LaToya Webb
Commissioned Composer
Kevin Day
Guest Conductor
Dr. Jason Fettig

}}

The National Intercollegiate Band (NIB) is a concert band, sponsored by honorary band fraternity and sorority Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma, that performs every two years at the national convention of the two organizations. Organized in 1947, the NIB is the oldest national intercollegiate band in the United States, and is open to all collegiate band members regardless of membership in Kappa Kappa Psi or Tau Beta Sigma.

Since 1953, the National Intercollegiate Band has been the resident ensemble of Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma's Commissioning Program, which has added thirty new works to the band repertoire since its inception and is the longest-running commissioning program for wind band music in the United States.

The National Intercollegiate Band has performed under the baton of some of the most renowned wind band conductors in the history of the ensemble, including William Revelli, Frederick Fennell, James Croft, and others, several of whom have been honored as inductees into the National Band Association Hall of Fame of Distinguished Band Conductors.

History

= Early steps, 1922–1947 =

In 1922, Kappa Kappa Psi announced its plan to hold the first national intercollegiate band contest in American history. A brief dispatch in the 1922 Baton explained, "Sometime within the next two years the Kappa Kappa Psi Fraternity will hold a National Intercollegiate Band Contest. This enterprise will be the first of its kind ever attempted. As Music (sic) is becoming the foremost Art in America, our Fraternity aims to assist in so spreading the good work."{{Cite journal |year=1922 |title=Kappa Kappa Psi to Hold Intercollegiate Band Contest |periodical=BATON |volume=1 |page=14 |publisher=Kappa Kappa Psi |location=Stillwater, OK |oclc=56732825 }} This early announcement did not culminate in a contest, and the idea of a national intercollegiate band was not revisited again by Kappa Kappa Psi until the 1940s.{{cite book |author=Kappa Kappa Psi |editor1-first=Nick |editor1-last=Smith |title=Guide to Membership for the 2011–2013 Biennium |url=http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/KKPsiGuidetoMembership.pdf |year=2011 |publisher=Kappa Kappa Psi/Tau Beta Sigma |location=Stillwater, OK |pages=50–1 |chapter=History of the National Intercollegiate Band |access-date=2012-12-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130102172835/http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/KKPsiGuidetoMembership.pdf |archive-date=2013-01-02 }}

In the meantime, the first Kappa Kappa Psi-sponsored intercollegiate band was established by F. Lee Bowling in 1933, with musicians from the University of Colorado (home of the Alpha Iota chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi), the University of Denver (Alpha Lambda), Colorado State College of Agricultural and Mechanical Arts (Kappa), Colorado State College of Education (Alpha Theta), the Colorado School of Mines (Xi), and the University of Utah participating.{{Cite thesis |degree=M.Mus. |title=Kappa Kappa Psi, National Honorary Fraternity for College Bandsmen: Its History, Growth, and Development from 1919 to 1971 |last=Jameson |first=Joe C. Jr |year=1971 |publisher=Kansas State College of Pittsburg |oclc=29924625 |page=26 }} In 1934, the University of Utah left the intercollegiate band and the University of Wyoming (Alpha Nu) took its place. The concerts held by this Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Band were sponsored by the local chapters of Kappa Kappa Psi and many members of the fraternity participated in the ensemble. The first concert of the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Band was held in February 1933, and the band gave annual concerts during Denver Music Week. Bowling left the band's managership in 1937.{{Cite journal|periodical=Colorado Alumnus |title='High' Notes Scored in International Band World and Medical Circles by C.U. Graduate |volume=38 |issue=2 |date=August 1947 |page=1}}

= National Intercollegiate Band established, 1947 =

Bowling was elected Grand President of Kappa Kappa Psi in 1941 and presented a plan to hold a national intercollegiate band concert, modeled after the Rocky Mountain intercollegiate bands. The delegation endorsed the plan, which was to be executed at the next biennial national convention in Stillwater in 1943, the silver jubilee of the fraternity. However, due to World War II, the 1943 and 1945 national conventions were not held, and so the next biennial convention was held in 1947. The first National Intercollegiate Band gave a concert on the evening of Friday, March 7, 1947.{{cite news |last=Poulter |first=Virgil |title=Nation's Musicians Gathering Today In National Meet |url=http://dc.library.okstate.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ocolly1940/id/27721 |newspaper=O'Collegian |publisher=Oklahoma A&M College |location=Stillwater |date=March 6, 1947 |page=1 |access-date=June 29, 2012}} All delegates, officers, and visitors to the convention performed in the ensemble, which was augmented by Kappa Kappa Psi members from the Oklahoma A&M Symphonic Band so the band had a balanced instrumentation.

File:National Intercollegiate Band 1947.jpg

Grand First Vice-President William A. Scroggs, founder of the fraternity, conducted the band in their first piece, Semper Fidelis. Max A. Mitchell, Grand Second Vice-President, conducted Leonard Smith's Spanish Caprice, a piece for band and solo cornet. Bohumil Makovsky, Past Grand President and Chairman of the Board of Trustees, conducted his march, Kappa Kappa Psi, and F. Lee Bowling conducted J. DeForest Cline's Kappa Kappa Psi march.{{cite document |year=1947 |title=First National Intercollegiate Band Program |type=Concert program|publisher=National Intercollegiate Band }} The 1947 NIB was recognized as the first-ever intercollegiate band assembled with a national scope in the United States. Since 1947, the fraternity has presented the F. Lee Bowling Participation Award to the college or university who has had the most students participate in the National Intercollegiate Band, regardless of membership in Kappa Kappa Psi or Tau Beta Sigma. In the case of a tie, multiple awards are presented.

The 1957 National Intercollegiate Band performed in the Salt Lake Tabernacle in Salt Lake City on August 24, 1957, under the direction of Lieutenant Colonel William F. Santelmann, retired director of the United States Marine Band.{{cite news |title=Collegiate Band Plans Tabernacle Concert Saturday |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=dq9NAAAAIBAJ&dq=kappa-kappa-psi%20salt-lake&pg=7035%2C2845178 |newspaper=Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram |location=Salt Lake City |date=August 15, 1957 |page=B13 |access-date=June 26, 2012}}{{cite news |title=Collegiate Band To Give Concert Aug. 24 In S. L. |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=T3sJAAAAIBAJ&dq=kappa-kappa-psi%20salt-lake&pg=5266%2C4558429 |newspaper=Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram |location=Salt Lake City |date=August 23, 1957 |page=A9 |access-date=June 26, 2012}} The band comprised 112 musicians from Utah, Florida, Maryland, Colorado, Ohio, Texas, Indiana, and New Mexico, and premiered Robert Russell Bennett's new work Symphonic Songs for Band.

In 1969, the fiftieth anniversary of Kappa Kappa Psi, there were enough performers to create two bands. The National Intercollegiate Symphonic Band, the top ensemble, was conducted by Norman Dello Joio and premiered his new work, Songs of Abelard. The Symphonic Band also performed several other Dello Joio works, including Scenes from the Louvre, Variants on a Mediaeval Tune, and Fantasies on a Theme by Haydn. The National Intercollegiate Concert Band was conducted by Past Grand President Jay L. Slaughter, and performed Makovsky's Kappa Kappa Psi march and several other works.{{cite document |year=1969 |title=National Intercollegiate Band Program |type=Concert program|publisher=National Intercollegiate Band }}

= National Intercollegiate Marching Band, 2002 =

In June and July 2002, Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma sponsored the first National Intercollegiate Marching Band, which traveled to the French Riviera, including the cities of Nice, Grasse, Aix-en-Provence, Cannes, Antibes, and the Principality of Monaco.{{Cite journal |date=Spring 2000 |title=National Intercollegiate Marching Band French Riviera Tour |periodical=PODIUM |page=16 |url=http://kkytbs.org/podium/Podium-Sp2000.pdf |publisher=Kappa Kappa Psi/Tau Beta Sigma |location=Stillwater, OK |oclc=8172619 |access-date=2012-12-24 |archive-date=2012-04-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425120107/http://www.kkytbs.org/podium/Podium-Sp2000.pdf |url-status=dead }} The thirty-five member band, directed by Past National President Dr. Michael Golemo, performed at Le Suquet in Cannes, in Nice, and in front of the Prince's Palace of Monaco."National Intercollegiate Marching Band French Riviera-Principality of Monaco Working Itinerary #4" (DOC). Email attachment in {{Cite periodical |last1=Bonner |first1=Alan |date=November 20, 2011 |title=2002 National Intercollegiate Marching Band Tour to Riviera Proposed Itinerary Announced |periodical=News Notes On-Line |volume=3 |issue=9 |publisher=Kappa Kappa Psi/Tau Beta Sigma |url=http://kkytbs.org/newsnotes/newsnotes3-9.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303220654/http://kkytbs.org/newsnotes/newsnotes3-9.html |archive-date=2016-03-03 |access-date=January 4, 2012 }} Despite being billed as the "first biennial" intercollegiate marching band, the program was dissolved by the joint national councils after the inaugural trip due to its high cost and low attendance, which was believed to be caused by a fear of traveling abroad after the September 11 attacks.{{cite report |last1=Sigle |first1=Kimbi |last2=Roscoe |first2=Anthony E. |title=Joint Sessions Minutes, Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma 30th Biennial National Convention |contribution=Report of the Vice President for Communication and Recognition and the Vice President for Student Affairs |publisher=Kappa Kappa Psi/Tau Beta Sigma |year=2003 |url=http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/2003-TBS-JointMinutes.pdf |access-date=2012-12-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425120125/http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/2003-TBS-JointMinutes.pdf |archive-date=2012-04-25 }}

Guest artists

= Featured composer =

In 1953, Kappa Kappa Psi Grand President Hugh McMillen began the Commissioning Program to add new music to the band repertoire, beginning with a $500 commission of Don Gillis, who provided Ballet for Band for the NIB. The Commissioning Program is now the longest-running commissioning program for wind band music in American history, and has produced works that have secured a place in the emerging band canon and have garnered critical acclaim, such as Robert Russell Bennett's Symphonic Songs for Band and Karel Husa's Concerto for Trumpet and Wind Orchestra.{{cite book |last=Nicholls |first=William D. |title=Factors Contributing to the Commissioning of American Band Works Since 1945 |publisher=University of Miami |year=1980 |type=D.M.A. essay |chapter=National Intercollegiate Band |pages=15–8}}

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  • Robert E. Jager, Stars and Stripes Variations (1983)
  • James Barnes, Chorale Prelude: "Mein junges Leben hat ein End," Op. 61 (1985)
  • Jerry Bilik, Overture Alfresco (1987)
  • David Holsinger, Symphonic Canticle (1989)
  • Anne McGinty, Athenian Festival (1989)
  • Alfred Reed, Hymn Variants (based on "Lasst uns erfreuen, 1623") (1991)
  • James Curnow, Daystar: Symphonic Variations for Wind and Percussion (1993)
  • David Maslanka, A Tuning Piece: Songs of Fall and Winter (1995)
  • John Zdechlik, Rondo Jubiloso (1997)
  • Daniel Bukvich, Unusual Behavior in Ceremonies Involving Drums (1999){{col-break}}
  • Timothy Mahr, Mourning Dances (2001)
  • Jack Stamp, Bandancing (2003)
  • Philip Sparke, The Seasons (2005)
  • Eric Ewazen, Celestial Dancers (2007)
  • Mark Camphouse, Two American Canvases (2009)
  • Adam Gorb, Repercussions (2011)
  • John Mackey, (Redacted) (2013){{cite book |author=Kappa Kappa Psi |editor1-first=Nick |editor1-last=Smith |title=Guide to Membership for the 2011–2013 Biennium |url=http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/KKPsiGuidetoMembership.pdf |year=2011 |publisher=Kappa Kappa Psi/Tau Beta Sigma |location=Stillwater, OK |page=52 |chapter=National Intercollegiate Band Guest Conductors and Artists |access-date=2012-12-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130102172835/http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/KKPsiGuidetoMembership.pdf |archive-date=2013-01-02 }}{{cite book |author=Kappa Kappa Psi |editor1-first=Nick |editor1-last=Smith |title=Guide to Membership for the 2011–2013 Biennium |url=http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/KKPsiGuidetoMembership.pdf |year=2011 |publisher=Kappa Kappa Psi/Tau Beta Sigma |location=Stillwater, OK |page=53 |chapter=The Fraternity and Sorority Commissioning Program |access-date=2012-12-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130102172835/http://www.kkytbs.org/forms/KKPsiGuidetoMembership.pdf |archive-date=2013-01-02 }}
  • Julie Giroux, Of Blood & Stone: Pyramids of Giza (2015)
  • Steven Bryant, Miniature Suite (2017)
  • Joel Puckett, Fanfare for Friends (2019)
  • Alex Shapiro, Suspended (2021)
  • Michael Daugherty, The Adventures of Jesse Owens (2023)

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= Guest conductors =

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;1947

:Roger Fenn

:Hugh E. McMillen

:Leonard Haugh

;1949

:William Revelli

;1951

:Thor Johnson

;1953

:A. Austin Harding

;1955

:Frederick Fennell

;1957

:William F. Santelmann

;1959

:Paul Creston, Conductor-Composer

:Manley Whitcomb

;1961

:Richard Franko Goldman

;1963

:Charles Brendler

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;1965

:Václav Nelhýbel, Conductor-Composer

;1967

:Keith Wilson

;1969

:Norman Dello Joio, Conductor-Composer

;1971

:W. Francis McBeth, Conductor-Composer

:William Revelli

;1973

:Arnald Gabriel

;1975

:Martin Mailman, Conductor-Composer

:William C. Moffitt

;1977

:Carmen Dragon

;1979

:Donald E. McGinnis

;1981

:Gary T. Garner

:Terry Milligan

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;1983

:Donald Hunsberger

:James Sudduth

;1985

:William P. Foster

:Robert E. Foster

;1987

:Harry Begian

:John Wakefield

;1989

:John Paynter

:Joseph Missal

;1991

:Ray E. Cramer

;1993

:Paula Crider

;1995

:James Croft

;1997

:John Zdechlik, Conductor-Composer

:John L. Whitwell

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;1999

:David Waybright

;2001

:L. Bryan Shelburne

:Timothy Mahr, Conductor-Composer

:Julie Giroux, Conductor-Composer

;2003

:Don Wilcox

:Jack Stamp, Conductor-Composer

:Alan L. Bonner

;2005

:Michael Haithcock

;2007

:Frank B. Wickes

;2009

:John R. Bourgeois

;2011

:Craig Kirchhoff

;2013

:Anthony Maiello

;2015

:Joseph Hermann

;2017

:Richard Clary

;2019

:Jerry F. Junkin

;2021

:Cynthia Johnston Turner{{col-end}}

= Guest performers =

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the National Intercollegiate Band featured professional guest artists as soloists with the band. Two of these, T. N. Retif and Raymond Crisara, were featured soloists in that year's commissioned piece: Retif on Dello Joio's Songs of Abelard and Crisara on Karel Husa's Concerto for Trumpet and Wind Orchestra.{{cite book |last1=McLaurin |first1=Donald |editor1-first=Michael |editor1-last=Votta |title=The Wind Band and Its Repertoire: Two Decades of Research as Published in the College Band Directors National Association Journal |series=Donald Hunsberger Wind Library |year=2008 |publisher=Warner Bros |location=Miami |isbn=978-0-7579-1833-9 |oclc=57169022 |pages=122–35 |chapter=Karel Husa's Contributions to the Wind Band}}

References