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The Alpha Kappa chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia was
founded on April 14, 1924 by a group of men who formed
a group for men with an interest in music called the
Shubert Club. Among them was a man by the name of Homer
Baird who was also responsible for the establisment
the Ohio University Marching Band.
In it's eighty-plus year history, the chapter has never
gone inactive.
(Taken
from Sinfonia.org)
Sinfonias genesis was, in the words of sixth Supreme
President, Percy Jewett Burrell, not really a
beginning after all, but indeed the product of a personalityFather
Mills. Ossian Everett Mills, then bursar of the
New England Conservatory in Boston, was profoundly interested
in the physical, mental, moral, and spiritual development
of the Conservatory students and recognized that a large
proportion of them intended to put their musical knowledge
into the church either as organists or singers. Mills
felt that this class of people, as much as any, needed
to be men of high ideals and, beginning in 1885, invited
a group of male students to meet with him once a week.
Thirteen years later, Mills was still leading these
weekly meetings, and he encouraged the Old Boys
of the Conservatory to invite the New Boys
to a get-acquainted reception on September
22, 1898. Henry T. Wade, a member of the original committee
of Old Boys wrote:
The fact that Bro. Mills made the initial move to
have the men students get together and counseled us
in keeping the group interested, in having an efficient
organization for getting better acquainted and for fellowship,
and also saw to it that we had our first club room,
gives to him, in my opinion, a just claim to be honored
with the title of Founder...
A
discussion about forming a mens music club took
place among some of the men who attended the reception,
and there being considerable interest in the idea, a
meeting was planned for the evening of October 6 to
further explore the possibilities. It is safe to suppose
that some of the men who were attending the weekly meetings
held by Mills were present at the gathering on October
6 and that, through them, Mills influenced the adoption
of high ideals of manhood by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia even
before its official beginnings.
The
minutes of the first meeting on October 6, 1898 stated:
Mr. Wade was appointed chairman. Report of comm.
on suggestions as to what the club should do with itself,
was accepted.
Noted that a club be organized, to which shall be eligible,
any male student of the N. E. C.
Noted that the primary object of the club be sociability.
The election of officers was proceeded with...
The
minutes of that first meeting also describe the appointment
of a committee on rules and regulations,
which was to prepare a set of bylaws for the new organization.
On October 25, the clubs thirteen active and one
honorary member, Ossian Mills, accepted from a committee
a governing document that has remained the Fraternitys
philosophy of existence to the present day. In part
it read:
The object of this Fraternity shall be for the
development of the best and truest fraternal spirit;
the mutual welfare and brotherhood of musical students;
the advancement of music in America and a loyalty to
the Alma Mater...
The
club also accepted the suggestion of the newly-elected
director of the Conservatory (and the Sinfonias
second honorary member), George W. Chadwick, that the
group adopt the name of an organization to which he
belonged during his student days in Leipzig. SINFONIA
was born.
The
fledgling society was a success from its very beginning.
The first recorded initiation of new members took place
on November 28, 1898, less than two months after Sinfonias
founding. Under the leadership of its first president,
Frank Leslie Stone, the Fraternity carried on a busy
schedule of social events, recitals, concerts, and shows,
sponsored a mens glee club, entertained visiting
artists, renovated the chapter rooms set aside for their
use by the Conservatory, and held regular fortnightly
meetings, one of the main features of which was the
initiation of new members.
By
October 1899 the club numbered about fifty men and continued
to add members at frequent intervals. Sinfonias
outstanding success gave rise to thoughts of expansion
in the minds of Founder Mills, President Percy Jewett
Burrell, and Treasurer Ralph Howard Pendleton. To them
it seemed that if their club was fulfilling a need among
men at the New England Conservatory, then surely men
in other conservatories in the country could find benefit
and pleasure in similar organizations in their schools.
Large Greek-letter fraternities flourished on college
campuses, but there was no Brotherhood for men in music.
Why not establish a national Sinfonia for men studying
music in conservatories and music schools coast to coast?
The men of Bostons Sinfonia, however, were by
no means of one mind on the question of expansion; at
a meeting on October 1, 1900 to discuss the issue, arguments
pro and con were vigorous and tempers grew hot. But,
in the end, a majority agreed to spend $25.00 from the
clubs treasury (which then totaled $34.00) to
send men to New York, Philadelphia, and Washington in
order to present the idea of Sinfonia firsthand to male
students of the leading conservatories. The expedition
attracted notice far outside the student world and mention
appeared in leading newspapers and magazines.
So
it was that Pendleton and Henry Hall found themselves
in Philadelphia and in conference with men of the Broad
Street Conservatory on October 6, 1900, two years to
the day after Sinfonias birth in Boston. The Philadelphia
students requested and received admission to Sinfonia
as its Beta Chapter, confirmed by the following telegram
to the waiting brothers at the New England Conservatory:
October 6, 1900
Broad Street Conservatory applies for admission.
The Sinfonia now National.
Pendleton and Hall....
On
November 26, 1900, a group of twelve at the American
Institute of Applied Art in New York City became Gamma
Chapter; Delta, at Ithaca Conservatory, followed in
the last weeks of January 1901. To govern the affairs
of the now national Fraternity, a convention of its
four chapters was called in Boston on April 16-20, 1901.
The assembly saw the sights and attended concerts in
Boston, elected Ossian Mills Supreme President, and
set about the business of fraternity government that
has continued ever since.
By
1902, Beta had progressed sufficiently to host the second
National Convention. The Philadelphia Press on April
20, 1902, gave the assembly a particularly noteworthy
account:
Nearly forty musical geniuses from different parts
of the country will assemble in this city tomorrow to
discuss in a calm, harmonious way, topics pertaining
to their art.
This will be the second convention of the Sinfonia Fraternity
of America, the first organization which has ever tried
to promote and foster a general feeling of fellowship
among makers of melody since the practicability of producing
musical sounds was discovered in the dead past.
For three days these musical geniuses, who hail from
Boston, Chicago, Ithaca, and New York and other parts
of the Union are to enjoy one anothers society.
In that time they will talk of various phases of modern
music, discuss the compositions of the old masters,
transact business of the fraternity, hold a banquet
and visit the various points of interest in Philadelphia,
and they propose doing it in a manner which musicians
of old times would have believed impossible. In the
musical discussions particularly, it is said, the spirit
of antagonism proverbially rampant among artists of
the profession will be absent. Tradition, in this respect,
has been overcome by the Sinfonia.
A
committee on national ritual and initiation forms was
appointed at the first convention, but it wasnt
until after the death of Ossian Mills in 1920 that the
ritual attained its current form. By 1926, a committee
made up of Peter W. Dykema (Supreme President), Charles
E. Lutton (Supreme Secretary), Rollin Pease (Supreme
Historian), and Turpin Bannister revised the Ritual
as a tribute to the founder and, primarily through the
work of Rollin Pease, infused the ceremony with a poetic
beauty and deep esoteric symbolism that it retains today.
This committee revised the Ritual again in 1938, and
in 1947 another revision was adopted with only minor
changes to their work. Subsequent revisions in 1960,
1970 and 1982 drastically altered the Ritual, but the
1988 National Assembly voted to recapture the original
beauty and meaning of the ceremony by adopting a slightly
revised 1938 version as the official form of the Ritual.
The Sinfonias Ritual is acknowledged as being
one of the most beautiful and meaningful in Greek tradition.
The
club that resulted from the efforts of those young men
under the leadership of Brother Mills grew into the
largest music fraternity in the United States. The national
Brotherhood that formed around four chapters in April
of 1901 grew to over three hundred strong in the early
sixties and today boasts of approximately two hundred
active chapters.
What
has really happened since 1898? How did the Fraternity
grow to its present size? What were the motives of the
founders, and how have they served as the foundation
of the organization as it has evolved into what we now
know as Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity? A history
of the organization that appeared in Musical America
in 1917 stated:
The Sinfonias purpose, interpreted into every
day life, means service to ones fellow-man. The
fraternity covets for the man who is a non-Sinfonian
in the realm of music in America to-day a full realization
that service to music is not enough, but that service
to mankind should be the essential thing of his life.
The
writings of the founders and earliest members indicate
that they recognized music as more than a means of artistic
expression or entertainment. While the academic institution
would teach the musician to perfect his skill, Sinfonia
would complete his education by teaching him to regard
music as a powerful tool for the uplift of mankind.
This idea of service to others through music was personified
by Father Mills who, beginning in the 1880s, took groups
of musicians into the hospitals of Boston to touch the
lives of those who were sick and often forgotten. Sinfonia
chapters carry on this tradition today through the Ossian
Everett Mills Music Mission.
The
founders also sought to develop the manly musician
by providing a social atmosphere in which individuals
could develop the ideals of manhood in themselves and
their fellow-man ? ideals that, through their interactions
with others, would pervade society. The delegates who
were gathered at the first convention in Boston in 1901
stood on the threshold of the twentieth centurya
time that was to see the most rapid and dramatic changes
in the history of the world. Those men attempted to
project into this century an idea that would revolutionize
American musican idea that emphasized the harmony
and welfare of music students over the dominant condition
of competitiveness that characterized interactions among
musicians. They envisioned a brotherhood that they hoped
would go forth from the conservatories to bring about
the final harmony of all mankind. Thus, the advancement
of music in America was initially regarded as the inevitable
result of advancing Sinfonias ideals in musicians
in America.
In
the first decade of the twentieth century, the Fraternitys
members began to realize the organizations potential
to raise American music and American musicians to a
point of equality with their European counterparts.
America was beginning to assert itself in the arena
of world affairs, trying furiously to cast off the role
of the culturally backward colonies and
be counted among the ranking nations of the globe. That
American musicians should want to be part of this movement
as well stands to reason.
In
those days, even American audiences and conservatories
would recognize a musician only if he had a background
of European instruction. The foremost masters were Europeans.
No matter what a mans ability, he could realistically
expect no advancement without the proper European pedigree.
One can easily imagine the effect this type of atmosphere
could have on a young musician eager to make his start
in the world. This served to intensify the competition
among talented American musicians for the few positions
available to them and to foster in them a deep insecurity
and an unavoidable sense of inferiority to the Europeans,
regardless of their own abilities. The unfairness of
the situation gnawed at them. To be disregarded by the
Europeans was one thing, but to be disregarded by their
countrymen for the same reasons was almost unbearable.
If America was willing to assert itself on a level of
equality with the rest of the world, could not American
musicians do the same? This became one of the driving
forces behind the expansion of a national Sinfonia.
Thus,
the structure created for musical students to develop
devotion to Sinfonias ideals within themselves
and their Fraternity brothers became a mutually supportive
atmosphere for American musicians and a means to end
the destructive competition which only served to hold
them back. They foresaw a time when American musicians
would compete, not against one another, but against
the European stigma that kept them from a place of equality.
Only then could American music take its rightful place
alongside the European tradition. The early members
of the Fraternity took great pride in being a primary
force in that movement.
The
rapid rate of expansion that followed grew out of this
atmosphere, as the young musicians of the countrys
conservatories eagerly sought to overcome their perceived
inferiority. By its twenty-fifth year, the Fraternity
had grown to twenty-five chapters. It doubled in the
five years that followed. It was in this period that
Sinfonia experienced its Golden Age, when
labors of influential and selfless leaders such as Ossian
Mills, Percy Jewett Burrell, Peter Dykema and Thomas
E. Dewey brought forth a National Sinfonia that earned
the great respect of students and educators alike and
truly became a force in American music. The Object upon
which the Fraternity was founded was reordered in December
1927, placing the advancement of music in a position
of prominence. The new statement read:
It
shall be the object and purpose of this Fraternity to
advance the cause of music in America, to foster the
mutual welfare and brotherhood of students of music,
to develop the truest fraternal spirit among its members,
and to encourage loyalty to the Alma Mater.
Sinfonia
grew and flourished in the early teens under the leadership
of Burrell, a man imbued with the spirit of Ossian Mills
and determined to nurture the seeds that Mills had carefully
planted in Sinfonia. Supreme President from 1907-1914,
Brother Burrell gave selflessly of his time and effort
to build Sinfonia into a proud and strong Fraternity
with an earnest commitment to the values embodied in
the Object of Sinfonia and a demand for quality that
gained Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia the respect of its peers.
Sinfonia
continued to flourish in the 1920s under the dynamic
leadership of Wisconsins Peter W. Dykema, later
of Columbia University, a man of great energies and
foresight whose effect on American music education is
felt to this day. The Fraternity stressed quality in
its programs, a quality that was reflected in a series
of exemplary publications written by a young first year
law student at the University of Michigan, Thomas E.
Dewey, who at the time was equally well known for a
fine baritone voice. Dewey insisted on quality
as National Historian, often returning articles to their
authors with instructions to improve them. His efforts
resulted in a feeling of pride throughout the Fraternity
that helped to power Sinfonias rapid growth. Dewey
later transformed those same standards and values into
an outstanding political career that carried him to
the Governorship of New York and just short of the Presidency
of the United States in 1948.
After
Americas victory in World War II, the idea that
American music was inferior became a thing of the past.
The insecurity that had given Sinfonia its urgency before
the wars vanished. The draft in wartime had made it
virtually impossible to maintain anything other than
a shell of the organization, since many schools could
claim fewer than ten male students enrolled. With the
introduction of the GI bill came a massive influx of
men into the nations music programs after the
war. The size problems suddenly vanished, and now chapters
boomed almost faster than anyone could keep track. Due
to this rapid growth, maintaining the same type of quality
and continuity in the Fraternitys programs became
very difficult. Rather than a natural, orderly expansion,
the Fraternity was now faced with a membership boom
for which it was not well prepared.
The
increased numbers brought about the appearance of health,
but along with that perception came complacency toward
the values of the Fraternity that had seemed so urgent
before the wars. The values that had been intently championed
by the idealists of the early years seemed somewhat
hollow and perhaps a little naive to the men who were
fresh from the experiences of war. They wanted to enjoy
life, to make up for lost time. The Fraternity became
larger through a desire for fellowship and renewing
old acquaintances, but the intense commitment to developing
the ideals of manhood that had been prevalent in the
early days subsided in favor of more social and professional
interests.
Extremely
rapid expansion coupled with the difficulties and expenses
of communicating with the entire membership and keeping
records updated posed some rather large problems. To
save money, publications were streamlined. It was impossible
to put out the type of yearbook that had been the standard
of the pre-war era. The heritage of excellence that
was common knowledge to the early brothers was lost
in the rush of expansion, and hence any knowledge of
Sinfonias early years was limited and somewhat
vague. The writings and commentaries that made up the
bulk of the Fraternitys history were no longer
published on a regular basis, and as a result their
message became less and less familiar to its members.
Along with that loss and the intense commitment the
writings had helped to foster went the national prestige
that the Fraternity had enjoyed in the 1920s and 1930s.
This was not a drastic process, but rather a decline
that progressed slowly over the ensuing years. When
the scorn of established institutions that characterized
the 1960s hit Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, the Fraternity
was hard pressed to preserve the vestiges of national
prominence that remained. The question of quality had
been replaced by the more vital question of survival
itself.
In
an attempt to distinguish itself from other fraternities
and attract membership, Sinfonias leaders marketed
the organization as The Professional Fraternity
for Men in Music, a designation that, despite
its departure from the original intent of a club formed
for sociability, became a source of pride for generations
of Sinfonians. In 1970, the Fraternitys statement
of purpose was rewritten to place increased emphasis
upon professionalism.
The primary purpose of this Fraternity shall be to
encourage and actively promote the highest standards
of creativity, performance, education, and research
in music in America. Further purposes shall be to develop
and encourage loyalty to the Alma Mater, to foster the
mutual welfare and brotherhood of students of music,
to develop the truest fraternal spirit among its members,
and to instill in all people an awareness of music's
important role in the enrichment of the human spirit.
At
the height of the characterization of Sinfonia as a
professional fraternity, Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 was passed, dictating that
professional fraternities cannot legally restrict membership
to a single sex. After permitting the initiation of
approximately 250 females since 1976, in accordance
with the new regulation, Sinfonia was granted exemption
from Title IX and therefore designated as a social,
rather than professional, fraternal organization.
Following receipt of an exemption from Title IX in 1983,
the 1985 National Assembly voted to limit all membership
and initiation programs in chapters to men only and
to delete Phi Mu Alpha is a fraternity representing
the music profession from the National Constitution
as not being an accurate description of the organization.
However, until 1998, the National Examination continued
to teach probationary members that the Fraternity was
a professional society in terms of its goals and
purposes. As efforts increased to educate members
that Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia is both legally and philosophically
a social fraternity, members began to question the apparent
contradiction of this classification with the 1970 statement
of purpose. Concurrently, members who took a greater
interest in the Fraternitys history and the Ritual
came to realize that the 1901 Object is the basis of
the Fraternitys Ritual and symbols. This increased
awareness led to the decision of the 2003 National Assembly
to restore the 1901 Object, in recognition of the fact
that placing the development of the best and truest
fraternal spirit in the position of chief importance
expresses an idea that is the very essence of Sinfonia.
With
retrospective self-examination, Sinfonia has entered
its second century with a renewed commitment to the
vision of its Founders and a zeal for the timeless values
that, as history has demonstrated, provide such a strong
foundation for the health of the organization. The values
that made Sinfonia great in its early days are abiding
and can be just as useful now as they were one hundred
years ago. What made Sinfonia so prominent in its Golden
Age? There were three overriding forces: intense
commitment to the values of the Fraternity; a belief
in the need for a vital and well-organized national
organization in addition to strong individual chapters;
and a sincere attempt to live the vows taken at initiation.
As our early brothers expressed so well in 1928, at
the memorial service for Ossian Mills:
To all of us humans the future is a closed book, except
that we know it as a continuation of the present, just
as the present flows out of the past. We, therefore,
can speak of the Sinfonia of the future only in terms
of what has been.
The
future course of Sinfonia rests on the actions taken
in the present. The success that Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia
will enjoy tomorrow depends upon fidelity and vigilance
to the vision of the founders today. Why should Sinfonia
not fulfill its promise to advance music in America
and bring about the final harmony of mankind by developing
musicians physically, mentally, morally, and
spiritually? The only limitation to Sinfonias
attainment of this mission is each brothers personal
commitment and effort.
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