Merle Slease Evans (December 26, 1891 – December 31, 1987) was a cornet player and circus band conductor who conducted the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus for fifty years. He was known as the "Toscanini of the Big Top." Evans was inducted into the American Bandmasters Association in 1947 and the International Circus Hall of Fame in 1975.
Mr. Evans and his all-brass ensemble used to play about
200 different pieces of music in a three-hour performance. His repertoire
pacing the ringside action included a medley of waltzes, tangos, fox trots,
gallops, marches and Latin numbers, along with Wagner, Tchaikovsky and Smetana,
not to mention Sousa. He wanted his music to have the zip that went with the
sawdust, the beat of hoofs and the cheers of excited children.
Mr. Evans also enjoyed an illustrious musical career
beyond circus, recording and directing bands around the country and in Europe.
There, his concert programs included Bach, Beethoven and Brahms, played before
audiences in the many thousands.
Merle Evans was born in Columbus, Kansas in 1891. His
father was a foreman in a coal mine. He had six siblings. Evans had an early
job selling newspapers on corners. He used his cornet to call attention to the
headlines. He is featured in Tom Rhoads' farcical history of Columbus. After
holding several other jobs, Evans left home and joined the S.W. Brundage us
Carnival Company as a cornet player. Evans held several other jobs, including
as a band director for the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Wild West Show featuring
Buffalo Bill, ''I had practiced for six hours a day for three years,'' Evans recalled,
''but the best training was listening to such greats as Clark, Bachman,
Gilmore, Sousa and learning from them the art of phrasing, tonal production,
varied styles.''
He was blowing his cornet with Gus Hill's minstrels when
Charles Ringling summoned him in 1919 to strike up the band for him. That was
the year the circus of the five Ringling brothers joined forces with Barnum
& Bailey, the creation of Phineas T. Barnum, to form the world's largest travelling
exhibit, billed as ''The Greatest Show on Earth.'' Soon, the Big Top hailed Mr.
Evans as a Toscanini of its very own. He wrote eight circus marches, including
Symphonia and Fredella.
Evans was the band director for fifty years. He only
missed performances due to a musician’s union strike in 1942 and the death of
his first wife. He announced his
retirement for the first time in 1955, saying that the televised circus spectacular
of that year would mark his final performance. By then he had struck up
the
band 22,000 times. But it was not until 1969, in his 50th year with the circus
that he formally passed on his baton, along with his job of musical director.
Even after that he could still be seen now and then leading the band in its
red-costumed splendour. And he continued to show up as a guest conductor at
workshops until last year.
Merle Evans with Lee Wallenda
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Over the decades he witnessed the ups and downs of the
circus world and the demise of the big tent, which Ringling Brothers and Barnum
& Bailey folded for the last time in Pittsburgh in 1956. He saw the acrobat
Hans Jahn fall to his death in New York City in 1930 .On July 6, 1944, a fire
broke out during a Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus performance.
The
fire killed around 168 people. The quick reaction of Merle Evans and his band
is credited with saving thousands of lives. When Evans saw the fire, he signalled
that the band should play John Philip Sousa’s “Stars and Stripes Forever,” used
in the circus as the “disaster march,” indicating an emergency. The performers
heard the music and immediately began the evacuation. Accounts state that Evans
and his band played until it was no longer safe to do so, and then evacuated
and reformed outside, where their playing helped to pace the evacuation and
steady the crowd.
After his retirement, Evans continued to live an active
life. He served as a director of the Columbus State Bank in his hometown of
Columbus, Kansas. He gave workshops and guest-led bands around the country. His
second wife was Nena, who served as secretary to the owners and executives of
the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus. Evans died in Sarasota,
Fla., the winter home of the circus on December 31, 1987. He was 96 years old.
A scholarship at the Indiana University Bloomington
Jacobs School of Music is named after Evans. The scholarship supports students
with aspirations towards concert bands. The Midwest Clinic awarded Evans its
Medal of Honour in 1966. Windjammers Unlimited credits Evans with its early
success as an organization, and he is honoured in their Hall of Fame.
(Edited from Wikipedia & New York Times)
For “Merle Evans Circus Band - Sounds of the Big Top” go here:
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1. ROYAL BRIDESMAIDS MARCH
2. ENTRY OF THE GLADIATORS (Thunder & Blazes)
3. QUALITY PLUS
4. SUNNYLAND WALTZES / THE STORMING OF EL CARNEY
5. WORLD EVENTS
6. COLOSSUS OF COLUMBIA MARCH
7. MEDLEY: PAHJAMAH / BULL TROMBONE
8. BIG TIME BOOGIE
9. EL CABALLERO
10. PAGEANT OF PROGRESS
11. MEDLEY: CRIMSON PETAL / THE BASTINADO GALOP
12. MARCH PONDEROSO
13. SYMPHONIA MARCH
14. THE BIG CAGE
15. BARNUM & BAILEY'S FAVORITE
16. HIGH RIDIN'
17. JUNGLE QUEEN
18. ROSES OF MEMORY
19. STOP IT!
20. OLYMPIA HIPPODROME
21. GO
22. ROYAL DECREE
23. FOSTERETTES MARCH
24. SPRING BEAUTIFUL MARCH
25. BROADWAY ONE - STEP
26. MEDLEY: OH YOU CIRCUS DAY / ENTRY OF THE GLADIATORS
27. CAESAR'S TRIUMPHAL MARCH
28. ROYAL DECREE MARCH
29. JUNGLE QUEEN
30. MEMPHIS THE MAJESTIC
31. FAN TAN
32. MISS TROMBONE
33. TEDDY BEAR'S PICNIC
34. ROLLING THUNDER MARCH
35. CRIMSON PETAL
36. CIRCUS ECHOES
37. OLD GLORY TRIUMPHANT MARCH
The music of the big show is the loom upon which the thrill-studded tapestry of the performance is threaded! In musical circles the world over and in the thoughts of millions of circus goers the name Merle Evans means circus music. 37 melodies and rousing marches which lift and fill the big top with spangle-studded aplomb! Where's the lion? Send in the clowns! Careful acrobats, there is no safety net! This is grand band music for every kind of circus act which has reached its zenith under the baton of Merle Evans.
Come along, every seat is filled and the greatest show on earth is about to begin! (Jasmine notes)
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