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Musician - Arthur Pryor

Wikipedia.org Article (offsite)


Arthur Willard Pryor born 1870, died 1942. Pryor was a famous Trombonist, playing with the John Philip Sousa band and later on radio. "He was born in St. Joseph, Missouri, the son of Samuel Daniel Pryor, a bandleader, and Mary "Mollie" A. Coker, a pianist." Pryor's notoriety includes "300 compositions, including three operettas."1

Arthur Pryor was born into a family of musicians. His father, Samuel, was a bandleader. His Aunt Alice Pryor Hughes and his Uncle "A. Pryor" (possibly Alson Pryor) stated their profession as "musician" on the US Census. Arhtur's uncles James T. Pryor and Emsley R. Pryor were buglers in the Civil War.

Obituary

Freehold Transcript, June 19, 1942
Arthur Pryor one of the country's leading band masters, and former Democratic member of the Board of Freeholders, died yesterday at his home in Long Branch. He would have been 70 on September 22. Composer of 350 pieces, among them the famous, "Whistler and His Dog," Mr. Pryor was internationally famous and for many years his band was engaged each season to play on the boardwalk at Asbury Park. Two sons, Arthur Jr., an advertising executive, and Roger, band leader and actor, survive. While soloist for the famed Sousa, he was considered the highest paid musician in the world and appeared on numerous occasions before the crowned heads of Europe.


References

1National Biography, published under the auspices of the American Council of Learned Societies, vol. 17, Oxford University Press, 1999. Article submitted by James M. Burk.










   

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