The San Antonio Symphony Orchestra...
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The San Antonio Symphony Orchestra held a contest. Five prominent citizens competed to see who was the best guest conductor of the orchestra. None were professional musicians. The winner was an Air Force General, the commander of Randolph Air Force Base. He conducted the symphony in playing "Stars and Stripes Forever" by John Philip Sousa. The audience broke into spontaneous applause when the piccolo player finished the little air in the middle of that march that only a piccolo can do. Now, who really won that contest? Sousa wrote the music. Probably the general who got the medal had some help from the resident conductor of the symphony. And I'm sure some of the credit should go to the companies and artisans that built the instruments to make the music. And the light company for providing the light to see the music by. And the construction crews for building the auditorium. But who really should get the most credit? The musicians who played the music. They did the real work. And the audience recognized this when they applauded for the piccolo piece. -- Mosley
