"The President’s Own" Remembers George H. W. Bush by Master Sgt. Kristin duBois, United States Marine Corps Band December 13, 2018
As the nation mourns the passing of one its finest patriots,
current and former members of the Marine Band remember President
George H. W. Bush as a man whose love of music and uncommon
graciousness elevated the unique relationship between the Chief
Executive and “The President’s Own”.
“Although President
Bush served as our Commander-in-Chief before my time in ‘The
President’s Own,’ the close relationship he developed with the
Marine Band is well-known,” Music Adviser to the White House and
Marine Band Col. Jason K. Fettig said. “We have been fortunate to
have had wonderful moments with every president we serve, but
President and Mrs. Bush’s gratitude for our Marines and for the
special music we provide in The People’s House was especially warm
and always engaging. He never missed an opportunity to connect with
those around him and thank them for their contributions, and the men
and women in the band who got to know President Bush both during his
administration and in the many years beyond will always remember his
ever-present appreciation and admiration for all those who served
our nation alongside him.”
President George H.W. Bush and Mrs. Barbara Bush, with Col. John Bourgeois and members of the Marine Chamber Orchestra at a holiday reception on December 12, 1990. (Official White House photo provided by George H.W. Bush Presidential Library)
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Col. John R. Bourgeois, USMC (Ret.), Marine Band Director from
1979-96, recalled memories of President Bush with great ease. “Of
all the presidents I served, he was the most conversive and was the
kindest man in the world,” he said. He recounted how the president
would make a point to bring the guest of honor from each state
dinner over to Bourgeois and the Marine Chamber Orchestra to make
introductions. “It was very much like being a part of the family,”
Bourgeois said. It was during President Bush’s administration, in
February 1990, when Bourgeois led the Marine Band on an historic
18-day concert tour of the former Soviet Union as part of the first
ever U.S.-U.S.S.R. Armed Forces band exchange. “The president was
integral to making that tour happen and while we were there we saw
the end of the Soviet Union,” he said.
On a more
light-hearted note, Bourgeois recollected an event on Dec. 7, 1992,
when the Marine Band performed Hail to the Chief at a White House
holiday reception for the president’s staff. At the end of the
fanfare, an unlikely gentleman made his way through the crowd and
took the podium: comedian Dana Carvey, known for his uncanny
impression of the president. But it was the annual Gridiron Club
dinner where Bourgeois witnessed President Bush in a truly nostalgic
moment. It was March 1993 and Gridiron president, Los Angeles Times
bureau chief Jack Nelson, sat at the center of the head table with
newly-inaugurated President Bill Clinton on one side of him and
former President George H. W. Bush on the other. As Bourgeois led
the Marine Band to the dais for The Star-Spangled Banner, he saw
both Clinton and Bush lean over to whisper to Nelson. Nelson later
told Bourgeois that President Bush commented that there are many
things he won’t miss about being president but the Marine Band isn’t
one of them.
Few members of the Marine Band can boast of a
better first performance at the White House than former Marine Band
pianist Master Gunnery Sgt. Robert Boguslaw, USMC (Ret.). Although
he had performed at the White House before May 14, 1992, this was
the first time he performed solo in the private residence. As he
played a medley of Broadway show tunes from “Carousel” and
“Oklahoma,” President Bush and former Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev stood in the well of his piano where he overheard the two
leaders discuss perestroika and the fall of the Berlin Wall.
“President Bush was always a gentleman and always came over to shake
my hand and thank me,” he said.
Master Gunnery Sgt. Peter
Wilson, violinist and current string section commander, joined the
Marine Chamber Orchestra in 1990, halfway through President Bush’s
term. What impressed him about the president was that he always made
a point to go out of his way to acknowledge and thank the musicians
for their participation at assorted events, even if it meant shaking
off his handlers to seek out the orchestra. It was during President
Bush’s tenure that Wilson and several other musicians founded the
Free Country ensemble and one of their early performances was at
President Bush’s daughter Dorothy Bush’s wedding to Robert P. Koch
at Camp David on June 27, 1992. In addition to Free Country, the
Marine Band provided a brass quintet in the chapel for the ceremony
and a dance band for cocktail hour. After the event, as the
musicians packed up their instruments to leave, President and
Barbara Bush found them to shake each of their hands, ask their
names, and thank them for their music. Wilson said from that day
forward, President Bush remembered his name and called him Pete each
time he saw him at the White House. “He had an amazing ability with
names and people,” Wilson said.
At a congressional picnic
Wilson was singing with Free Country and he recalled President Bush
seemed to appear from out of nowhere and shook hands with each of
the musicians as they performed. Wilson considers it a point of
pride that he was able to greet Bush and not lose a beat during the
fast-moving lyrics of Billy Joel’s “Travelin’ Prayer.” It was
another event, however, that Wilson can never forget. The Marine
Chamber Orchestra was performing at the White House on Jan. 16, 1991
and President and Mrs. Bush were greeting visitors in a receiving
line. Wilson noticed then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
General Colin Powell walk up to the president in his green service
uniform to pull him away. Bush didn’t come back to the event. When
Wilson returned to Marine Barracks Washington, the news on the
television in the lounge was reporting the first bombing attacks on
Baghdad and the beginning of Operation Desert Storm.
“We all
recall how very kind and appreciative he was of everything the band
did at the White House,” said Former Executive Assistant to the
Director Capt. Frank Byrne, USMC (Ret.). “Mrs. Bush was also
wonderful. I do especially recall the two Desert Storm victory
parades, one in New York City and one in Washington. I marched and
played in both. In NYC the crowds were so big that we hardly had
room to get the band through the streets at certain points. There
was ticker tape, but also all kinds of paper, including big stacks
of continuous feed letter sized paper that were a challenge to get
through. President Bush and Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf were in the
reviewing stand and were so happy and proud. It’s not often the band
gets to do a big street parade in good, not freezing, weather and it
was a thrill to participate.”
“I remember several occasions
at the White House that President Bush, upon seeing members of the
Marine Band, would pause his entourage just long enough to
personally thank the members of the Marine Band and relay how much
he, the First Lady and the staff appreciate our musical
contribution,” said former bassoon player Master Sgt. Dyane Wright,
USMC (Ret.). “He stated that the music by members of the U.S. Marine
Band is what they enjoyed the most about their White House events.”
“I will always remember President and Mrs. Bush as being
unfailingly gracious, kindhearted and appreciative toward the
members of the Marine Band,” recalled Former Director Col. Timothy
W. Foley, USMC (Ret.).
The late Marine Band pianist Master
Gunnery Sgt. Charles Corrado, USMC (Ret.), served ten presidents
from 1958-2003. His wife Martha reflected on “Charlie’s” many, many
encounters with President Bush and recalled in particular when the
president requested Corrado to perform at his residence at
Kennebunkport, Maine, on July 10, 1991, while he and Prime Minister
Toshiki Kaifu of Japan prepared for the upcoming Economic Summit of
the Industrialized Nations in London. “I was jealous that he got to
go!” she said. “He played in the sunroom while the meetings took
place and the family was very appreciative of him being there.”
Former principal cello Master Gunnery Sgt. Marcio Botelho, USMC
(Ret.), remembered an equally memorable performance for President
Bush: “It was my first year in the band and sometime between April
and June I was at home when I got a call from work. The question
was, ‘How quickly can you get to the Barracks? Because we have to go
to the White House.’ I came in right away and we immediately
departed to the White House. Only three of us went, since we were
the only available musicians: concertmaster Master Sgt. Bruce Myers,
violinist Gunnery Sgt. Jim Diehl, and myself. President Bush was
having a working lunch with Lothar de Maizière, the newly-elected
prime minister of the old GDR (East Germany) and the White House
staff had discovered that the PM had been a musician. At the time we
were told he had been a cellist. Anyway, we rushed in to the house,
put our cases in the mezzanine level holding room and went up to the
state floor. President Bush and the PM had dined in the state dining
room and we set up in the Blue Room. No sooner had we set up, the
president and his guest walked in and took a seat about six feet
from us. Bruce called out a tune: Haydn’s London Trio No. 3, 1st
movement. We played it, they thanked us, we returned to the
barracks. Possibly the shortest performance I ever played at the
White House.” Botelho was also quoted in a Dec. 1989-Jan. 1990 issue
of the Marine Band’s newsletter Notes saying, “It’s surprising
because even though we are performing background music, people often
make it a point to compliment us. In fact, at all of the state
dinners the President and Mrs. Bush have greeted us and thanked us
at the end.”
In 2011, the George H. W. Bush Presidential
Library requested a Marine Band uniform for a new exhibit featuring
a baby grand piano from the Bush’s collection. Then-Drum Major
Master Gunnery Sgt. William L. Browne, USMC (Ret.) prepared the
uniform and personally fitted the mannequin that would wear it.
After Browne took the uniform to the tailor for alterations and
cleaning, he carefully packed it in his carry-on luggage and
traveled to College Station in December 2011 to ensure that it was
installed correctly. He arrived to find the mannequin sitting at the
piano with permanently bent legs that presented some technical
challenges. He assisted curator Susanne Cox in putting the mannequin
in place on the bench at the piano and made last minute adjustments
to the fit and appearance. One thing he couldn’t adjust, however,
was the length of the mannequin’s hair. “I know how hard it is to
give a mannequin a haircut so I made an exception just this once,”
he said with a wry smile. Browne was honored to participate in this
exhibit for the senior former President Bush. “Every time I’ve seen
him at an event, he and Mrs. Bush always made a point to come over
to thank the band,” he said. “At my very first presidential event as
Drum Major in 2008, President Bush stopped me in the hallway to say
how much he appreciated the band and how good it was to hear us.”
The Marine Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Col. Fettig, will
perform one last time for President Bush at his funeral service at
11 a.m., Wednesday, Dec. 5 at the Washington National Cathedral in
Washington, D.C. Selections include Gustav Holst's Nocturne from A
Moorside Suite, Kevin Siegfried's arrangement of "Lay Me Low" from
Shaker Songs, Aaron Copland's Our Town, Paul Christiansen's
arrangement of "My Song in the Night," John Williams' Hymn to the
Fallen, and Samuel Augustus Ward's "America, the Beautiful.
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