Anthony “Tony” Joseph Swanick (Eta Rho) 1960-2012

SWANICK, ANTHONY JOSEPH, 52, of Orlando, FL, beloved son of the late Joseph A. and the late Catherine M. Swanick (nee McCall), passed away unexpectedly on Nov. 11, 2012. Anthony (Tony) Swanick was a Founding Father of the Eta Rho chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi, and was an Active Brother until he left WCU in 1982. Tony was born August 29, 1960 and raised in Abington, PA. He served as the Communications Director for Congresssman Jon Fox from 1995-1999, working in the Philadelphia, PA area. Tony relocated to Orlando, FL, and was the Communications Director for Power Place Tours in the early 2000s.

Tony is survived by his brother, Patrick J. Swanick (Diana L.) of Austin, TX. Contributions in his memory, made to the Humane Society of the United States, www.HumaneSociety.org, will be gratefully accepted. A private Memorial Service and interment will be held at a later date.

Dr. James Croft (Gamma Nu) 1929-2012

On September 6, 2012 Kappa Kappa Psi and the college band world lost teacher, friend, and advocate, Dr. James Croft. Dr. Croft was an honorary member of the Gamma Nu Chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi at Florida State University.

Dr. Croft finished his Ph D. from the University of Oklahoma in 1970 and was hired as the director of band at the University of South Florida in 1972. After eigth years at USF he became the Director of Bands at Florida State University and remained there until his retirement in 2003. Dr. Croft’s high school program was selected as one of the groundbreaking Contemporary Music Project ensembles supported by the Music Educator’s National Conference and the Ford Foundation in the 1950’s. He also served as the president of the National Band Association and the College Band Directors National Association. He was also active in the forming of World Association of Symphonic Band Ensembles (WASBE) as a member of their board for 6 years. He was revered as a musician, composer, and clinician working with countless ensembles and composers. He truly was a legend in the college band arena.

For Kappa Kappa Psi, Dr. Croft conducted the National Intercollegiate Band in 1995 and received the Bohumil Makovsky Memorial Award that same year. Dr. Croft received the Distinguished Service to Music Medal during the 1997-1999 biennium, the highest honor Kappa Kappa Psi gives to an individual.

Dr. Croft served as an example, leader, and mentor for countless brothers and band directors across this country. He truly lived up to the high ideals of our fraternity. Our most sincere condolences are with his family and the Florida State University Community.

Neil Armstrong (Gamma Pi) 1930-2012

When Neil Armstrong passed earlier this month, the world lost a hero and a legend. What many people did not know, was that Brother Armstrong was an avid musician and made an honorary member of Kappa Kappa Psi at Purdue University. The following was printed in the Podium in 1969 and tells about Brother Armstrong’s musical roots and his affiliation with Kappa Kappa Psi.

First Man on the Moon
Reprinted from the November 1969 edition of the Podium

When Neil Armstrong stepped out on the moon’s surface, the world thrilled at mankind’s greatest adventure. And musicians said: “He’s one of us.”

Musicians form a close brotherhood, but they also believe in music for everyone, including men who explore space. So does Neil Armstrong. Though flying has been his lifelong passion, Armstrong is also devoted to music. As a teenager, he worked and saved to pay for flying lessons and still eked out enough extra money to buy a Conn baritone horn. He earned his pilot’s license at 16, even before he had his driver’s license; and he was the leader of a musical combo as well as a faithful member of the school band.

Armstrong’s love for music began when he was a small child. He joined the Upper Sandusky, Ohio, school band when he was an eighth grader, and chose to play baritone horn.

“I asked him why he chose such a big horn,” his mother recalls. “He was such a little fellow and it seemed to be more than he could carry. But he said he liked the tone. So, of course, we didn’t discourage him. And perhaps the school band needed a baritone player.

I never had to remind him to practice. He just naturally set aside time for that.”

The family had moved to Wapakoneta, Ohio, by the time Armstrong entered high school. He played in the school band, of course, but also for Boy Scout and church events. For sheer fu , he formed the “Mississippi Moonshiners,” a jazz band that performed at school dances and assembly intermissions.

“Neil was a very good musician,” says Jerre Maxon, the trombonist of the group. “He had a strong driving afterbeat, you know, and really kept us going. He sure loved music. He said music contributed to ‘thought control,’ and he always tried to improve his playing.

There were only six boys in the Wapakoneta 45-piece band and we had a lot of fun. After the football game, when we went downtown to parade, Neil would turn his cap around and march backwards, just for laughs. Sometimes we would trade off instruments. I suppose we drove the band director crazy-but those were good times.”

But with the exception of these episodes with the band and the “Moonshiners,” Maxon remembers Armstrong as a quiet, reserved young man, who said little. “I think one of the hardest parts of the moon mission for Neil will be the public speaking,” Maxon comments.

“He wanted his own instrument,” reports Neil’s father, Stephen. “In those days, our family had few luxuries. Neil worked at Neumeister’s Bakery cleaning the bread mixer until he had raised enough money to buy a Conn baritone horn.

Neil got his love of music from his mother. She played piano and assisted Neil to play piano, too. Sometimes, in the evening, Neil with his baritone, his brother Dean and his cornet, and his sister June with her violin would gather around Viola at the piano, and they would play. What a good time they had.” B. S. Porter Music Company in Lima, Ohio, has proudly framed the guarantee card of Dean’s Conn cornet, serial No. 163721.

After high school graduation, Armstrong won a Navy scholarship, and in the fall of 1947, went to Purdue University. His Conn baritone went along, and he performed with the Purdue “All American” Marching Band and Concert Band, under the direction of Paul Emrick.

Maxine LeFevre, assistant to AI Wright, Purdue’s current director of bands, serves as band historian. She says Neil Armstrong is remembered by his classmates as a likeable boy with a bashful smile.
“His band colleagues recall the pride he took in his horn,” Miss leFevre says. “No one dreamed at the time that by 1962 we would hear Neil was chosen to be an astronaut. The Purdue Marching Band did a half-time show in his honor that fall. Oddly enough, we titled the show ‘First Bandsman on the Moon’ and it came true!”

In 1966, Armstrong visited the Purdue campus and appeared in the variety show which the band was presenting for visiting alumni during Gala Week . The band presented him with a Purdue band blazer and Honorary Membership in the Gamma Pi Chapter of KKY, national band fraternity. Along with the pledge board and pledge cap, Armstrong was given his KKY pin. This year, when he learned he would be the first man to set foot on the moon, he wrote AI Wright that he hoped to carry the pin along on his flight.

Neil Armstrong never lost his love for music. “Every time Neil came home in these past years,” says his father, “one of the first things he would do was sit down at the piano and play.”

“That seemed to be part of coming home,” his mother adds. “After he had played three or four things, he was ready to sit down and tell us what he had been doing.”

But there never was another chance for the “Mississippi Moonshiners” to get together for a session. Maxon stayed in Wapakoneta where he became a successful contractor. Jim Mougey, the clarinetist, is now a band director in Norwalk, Ohio. Bob Gustafson, second trombonist, is a teacher in Springfield, Ohio.

At home in Houston, during his free time, Armstrong still enjoys playing his musical instrument. Occasionally, he and his wife, Janet, entertain friends with a duet. Twelve-year-old Ricky Armstrong is taking music lessons. Mark, six, without any doubt will be taking music lessons soon-perhaps as the boy behind the Conn baritone in band.

Ronald J. Sarjeant (Delta Iota) 1948-2012

On July 22, 2012 Kappa Kappa Psi and the South Carolina State University Band program lost a great advocate and teacher. Mr. Ronald J. Sarjeant, received his Bachelor’s degree from Florida A&M University in 1970 and was initiated into the Delta Iota Chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi in the fall of 1969. From that time, he worked to live the values of our organization and was committed to the college movement.

Mr. Sarjeant went on to serve as the Assistant Director of Band at Tuskegee University and later became the Director of Bands. In 1976 he left Tuskegee to serve as the Director of Band at South Carolina State University. He served the band program and mentored hundreds of students until his retirement in 2004. For his work with the South Carolina State Band and community, he was recently inducted into the South Carolina State University Hall of Fame.

The current SCSU Director of Bands, Mr. Ed Ellis, has this to say on the bands website, “Concert clarinetist, arranger, composer, teacher, mentor are but a few words to describe Ronald J. Sarjeant. He has left a mark at South Carolina State University that will never be forgotten. His many musical arrangements will continue to be played by the “101.” Although short in stature he was a giant in the field of music and music education. All who have enjoyed his music whether student, football fan, or music lover should remember him for all the good that he did. Sarge you and your legacy will never be forgotten!”

Mr. Sarjeant was an active member of Kappa Kappa Psi since his initiation. He was the advisor to the Zeta Eta Chapter at SCSU and advised the Epsilon Chi Chapter of Tau Beta Sigma. From 1993 to 2000, he served the fraternity as Southeast District Governor. Countless brothers had the opportunity to learn from Mr. Sarjeant, and his legacy will continue to thrive in our fraternity through the members he mentored. We are a better fraternity due to his service to the brotherhood.

Our most sincere condolences are with the family and the South Carolina State Community.

Robert R. Gross, III (Eta Rho) 1958-2012

Robert R. Gross, III, 54, of Bethlehem Township, died Wednesday, May 30, 2012, in St. Lukes Hospice House. He was the husband of Maryann (Salamone) Gross. They celebrated their 29th anniversary last June 19. Mr. Gross has been Superintendent of Schools in the Salisbury Township School District since 2010, and has been a member of the Adjunct Faculty at Wilkes University since 2006. After receiving both a B.S. and M.M. from West Chester University, he began his teaching career in 1980 as Band Director and Music Teacher at Garnet Valley High School. He later became Band Director and Music Teacher at Emmaus High School, and was appointed chairperson of the East Penn School District Music Department. In 1991 he moved to the West Shore School District in Lewisberry, where he served in various positions leading to Assistant Superintendent. He was Associate Superintendent of the Bethlehem Area School District from 2005 – 2008. He served as Superintendent of Schools in the Kutztown Area School District for two years until accepting his current position of Superintendent of Schools in Salisbury Township. Since receiving his Superintendent Letter of Eligibility Certification from Lehigh University in 1996, he has been pursuing a Doctorate Degree from Walden University. Mr. Gross held memberships in American Association of School Administrators, American Association of School Personnel Administrators, National Association of Secondary School Principals, Pennsylvania School Boards Association, National Staff Development Council, Pennsylvania Association of School Personnel Administrators, Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, North American Educational Negotiators, and the Society for Human Resource Management. He also belonged to the Lehigh Valley Society of the Arts, Historic Bethlehem Partnership, and Friends of Music in Bethlehem. He was a member of Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church in Bethlehem Township, and the Knights of Columbus. Born in Fountain Hill, he was the son of the late Robert R., Jr. and Louise (Scott) Gross.
Survivors: Wife, Maryann; daughter, Katrina DelVecchio and her husband Adam of Wind Gap; son, Kyle R. of Wind Gap; and grandsons, Kyler, Dominic and Landon.
Services: A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 11 a.m. Monday, June 4, in Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 1817 First Street, Bethlehem, PA 18020, followed by interment in Holy Saviour Cemetery. Visitation will be 3 to 7 p.m. Sunday in the Pearson Funeral Home, 1901 Linden Street, Bethlehem.
Contributions: In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be sent to St. Lukes Hospice, 1510 Valley Center Parkway, Bethlehem, PA 18017.

Published in Morning Call on June 1, 2012

W. Frank Evans (Alpha) 1933-2012

W. Frank Evans was born Oct. 9, 1933, into a newspaper publishing family that devoted their lives to helping small Oklahoma towns grow and prosper. His parents, Lloyd William and Sara Allen Evans, taught their five children the value of loyalty to their community. Frank was and example of that loyalty, improving the communities in which he lived. A graduate of Fairfax High School and Oklahoma State University, his music education degree prepared him to serve as a public school band director in Perkins, Garber and Fairfax from the mid-1950’s to the early-1960’s. During that time he served in the 45th Division of the Oklahoma National Guard and was a member of the guard’s field band. As a college student he played in the OSU marching and symphonic bands and in the original Stillwater Community Band, organized and directed by the late Hiram Henry. Settling in Stillwater in 1963 he owned and operated Evans Music Co. before becoming the first facilities manager of the OSU Seretean Center. In the mid-1970’s he was Assistant Physical Plant Manager for Principia College, Elsah, Illinois, and returned to Stillwater in the late 1970’s as Executive Secretary for Kappa Kappa Psi/ Tau Beta Sigma, national music fraternities headquartered on the OSU campus. He retired in 1995 as coordinator of extension conferences for OSU’s Division of Agriculture. A community volunteer and civic supporter, he served on the boards of Stillwater Arts and Humanities Council, Sheerar Museum Association, Stillwater Parks and Recreation, and was instrumental in helping to convert the former Stillwater High School building into the Stillwater Community Center. One of his passions was to help save historical buildings and landmarks for present-day use. He supported the Stillwater Community Band, Stillwater Community Singers, Stillwater Multi-Arts and OSU’s Friends of Music. A member of the Sooner State chapter of the American Theatre Organ Society, he loved pipe organ music. He was a long-standing member of the Stillwater Christian Science Church where he served as First Reader, chairman of the Executive Board, and as a Sunday school teacher. He was a Life member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity and the OSU Alumni Association. He is survived by his wife of 52 years Vonda Bivert Evans and daughter, Julie Evans of Tulsa and a brother, William Evans and his wife, Madge of Tucson, Ariz. He was predeceased by his parents; two sisters, Martha Pat Evans Brown and Nancy Evans Brumfield; and a brother, Robert L. Evans. The family suggests memorials to the Stillwater Community Band, c/o Wayne Bovenschen, PO Box 104, Stillwater, OK 74076 or to the Stillwater Community Singers, c/o Judy Brown, 316 S. Doty, Stillwater, OK 74074. A private family memorial service will be held to honor his life that closed on March 1, 2012.

Charles Millard Reinken (Alpha Omicron) 1946-2011

A memorial service will be held on Saturday, Nov. 5, for Charles Millard Reinken, who passed from this life on Feb. 3, 2011, in Lubbock, Texas, where he resided. The service will be at 2 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church in Plainview, followed by a brief reception and time of visitation. Charley was born Aug. 2, 1946, in Washington, D.C., beloved son of the late James Harold Reinken and Marvena Taylor Reinken, and grandson of the late Charles John F. Reinken and Johanna Dalies Reinken and William Jasper Taylor and Lutie Samantha Taylor. He leaves one sister, Janis Reinken of Austin, Texas, and a host of dear friends and cousins. First cousins from the Taylor family include Ardis R. Daniel and Gleva Smith of Blanco Community, Gloria R. Eden of Richardson, Kay Pritchard of Plainview, Glenna Taylor McLeod of Panhandle, Charles Taylor and Christine F. Nelson of Lubbock, Leon Foster of Tulia, Cheryl S. Hardin of Lubbock, Rita S. Estes of Amarillo; and, from the Reinken family, James A. Armstrong and Kathy Armstrong Ladd of Livonia, Mich., and Janet Armstrong Burke of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Honorary pallbearers will be Samuel Neal Braudt, David Bradshaw, James B. Davenport, Eric Kramer, John P. McGarr III and Jim Morgan. Interment will be at Plainview Memorial Cemetery at a time prior to the memorial service.

Charley Reinken had a distinguished 36-year newspaper career that spanned from the Atlantic to the Pacific, with a concentration in the heartland. After graduating from Texas Tech with an MA in journalism, a BBA in administrative management, with minors in sociology and industrial engineering, Charley got his start in newspapers at the Midland (Texas) Reporter-Telegram as assistant wire editor. In 1976, he began working as assistant news editor for The Houston Post, where he would spend 16 fruitful years. In 1981, the Post named him entertainment and fine arts editor, and in 1984, he became deputy editor of editorial/opinion pages. His travels on behalf of the Post included journeys to Israel, the Netherlands and Scotland. From 1992 to 1999, Charley was editor of the editorial/opinion pages of the Fayetteville Observer, North Carolina’s oldest daily newspaper (founded 1816). Charley was named deputy editor of the editorial pages of the Omaha World-Herald in 1999. In 2002, he assumed the editorship of the editorial pages. His final assignment for the World-Herald was as vice president for editorial page development. He served as editor of letters to the editor column of the Kansas City Star from 2005 to 2006. Charley was national desk senior copy editor for the Los Angeles Times, the largest newspaper on the West Coast, in 2007 and 2008. His final assignment as a journalist was in 2009-2010, as deputy local news editor of the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, which also is the home of Charley’s alma mater, Texas Tech University.

Among the honors and activities in Charley’s prominent career are national secretary, treasurer and vice president of the National Conference of Editorial Editors; “Andy” Award, given by the University of Nebraska at Omaha for promoting understanding of international issues; first place, N.C. Working Press, editorial writing; AP and UPI statewide awards in Texas; 1993 Outstanding Alumnus of the Texas Tech School of Mass Communications; adjunct faculty, University of Houston, 1987; Texas Tech Mass Communications Advisory Committee, 1986-91; weekly commentary of KRIV-TV in Houston, 1985. His work also appeared in World Book Encyclopedia, the Texas Observer, American Way magazine, The Masthead, Columbia Journalism Review and American Journalism Review. Among Charley’s other lifelong passions were photography, woodworking, backpacking, classical music and band music; he played piano, clarinet and other musical instruments. He was fluent in Spanish, proficient in French and German and read some Italian and Latin. Reinken was a 1964 graduate of Plainview High School and a proud member of the award-winning PHS band and the Texas Tech University marching and concert bands, and Court Jesters. He was a member of Kappa Kappa Psi band fraternity, Texas Tech Chapter. For those wishing to provide memorials, a band scholarship has been established in his memory at Plainview High School, to be coordinated through PHS Senior Counselor Rob Knight.

George N. Parks (Epsilon Nu) 1953-2010

George Nathan Parks, 57, of Amherst, Massachusetts, passed away on September 16 at Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, following a UMass Marching Band performance.

For 33 years, he served was the Marching Band Director at University of Massachusetts. Besides serving as director of the band known as The Power and Class of New England, Parks was professor of music at UMass. He received the university’s Distinguished Teacher Award and the Chancellor’s Medal for Distinguished Service. He was named an Honorary Alumnus of the University of Massachusetts.

Born May 23, 1953, in Buffalo, NY, George grew up in Newark, Delaware, graduating from Christiana High School. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Music Education from West Chester University, PA, and a Master of Music in Tuba Performance from Northwestern University in Evanston, IL. George began teaching at UMass in 1977, and began the George N. Parks Drum Major Academy the following summer. In 1979, Thom Hannum joined George for a legendary band partnership that lasted 31 years.

A tireless fund-raiser, Parks was the driving force behind the $5.7 million Minuteman Marching Band Building, currently under construction. The new building is named in his honor.

George’s work in music and leadership has inspired thousands of high school and college students to find the best in themselves. Some of his recent students were the children of his first students at the University.

George was a devoted husband and father, who enjoyed watching his son Michael’s hockey games and daughter Kathryn’s equestrian pursuits. George often came to Springfield Central High School to support wife Jeanne and her choral students. Among his favorite things were family trips to Disney World (where he would often run into DMA students), golfing, playing volleyball with the Band staff, watching movies, and choosing music for his favorite meal, spaghetti with meat sauce. He loved to have a houseful of people playing Axis and Allies. George was a communicant of the First Baptist Church of Amherst, where he often played tuba and sang in the choir.

George is survived by his wife of 31 years, Jeanne (nee Clayton), daughter, Kathryn, son, Michael, his mother, Vesta Parks and brother Patrick, of Newark, DE, sisters and brothers-in-law Barbara and Ed Firchak of Ocean City, MD, Pamela and Dan Kopec of Louisiana, brother and sister-in-law Jon and Lorie Parks of Delaware, and his in-laws, Harvey and Barbara Clayton of Jensen Beach, FL, and brother-in-law Robert Clayton of Celebration, FL. He will be greatly missed by his many nieces, nephews, close friends, 390 present “bandos,” and thousands of UMass band and DMA alum. George was pre-deceased by his father, Norman Parks.

William P. Foster (Delta Iota) 1919-2010

William P. Foster, who revolutionized the once-staid world of collegiate marching bands as the founder and longtime director of the high-stepping, crowd-wowing Marching 100 band of Florida A&M University, died Saturday [Aug 29, 2010] in Tallahassee, Fla. He was 91.

Robert E. Klein/Associated Press
Florida A&Ms Marching 100 at the 2005 Super Bowl. The group has more than 400 members and a worldwide following.
His death was announced by the university.

When Dr. Foster arrived at the historically black Florida A&M campus in Tallahassee in 1946, football halftime shows around the nation generally offered a rendition of the home teams fight song and a smattering of John Philip Sousa marches.

Dr. Foster introduced shows that infused black popular culture into his routines, blending contemporary music, often jazz or rock, with imaginative choreography, his green-and-orange uniformed band members carrying their instruments at a 45-degree angle, legs bent to the same angle.

College and high school marching bands around the nation drew on the Florida A&M style.

Its gotten to the point where I cant remember the last time I saw a halftime show that featured traditional marches, Fred Tillis, emeritus director of the University of Massachusetts fine arts department, told The Florida Times-Union in 1998.

Dr. Foster said there was a psychology to running a band.

People want to hear the songs they hear on the radio; it gives them an immediate relationship with you, he told The New York Times in July 1989, when the Marching 100 headed to Paris, having been selected by the French government to represent the United States with renditions of James Brown at the parade marking the French Revolutions bicentennial. And then theres the energy. Lots of energy in playing and marching. Dazzle them with it. Energy.

Sometimes his band moved at a step every three seconds or so, what he called the death cadence or death march, then zoomed to six steps a second.

It didnt exactly march.

It slides, slithers, swivels, rotates, shakes, rocks and rolls, as Dr. Foster once put it. It leaps to the sky, does triple twists, and drops to earth without a flaw, without missing either a beat or a step. It often became an animation show, simulating palm trees with branches swaying or an eagle flapping its wings.

Dr. Foster became known on campus as the Law, for what could be an intimidating presence, but he began with only 16 bandsmen in 1946. He soon called his musicians the Marching 100 because he envisioned reaching that number at some point.

The Marching 100 has grown to 400 or so musicians, drum majors and flag-bearers. It has played at the Super Bowl, presidential inaugurations and the Grammy Awards and in nationally televised commercials.

William Patrick Foster was born in Kansas City, Kan., on Aug. 25, 1919. He played the clarinet as a youngster and studied music at the University of Kansas. He hoped to become a conductor, but, as he recalled, a dean told him no musical companies would hire a black for that role.

That was when I decided that I would develop a black band that was equal to, or finer than, any white band in the country, he told The Atlanta Journal and Constitution in 1998.

He got students and parents to round up used instruments at his first job, music director for the ill-funded and segregated Lincoln High School in Springfield, Mo., then moved to the historically black Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, where he built a band.

His Florida A&M band first gained recognition on a limited scale by playing numbers like Alexanders Ragtime Band in the Orange Blossom Classic, when the Rattlers would face another historically black school at Miamis Orange Bowl. By the 1960s, as segregation began to bend, the band played at the Orange Bowl game itself and ultimately emerged as a scintillating presence with a wide audience.

Dr. Foster received a bachelors degree from Kansas in 1941 and a masters degree from Wayne State in 1950, both with a concentration in music, and a doctor of education degree from Teachers College at Columbia University in 1955.

He was the author of the memoir The Man Behind the Baton and Band Pageantry: A Guide for the Marching Band.

He retired as the Florida A&M band director in 1998.

He is survived by his sons Anthony and William Jr. and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. His wife, Mary Ann, died in 2007.

When Dr. Foster arrived at Florida A&M, he looked to innovative performances as a way of building its music department. His protégés included the renowned jazz musicians Cannonball Adderley, on the saxophone, and his brother, Nat, on the trumpet and cornet.

Everything he did was new, Nat Adderley once told The St. Petersburg Times. No one had ever seen anything like it.

Daniel J. Fissell (Omicron) 1974-2010

On Wednesday, March 10, 2010 of Falls Church, VA. Beloved partner of Al Fuertes; loving son of Gary Fissell and Mary Cina; brother of Kristine (Joey) Simpkins; uncle of Hannah Simpkins, nephew of Elizabeth Lineham RSM, Thomas Lineham, James Lineham and Gregory Fissell. Friends may call at the MURPHY FALLS CHURCH FUNERAL HOME, 1102 W. Broad St. (Rt. 7) on Monday, from 3 to 5 and 6 to 8 p.m. Services will be held on Tuesday, March 16, 1 p.m. at the Little River United Church of Christ, 8410 Little River Turnpike, Annandale, VA. Interment Fairfax Memorial Park. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Daniel Fissell Music Foundation, c/o Rev. Dr. Al Fuertes at afuertes@gmu.edu


Dan was a native of Virginia. He graduated from McLean High School in 1992. In 1997, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Music Education from West Virginia University and a Master’s degree in Music from George Mason University in 2009.

He joined Fairfax County Public Schools in September 1998, as an orchestra teacher at Holmes Middle School. In 2003, he transitioned to the elementary level. At the time of his death, Dan taught orchestra at Vienna, Marshall Road, Cunningham Park and Stenwood elementary schools.

Dan Fissell died on March 10, 2010 as the result of injuries he received in a house fire.

Dan was an accomplished orchestra director in Fairfax County Public Schools and he was a huge advocate for music education. Dan also enjoyed traveling, especially to the Philippines. During his visits to the Philippines, Dan developed close ties to academic universities and organizations; he immersed himself in learning about the country, the people, their cultures and their educational programs. After traveling to the tiny island of Siquijor, and learning about the culture of the healers who lived there, Dan chose to do his graduate thesis on Healing in Siquijor. During his research and focusing on his passion for music education, Dan soon discovered there was a great need for financial support for public school music programs.

In 2005 in conjunction with Silliman University, Dan arranged his first of many pilgrimages to the Philippines to fulfill his goal to support public music programs in that country. Dan organized the Capital Youth Chamber Orchestra. The orchestra included his past and present orchestra students. The purpose of the program was to bring attention to the need for more music programs in schools and to raise money for The Pay-It-Forward Foundation, a local charity in the Philippines.