John Malveaux of
sends this link:
A Proclamation
In the symphony halls of our great cities
across America, in the community centers of our small towns, on radio
and in recordings, a note is played that began centuries ago and
resounds to this day. At the heart of classical music is continuity and
tradition. What was heard in a Vienna opera house was heard again in a
colonial theater in Charleston, South Carolina, was echoed at the
inauguration of President Lincoln, was repeated in turn-of-the-century
Chicago, and is played again today by a range of musicians from the most
skilled of virtuosos to the youngest student struggling with the
complexities of the violin.
Classical music is a celebration of
artistic excellence. Great art endures through the ages, and in the
United States we have embraced that great music and incorporated it into
the American experience. Our best art reflects our Nation's spirit—that
mixture of discipline and improvisation, the combination of strong
individual voices working together at the same time, the bravado, the
inventiveness, the dynamism of the American character. Classical music
plays in harmony with that energy and spirit to become reinvigorated and
reinvented with each new orchestra or chamber group, with every
performance that rings out new and fresh.
This month we exalt the
many talented composers, conductors, and musicians who bring classical
music to our ears. These artists carry on a great tradition of musical
achievement, and we are proud of their outstanding accomplishments.
Whether in new American works or in the masterpieces of the great
composers of old, music is a unifying force in our world, bringing
people together across vast cultural and geographical divisions.
Classical music speaks both to the mind and to the heart, giving us
something to think about as well as to experience.
The Congress,
by House Joint Resolution 239, has designated September 1994 as
"Classical Music Month," and has authorized and requested the President
to issue a proclamation in observance of this month.
Now, Therefore, I, William J. Clinton,
President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim September
1994 as Classical Music Month. I urge all Americans to observe this
month with appropriate ceremonies and activities.
In Witness Whereof,
I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-second day of August, in the
year of our Lord nineteen hundred and ninety-four, and of the
Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and
nineteenth.
William J. Clinton
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