|
Carl
Fillmore McMath was bom in Fitzgerald, Georgia in 1935, and
attended schools in Tennessee, Mississippi, Florida and Georgia before
attending
and graduating from Winyah High School, Georgetown, South Carolina. He
began his music career in the fourth grade by playing the trumpet, because
his older brother also played it.
After graduating high school
in 1953, McMath was awarded a competitive music scholarship at The University
of South Carolina where he served as
band property manager and librarian. He also served as President of the
University Band and graduated in 1957 with the A.B. degree in Education.
McMath also enlisted in the United States Marine Corps Reserve in 1953
and was honorably discharged from service in 1961. While in college he
was a member of the Columbia Opera Orchestra.
After his first teaching
position at Buford High in Lancaster, McMath went to Chicora High in Charleston
Heights and in 1962 he transferred
to R.B.
Stall where he became their first band director. While in Charleston
he was also solo trumpet for the Charleston Symphony Orchestra.
Carl graduated from Appalachian State Teachers College, now Appalachian
State University, in 1964 with the M.A. degree in music. Since August
of that year, he and his family have made their home in Spartanburg.
It is
here in Spartanburg that his duties of developing and teaching the
district's Junior High Band have been so successful.
McMath was elected vice-president of the South Carolina Band Directors
Association in 1963. He worked hard as an officer and committee
chairman for the association and was always willing to assist with jobs
that
required attention. At one time or another, he served on every
committee. One
of his accomplishments includes being chairman of the committee,
which provided
the first handbook for the association. This committee also initiated
the SCBDA Outstanding Performance Award.
While teaching at McCracken Junior High, the Eagle Band performed
for the South Carolina Music Educators Association twice. In
1980 the McCracken
band also performed at the Atlanta convention of the American
School Band
Directors Association where it received an extended standing
ovation. Bands under his direction received thirteen consecutive superior
ratings at the
SCBDA Concert Band Festival.
He was elected to membership in the American School Band Directors
Association in 1965 and to the executive board in 1986. In
1970, the music department
of Appalachian State University inducted him into membership
in Pi Kappa Lambda, national music honor society. Additionally,
in
1983
he was elected
president of the Spartanburg County Education Association.
He has been a member of the Spartanburg Symphony Orchestra and is
active
as a performer
and private teacher. McMath is a former member of the renowned
Smoky Mountain Brass Band based in Asheville, North Carolina.
He is also
a member of the
Theta Chapter of Phi Beta Mu International School Bandmaster's
Fraternity and received the fraternity's Outstanding Bandmaster
Award in 1986.
He also received the prestigious Career Service Award of the
South Carolina
Chapter of The American School Band Directors Association in
1999.
McMath served eleven Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches
as part-time music director or orchestra director over a
span of thirty-five years.
He has been active as a clinician and adjudicator in North
Carolina, Georgia, and South Carolina. He has written articles
on band
that have been published
in The School Musician Magazine, the Royal Marines (UK) HistoricalJoumal,
and Blue Band, the magazine of the Royal Marines Band Service
(UK).
McMath is grateful to the following teachers who helped shape
his career: J.R. Kennedy, Richard Zimmerman, Pat Gamett,
William Spencer,
Nicholas
Emeston, Robert Chesebro, Gary Malvern, Bob Barr, Harold
Bachman, William Revelli, and Walter Marden.
He is married to his loyal and faithful partner of forty
years, his dear wife Nina. They have two daughters; Carol,
a chief
counselor at Spartanburg
Mental Health Center and Elizabeth, who is pursuing a nursing career. |