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  1. Joseph Edgar Maddy (October 14, 1892 – April 18, 1966) was an American music educator and conductor. [1] [2] Early life. He was born in Wellington, Kansas on Octobert 14, 1892. Both of his parents were teachers. He attended Wichita College of Music in Wichita, Kansas, where he studied violin and later joined the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.

  2. Joseph E. Maddy. Joseph Edgar Maddy (October 14, 1892 – April 18, 1966) was a pioneering American music educator and conductor. He was born in Wellington, Kansas where both of his parents were teachers. He attended Wichita College of Music in Wichita, Kansas where he studied violin and later joined the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.

  3. Interlochen Arts Academy is a pre-professional arts boarding high school, founded in 1962 by Joseph E. Maddy. The school offers seven arts majors in creative writing, dance, film and new media, interdisciplinary arts, music, theater, and visual arts.

    • 1928
    • 1,200 acres (490 ha), wooded, rural, between two lakes, adjacent to Interlochen State Park
    • "Dedicated to the promotion of world friendship through the universal language of the arts."
    • Joseph E. Maddy
  4. Joseph Edgar Maddy (October 14, 1892 – April 18, 1966) was a pioneering American music educator and conductor. He was born in Wellington, Kansas where both of his parents were teachers. He attended in Wichita, Kansas where he studied violin and later joined the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.

  5. Joseph E. Maddy (1891–1966) was a pioneering American music educator. He studied violin and used to play in the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra before accepting a teaching position at the Morton High School in Richmond in 1920, where Maddy was commissioned to revive the outstanding school and community music program.

  6. TRAVERSE CITY, Mich., April 18 (AP) Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, the founder and president of the National Music Camp and Arts Academy at Interlochen, died today of a heart attack. He was 74 years...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wabash_BluesWabash Blues - Wikipedia

    Though the song was recorded by Isham Jones and his ensemble, the piece was arranged by Joseph E. Maddy. Prior to being called "Wabash Blues", the first name of this significant early jazz standard was called "The Trombone Jazz" and was orchestrated by Joseph E. Maddy in the summer of 1918 at Kansas City's Electric Park - a then ...