George Ira Tompkins (1888-1972), was a ragtime composer, vocal director and music teacher from Waterbury, Connecticut. His musical contributions in the early 20th century in the Farmington and Naugatuck Valley regions of Connecticut were numerous. He was one of the earliest violin students of The Institute of Musical Art (known today as The Juilliard School) and a violinist in the New York Symphony Orchestra, predecessor to the Philharmonic Society of New York, later known as the New York Philharmonic.
George Tompkins was a local musician to the populous city of Waterbury in the early 20th century. He was the grandson of George Tompkins of Waterbury, leader of the Tompkins band in that city in the mid-late 19th century, which played at the funeral of President Abraham Lincoln in 1863.[1] He started out in Waterbury as a violinist before moving to Simsbury.[2] Tompkins had played in the Waterbury Symphony Orchestra prior to 1905, giving a violin performance at its final concert on May 23, 1905, at the Poli's Theater of Waterbury. By age 16, George Tompkins was attending the Yale School of Music.[3][4] He was a student of violin professor Isidor Troostwyk. In 1907, he appeared with a string quartet based in Connecticut in a concert at Buckingham Hall, alongside operatic baritone, David Bispham.[5] A music reviewer commented on Tompkins' ability at the violin following a concert that same year saying, "George I. Tompkins continues to grow more proficient in the art of playing the violin and his ability is showing itself more in every appearance. Walter's "Preislied" was a difficult selection, but it seemed anything but hard to the young artist, who is fast winning laurels in the musical world".[6] W.E. Clark of The Phonograph Co. of Chicago described Tompkins as "a violinist of marked ability" following a performance of Henryk Wieniawski's Concerto in D Minor at Woolsey Hall.[7] Tompkins graduated from the Yale School of Music in 1908, following a period as conductor of the Yale Dramatic association production of "Revizor"[8] by Nikolai Gogol.
Following studies at Yale, George Tompkins was among the earliest violin students of The Institute of Musical Art. Attending the institute for two years, graduating in 1910, Tompkins would become a member of the New York Symphony Orchestra in 1908, participating in many concerts along the Jersey Shore during this time.[9]
His name first appears in connection with violin students who later joined the Liberty Orchestra of Simsbury, which played especially for the "Welfare dances" of the town after World War I. Many musicians that comprised this orchestra were from the small village of Tariffville, including many Polish-Americans, led by violinist Edwin Varjenski.[10] George was also a leader of the local Chautauqua organization in 1915.[11]
Tompkins is listed as the only violin instructor in the town of Simsbury for the year 1913,[12] and likely the sole music instructor for many years prior.
By 1915, Tompkins appears as "instructor" at the Westminster School of Simsbury, arranging many performances with private students for the Simsbury community as arranger and accompanist.[13] He served as musical director for the Westminster School dramatic production, The Elephant's Remorse, in collaboration with author C.C. S. Cushing, who also wrote the Broadway adaptation of Der Zigeunerprimas, in 1914.[14][15] Tompkins was affiliated with the Westminster School as early as 1912.[16] He served as choral director, piano accompanist as well as organist during his tenure.[17]
In private pursuits, Tompkins was active as a composer of ragtime and popular music of the 1910s. His first pieces of music were published in 1912, including "The Mexican Rag", which was originally sung by the Westminster School Dramatic Club. One of his earlier publications being "Beaux Esprits" in 1913, was popularized by an arrangement by James C. McCabe, staff arranger for Arthur Pryor's band and Joseph C. Smith's orchestra. A popular recording of this piece was made by Columbia Records in 1914 by Prince's Band,[18] arrangement by Ford Dabney, being sold by Columbia into 1916.[19] Beaux Esprits was featured in dance-duo, Vernon and Irene Castle's 1914 popular dances. By 1915, it was in use as an accompaniment for dramatic productions and silent films.[20]
Tompkins's reputation as a violinist had succeeded that of his composing, evidenced by a passage from 1915 in The Musician titled "The College Man in Music".[21] Despite this, Tompkins would continue to publish more music for the stage and method books of piano. By 1917, he was engaged as a teacher at The Taft School in Watertown, Connecticut. While a teacher at this institution, he was leader of the Watertown Choral Club chorus and was asked to conduct his own compositions with the Boston Festival Orchestra.[22] He was drafted into the U.S. Army that same year during World War I, serving with the 73rd Infantry of the 12th Division. During his service, he was concertmaster of the Seventy-Third Regimental Orchestra,[23] which performed works exclusively published by Jerome H. Remick, the same publisher Tompkins had worked with years earlier in publishing "Beaux Esprits". In 1918, Remick would also publish Tompkins's proto-jazz composition, "Cassandra". For a brief time, Tompkins was engaged in Florida to produce music for student productions at the University of Florida, including a successful production called Out of the East in May 1921.[24] In 1922, Tompkins was invited to New York to produce music for a Broadway musical called "Get In Step", for the Seventh Regiment benefit.[25][26] It premiered at the Lexington Theatre on April 27, 1922.[27][28] Tompkins was described by Etude Magazine in May 1922 as "a most promising American composer who has original ideas and methods of presentation with-out needless or extravagant methods of treatment".[29] He was awarded third place in the 1922-23 Etude Prize Contest for choral composition.[30]
George Tompkins removed to Westport, Connecticut following his time in Watertown, and remained there throughout the 1920s and 1930s. He was first, director of the Westport Choral Club.[31] Henceforth, he became affiliated with the "Westport Players". In 1935, he was assisting with the original production of Snowed Under,[32] a play by Burton Davis, later adapted into the 1936 Warner Bros. film of the same name.
By 1937, Tompkins was the host of a local radio show, "Young Playmates" on WICC in Bridgeport, as an educational speaker for children who wanted to be in the radio business.[33] They were also given opportunities to demonstrate their talent on the air.
Tompkins directed The Manufacturers' Chorus of Bridgeport, into the 1940s, and following World War II.[34]
Tompkins died in 1972 in Connecticut. His authorship of the 1918 foxtrot, "Cassandra", was unknown for many years, until being resurrected by ragtime pianist Tom Brier[35] going onto be recorded numerous times by Tom Brier, included in his 2006 studio album, Rewind, and by others who discovered the piece on the internet.
. Brier described the piece as an "obscure" one, and a "personal favorite",