News

In 2005, a sousaphone was lost during Hurricane Katrina. Now the replacement has vanished. It should be easy to spot, it reads "Preservation Hall" on the bell. There is a reward.
What do you get when you cross a sousaphone with a microphone? More trending stories We don't know — but it sure does make for a great news story. "Listen to this," KSAZ reporter Cory McCloskey ...
In February, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band in New Orleans had a rare Italian-made sousaphone stolen. Now, thanks to an anonymous tipster, it's back in the band's possession.
Self-proclaimed "America's finest news source" The Onion reports that Activision's latest virtual-instrument title, Sousaphone Hero, isn't selling as well as the company had hoped, despite a $25M ...
Reporter Cory McCloskey suffered a moment of embarrassment when he stuck his mic in a band player's sousaphone only to have it fall.
Protesters, primarily "anti-Trump," were quite visible and vocal outside the Chicago Hilton during Trump's appearance at the National Association of Black Journalists’ convention.
A happy ending for a Tacoma man whose rare musical instrument was stolen from his garage.
It was in 1926 while playing with Ernie Andrews’ Orchestra in Boston that Pete received this instrument known as the Jumbo Sousaphone. There was only one other like it in Boston and of the New York ...
Zack Hickman is a self-described man of mischief who on a rainy Friday in the middle of a pandemic, walks the streets of Watertown playing the sousaphone.
Yesterday, a man who had shed his shirt thanks to this obnoxious late-summer heat attempted to board a crowded train on the New York City subway—with his sousaphone.
In this case, the contrarians are members of a contemporary incarnation of the Ku Klux Klan, and their most vocal opponent is a sousaphone-playing young man named Matt Buck.