By Nolan Vallier and Scott Schwartz
Title: Lloyd P. Farrar Music Instrument Collection and Personal Papers, 1850-2005
ID: 12/9/92
Primary Creator: Farrar, Lloyd Philip (1934-2025)
Extent: 84.0 cubic feet
Arrangement:
The Collection is arranged into four series: Series 1) Instrument Collection, Series 2) Research Notes and Files, Series 3) Music Library, and Series 4) Personal Papers.
Series 1 is organized into two sub-series: 1) Musical Instruments, which is arranged chronologically by date of accrual, and 2) Instrument Collection Documentation, which is arranged alphabetically by instrument and then by manufacturer.
Series 2 is organized into three sub-series: 1) Instrument Manufacturer Catalogs and Research Files, which is arranged alphabetically by manufacturer; 2) Biographies and Histories, which is arranged alphabetically by given title and chronologically therein; and 3) Archives, Auctions, Libraries, Museums, and Personal Instrument Collection Catalogs, which is arranged alphabetically by given title and chronologically therein.
Series 3 is arranged by instrument part book in score order, and alphabetically by title thereafter.
Series 4 is arranged alphabetically by given title and chronologically thereafter.
Date Acquired: 09/26/1995. More info below under Accruals.
Subjects: Alumni, Brass Instruments, Music--Societies, etc. -- United States, Musical Instrument Collections, Musical Instrument Makers - Europe, Musical Instrument Makers - United States, Musicology, organology, Phi Mu Alpha, University of Illinois, University of Texas, Woodwind Instruments
Formats/Genres: Papers
Languages: English, German, Dutch;Flemish, Czech, Japanese
Consists of Lloyd Farrar's collection of woodwind, string, and brass instruments by predominantly American, but some European, musical instrument manufacturers; his research papers including notes on instrument builders, articles written about musical instruments, and photographs of musical instruments; collected books on musical instrument builders, museum collections and exhibits of musical instruments, treatises on performance practice and building musical instruments, and general histories about music in the 19th century; and a small body of personal papers, documenting the life and organological research of Lloyd Farrar.
Lloyd P. Farrar (1934-2025) was an organologist and musicologist. The son of Dr. Milton Dyer Farrar and Helen Farrar, he was born and grew up in Urbana, IL. From 1932 to 1946, Farrar's father was a professor of entomology with the Illinois State Natural History Survey Division. For three years, the family lived in Durham, New Hampshire while Dr. Farrar worked as the associate director of the Crop Protection Institute. His family moved once again to Clemson, South Carolina in 1949 after his father became the head of Clemson University's Entomology and Zoology Department. Lloyd Farrar attended the Philips Academy, an all-male boarding high school, in Andover Massachussetts, graduating in 1952.
After starting college as a geologist in North Carolina, he hitchhiked across the country to the University of Illinois where he studied trombone and musicology. As a music major, he joined Phi Mu Alpha Fraternity. He met his wife Doris Vogt, who was also studying music and was a member of Mu Phi Epsilon. The two were married in 1956. At the University of Illinois, Farrar performed as the principal trombonist in the University Symphony Orchestra as well as on sackbut with the Collegium Musicum. Farrar graduated with his bachelors degree in music in 1955. The following year he earned a masters degree in musicology.
Farrar then spent a year in the Netherlands on a Fullbright Grant studying early Dutch music. Following this, he and his wife traveled to the University of Texas at Austin where he began his PhD in Musicology, but he never completed his dissertation. While he was in Washington DC studying at the Library of Congress, Farrar took a job teaching music history and conducting the wind band at Mary Washington College in Viriginia. In addition, he formed the nearby Prince George's Civic Orchestra in Washington DC, conducting the orchestra from 1965 to 1969.
Around 1971, Farrar began to lose his sight and abandoned much of his intensive bibliographic work at the time, but continued his organological work. During the mid 1970s he collected hundreds of musical instruments as a means of correcting and expanding Lindesay Langwill's instrumental history book to include American manufacturers. Between the late 1970s and mid 1980s, Farrar was one of the country's leading organologists, writing articles for The Woodwind Quarterly, The International Trumpet Guild, The American Musical Instrument Society, The Serpent Newsletter, and the American Musicological Society as well as serving on the board of governors for the American Musical Instrument Society, where he chaired the committee for revisions to the Langwill Index. In 1988, Farrar examined and arranged the John Held and Chatfield Band Library at the Utah State Archives. In the late 1980s he began the Patuxent Martial Musick Collection in Colesville, Maryland, which was later transferred to the Sousa Archives in 1995. In 1996, the Farrars moved to Norris, Tennessee. Farrar died on January 10, 2025 in his Tennessee home.
Alumni
Brass Instruments
Music--Societies, etc. -- United States
Musical Instrument Collections
Musical Instrument Makers - Europe
Musical Instrument Makers - United States
Musicology
organology
Phi Mu Alpha
University of Illinois
University of Texas
Woodwind Instruments
Repository: The Sousa Archives and Center for American Music
Additional materials were acquired from Lloyd Farrar on September 29, 2004; January 25, 2005; March 4, 2012; and June 26, 2016.
Yamaha Bb Flugelhorn received from Geoffrey Britten on May 2, 2019.
Serpent, Sackbut, Alto Shawm, and Tenor Shawm transferred from the School of Music on July 22, 2024.
Addition of unprocessed historical flutes, fifes, piccolos, clarinets, and research files acquired from Mark Farrar on March 10, 2025
Acquisition Source: Lloyd Farrar
Acquisition Method: Gift of Lloyd and Doris Farrar.