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{{short description|American painter}}
{{Short description|American musician and writer (1936–2007)}}


{{More citations needed|date=March 2007}}
{{More citations needed|date=March 2007}}


'''Frederick Tupper Saussy III''' (July 3, 1936 &ndash; March 16, 2007) was an American [[composer]], [[musician]], [[author]], [[artist]], and [[conspiracy theorist]]. His contemporaries describe him as a self-styled theologian, restaurant owner, ghostwriter of [[James Earl Ray]]'s biography, King assassination conspiracy theorist, anti-government pamphleteer, and radical opponent of the federal government’s taxation and monetary authority.<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-18-98/memphis_n_fea.html|title=News & Opinion: The Amazing Tupper Saussy (Memphis Flyer . 05-18-98)|website=Weeklywire.com}}</ref> He was born in [[Statesboro, Georgia]]; grew up in [[Tampa, Florida]]; and graduated from the [[University of the South]] at Sewanee, Tennessee, in 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070319/OBITS/703190336/1090/NEWS|title=None|website=Tennessean.com}}</ref> His jazz combo there put out a university-subsidized album, ''Jazz at Sewanee'', which included several original compositions.<ref>[[Andy Zax]]. "A Conversation with Tupper Saussy." ''Brilliant Colors: The Complete Warner Bros. Recordings.'' Liner notes. Page 5.</ref> Thereafter Saussy taught English at [[Montgomery Bell Academy]] in [[Nashville, Tennessee]], co-founded an advertising agency, McDonald and Saussy, and kept his musical career alive with recording dates and club sessions.
'''Frederick Tupper Saussy III''' (July 3, 1936 &ndash; March 16, 2007) was an American composer, musician, author, artist, and conspiracy theorist. He was a self-styled theologian, restaurant owner, ghostwriter of [[James Earl Ray]]'s biography, [[Martin Luther King Jr. assassination conspiracy theories|King assassination conspiracy theorist]], anti-government pamphleteer, and radical opponent of the federal government’s taxation and monetary authority.<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-18-98/memphis_n_fea.html|title=News & Opinion: The Amazing Tupper Saussy (Memphis Flyer . 05-18-98)|website=Weeklywire.com|access-date=2007-03-19|archive-date=2007-03-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070322221149/http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-18-98/memphis_n_fea.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>


He was born in [[Statesboro, Georgia]]; grew up in [[Tampa, Florida]]; and graduated from the [[University of the South]] at Sewanee, Tennessee, in 1958.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070319/OBITS/703190336/1090/NEWS|title=None|website=Tennessean.com}}</ref> His jazz combo there put out a university-subsidized album, ''Jazz at Sewanee'', which included several original compositions.<ref>[[Andy Zax]]. "A Conversation with Tupper Saussy." ''Brilliant Colors: The Complete Warner Bros. Recordings.'' Liner notes. Page 5.</ref> Thereafter Saussy taught English at [[Montgomery Bell Academy]] in [[Nashville, Tennessee]], co-founded an advertising agency, McDonald and Saussy, and kept his musical career alive with recording dates and club sessions.
With the [[Nashville Symphony]], he composed a work called ''The Beast with Five Heads'' (1965/66), based on "[[The Bremen Town Musicians]]", designed to replace ''[[Peter and the Wolf]]'' as a work to teach schoolchildren about [[orchestration]], which continued to be used for the next fifteen years.<ref>[[Andy Zax|Zax]], 6-7.</ref> For its 1968/69 season, the Nashville Symphony commissioned him to write a [[piano concerto]] for [[Bill Pursell]]; it was performed by the Symphony on January 14, 1969, with [[Thor Johnson]] conducting.<ref>[[Andy Zax|Zax]], 7</ref>

With the [[Nashville Symphony]], he composed a work called ''The Beast with Five Heads'' (1965/66), based on "[[The Bremen Town Musicians]]", designed to replace ''[[Peter and the Wolf]]'' as a work to teach schoolchildren about the instruments of the orchestra, which continued to be used for the next fifteen years.<ref>[[Andy Zax|Zax]], 6-7.</ref> For its 1968/69 season, the Nashville Symphony commissioned him to write a piano concerto for [[Bill Pursell]]; it was performed by the Symphony on January 14, 1969, with [[Thor Johnson]] conducting.<ref>[[Andy Zax|Zax]], 7</ref>


Saussy's activities as [[tax protester]] led him to be sentenced to prison and to be a fugitive from the law between 1987 and 1997. After his arrest, he served 14 months and was released in 1999.
Saussy's activities as [[tax protester]] led him to be sentenced to prison and to be a fugitive from the law between 1987 and 1997. After his arrest, he served 14 months and was released in 1999.


==Popular music==
==Popular music==
Tupper Saussy was perhaps best known as the [[songwriter]] and [[keyboardist]] for the [[psychedelic pop]] band [[The Neon Philharmonic]], whose vocalist was [[Don Gant]]. [[The Neon Philharmonic]]'s single "[[Morning Girl]]" rose to Top Twenty status and was nominated for two [[Grammy Award|Grammy awards]] in 1969. Earlier in Saussy's career, [[Monument Records]] had released several albums of his [[jazz]] compositions: "Discover Tupper Saussy," "Said I to Shostakovitch," and ''The Swingers' Guide to Mary Poppins'' (this last featuring songs from the [[The Walt Disney Company|Disney]] movie). In the 1960s and 1970s, he composed works for the [[Nashville Symphony Orchestra]] and the [[Chattanooga Symphony]]. Saussy also composed two pop songs for [[The Wayward Bus (band)|The Wayward Bus]], "The Prophet: Predictions by [[David Hoy]]" and "Love Hum". He also worked with [[Chet Atkins]] and [[Ray Stevens]], and wrote arrangements for [[Mickey Newbury]]'s ''[[Harlequin Melodies]]'', as well as arrangements for [[Boudleaux Bryant]], [[Bobby Bare]], and [[Roy Orbison]]. [[The Neon Philharmonic]]'s two albums, ''[[The Moth Confesses]]'' and ''[[The Neon Philharmonic (album)|The Neon Philharmonic]]'' were released by Warner Brothers in 1969. The group disbanded in 1972, but producer [[David Kastle]] bought the name and used it on recordings until 1975, even recording one of Saussy's songs, "Making Out the Best I Can".
Tupper Saussy was perhaps best known as the songwriter and keyboardist for the [[psychedelic pop]] band [[The Neon Philharmonic]], whose vocalist was [[Don Gant]]. The Neon Philharmonic's single "[[Morning Girl]]" rose to Top Twenty status and was nominated for two [[Grammy Award|Grammy awards]] in 1969. Earlier in Saussy's career, [[Monument Records]] had released several albums of his jazz compositions: ''Discover Tupper Saussy'', ''Said I to Shostakovitch'', and ''The Swingers' Guide to Mary Poppins'' (this last featuring songs from [[Mary Poppins (film)|the namesake Disney movie]]). In the 1960s and 1970s, he composed works for the Nashville Symphony Orchestra and the [[Chattanooga Symphony]]. Saussy also composed two pop songs for [[The Wayward Bus (band)|The Wayward Bus]], "The Prophet: Predictions by [[David Hoy]]" and "Love Hum". He also worked with [[Chet Atkins]] and [[Ray Stevens]], and wrote arrangements for [[Mickey Newbury]]'s ''[[Harlequin Melodies]]'', as well as arrangements for [[Boudleaux Bryant]], [[Bobby Bare]], and [[Roy Orbison]]. The Neon Philharmonic's two albums, ''[[The Moth Confesses]]'' and ''[[The Neon Philharmonic (album)|The Neon Philharmonic]]'' were released by Warner Brothers in 1969. The group disbanded in 1972, but producer [[David Kastle]] bought the name and used it on recordings until 1975, even recording one of Saussy's songs, "Making Out the Best I Can".


==Painting==
==Painting==
Saussy was the great-nephew of the Savannah painter [[Hattie Saussy]]. His first exhibition of watercolors was given in 1972 at [[Cheekwood]] in [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]], [[Tennessee]] and his works can be found in the permanent collection of the Tennessee State Museum.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tnmuseum.org/|title=Tennessee State Museum - Nashville Attractions|website=Tnmuseum.org}}</ref>
Saussy was the great-nephew of the Savannah painter [[Hattie Saussy]]. His first exhibition of watercolors was given in 1972 at [[Cheekwood]] in Nashville and his works can be found in the permanent collection of the Tennessee State Museum.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tnmuseum.org/|title=Tennessee State Museum - Nashville Attractions|website=Tnmuseum.org}}</ref>


==Theater==
==Theater==
In 1972, he published the [[play (theatre)|play]], ''[[To Watch a Beautiful Sunrise]]'', through [[Samuel French Inc.]], a comedy concerning a radical [[anarchist]] with the House of the Rising Sons who is assigned to kill his own stepfather. Saussy first acted by replacing an actor in a regional production of ''[[Cactus Flower (play)|Cactus Flower]]'' at [[The Circle Theater]] in Nashville after the original actor got pneumonia. A friend was playing Stephanie and recommended him for the role.<ref>[[Andy Zax|Zax]], 8.</ref>
In 1972, he published the play, ''[[To Watch a Beautiful Sunrise]]'', through [[Samuel French Inc.]], a comedy concerning a radical anarchist with the House of the Rising Sons who is assigned to kill his own stepfather. Saussy first acted by replacing an actor in a regional production of ''[[Cactus Flower (play)|Cactus Flower]]'' at [[The Circle Theater]] in Nashville after the original actor got pneumonia. A friend was playing Stephanie and recommended him for the role.<ref>[[Andy Zax|Zax]], 8.</ref>


==Politics==
==Politics==
Saussy published a book on what he called "the Vatican Jesuit Global Conspiracy"<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tuppersaussy.com/Books.html |title=Books |website=www.tuppersaussy.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070518211331/http://www.tuppersaussy.com/Books.html |archive-date=18 May 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref> in which he claims that "the American Revolution and its resulting constitutional republic have been single-handedly designed and supervised by a Jesuit named [[Lorenzo Ricci]] - this country's true founding father". Between 1980 and 1987, Saussy edited ''The Main Street Journal'', advising and reporting on political action aimed at restoring the gold and silver monetary system in the U.S. and arguing against federal taxes. Convicted on federal income-tax charges in Chattanooga in 1985 and unsuccessful in his appeals, Saussy went on the lam in 1987 rather than begin serving a one-year sentence at the federal prison in Atlanta.<ref name="auto"/>
Saussy published a book on what he called "the Vatican Jesuit Global Conspiracy"<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tuppersaussy.com/Books.html |title=Books |website=www.tuppersaussy.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070518211331/http://www.tuppersaussy.com/Books.html |archive-date=18 May 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref> in which he claims that "the American Revolution and its resulting constitutional republic have been single-handedly designed and supervised by a Jesuit named [[Lorenzo Ricci]]—this country's true founding father". Between 1980 and 1987, Saussy edited ''The Main Street Journal'', advising and reporting on political action aimed at restoring the gold and silver monetary system in the U.S. and arguing against federal taxes. Convicted on federal income tax charges in Chattanooga in 1985 and unsuccessful in his appeals, Saussy became a fugitive in 1987 rather than begin serving a one-year sentence at the federal prison in Atlanta.<ref name="auto"/>


Later, he befriended [[James Earl Ray]], who had confessed to the [[assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.]] After Ray, who was in prison, read of Saussy's defense in Tennessee newspapers, inquired by postcard if Saussy would be interested in helping Ray write and publish his autobiography. Thus began a collaboration that resulted in the publication, in 1987, of ''Tennessee Waltz: The Making of An American Political Prisoner''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-03-98/memphis_n_fea.html|title=News & Opinion: The Missing Link (Memphis Flyer . 05-04-98)|website=Weeklywire.com}}</ref> After the book was published by Saussy in 1987, Ray disavowed parts of it and sued Saussy.<ref name="auto"/>
Later, he befriended [[James Earl Ray]], who had confessed to the [[assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.]] Ray had read of Saussy's defense in Tennessee newspapers and inquired by postcard if Saussy would be interested in helping him write and publish his autobiography. This resulted in the publication in 1987 of ''Tennessee Waltz: The Making of An American Political Prisoner''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-03-98/memphis_n_fea.html|title=News & Opinion: The Missing Link (Memphis Flyer . 05-04-98)|website=Weeklywire.com}}</ref> After its publication in 1987, Saussy was sued by Ray, who disavowed parts of their book.<ref name="auto"/>


==Legal problems==
==Legal problems==
In the early 1980s, the federal government had begun cracking down on outspoken tax protesters, whose numbers were then estimated by the [[Internal Revenue Service]] at 40,000 or more. In 1985 Saussy was found guilty of willfully failing to file a tax return for the year 1977, and sentenced to serve one year in Atlanta Federal Prison Camp.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nashvillepost.com/business/article/20400812/a-belle-meade-renegade-a-nashville-original|title=A Belle Meade renegade, a Nashville original|newspaper=[[Nashville Post]]}}</ref> (Technically, he filed a Fifth Amendment return, a discredited tax dodge that was popular with tax protesters in the 1970s and early 1980s. He also issued something called PMOC, or "Public Money Office Certificates," and used them instead of money to pay for some services while living in Sewanee.<ref name="auto"/>) Saussy fled in 1987 rather than begin serving a sentence at the federal prison in Atlanta. Thus began a game of cat-and-mouse with U.S. marshals that only ended in November 1997 outside his home in Venice Beach, California.<ref name="auto"/>
In the early 1980s, the federal government had begun cracking down on outspoken tax protesters, whose numbers were then estimated by the [[Internal Revenue Service]] at 40,000 or more. In 1985 Saussy was found guilty of willfully failing to file a tax return for the year 1977, and sentenced to serve one year in Atlanta Federal Prison Camp.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nashvillepost.com/business/article/20400812/a-belle-meade-renegade-a-nashville-original|title=A Belle Meade renegade, a Nashville original|newspaper=[[Nashville Post]]}}</ref> He filed a Fifth Amendment return, a discredited tax dodge that was popular with tax protesters in the 1970s and early 1980s. He also issued what he called PMOC, or "Public Money Office Certificates," and used them instead of money to pay for some services while living in Sewanee.<ref name="auto"/>) Saussy fled in 1987 rather than begin serving a sentence at the federal prison in Atlanta. US marshals pursued him until his arrest in November 1997 outside of his home in [[Venice Beach, California]].<ref name="auto"/>


Saussy's appeal was denied by the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]]. Saussy eventually served a 14-month sentence at [[Taft Correctional Institution]] in [[Taft, California]]. Saussy was given the job of chapel music director and piano instructor to prisoners.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://tuppersaussy.com/html/about/abouttupper.html |title=About tupper |website=tuppersaussy.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040904075607/http://tuppersaussy.com/html/about/abouttupper.html |archive-date=4 September 2004 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Saussy was released from prison on May 12, 1999.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bop.gov/inmateloc/|title=Inmate Locator|website=Bop.gov}}</ref>
Saussy's appeal was denied by the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]]. Saussy eventually served a 14-month sentence at [[Taft Correctional Institution]] in [[Taft, California]]. Saussy was given the job of chapel music director and piano instructor to prisoners.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://tuppersaussy.com/html/about/abouttupper.html |title=About tupper |website=tuppersaussy.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040904075607/http://tuppersaussy.com/html/about/abouttupper.html |archive-date=4 September 2004 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Saussy was released from prison on May 12, 1999.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bop.gov/inmateloc/|title=Inmate Locator|website=Bop.gov}}</ref>


==Later years==
==Later years==
During his fugitive years, Saussy pursued his suspicions about the religious element in the origins of American government. In prison, he collated his research and prepared a final manuscript. This grand conspiracy was published in 1999 by Osprey under the title ''Rulers of Evil: Useful Knowledge about Governing Bodies''.<ref>Saussy, F. Tupper. [https://archive.org/details/F.TupperSaussyRulersOfEvilUsefulKnowledgeAboutGoverningBodies ''Rulers of Evil: Useful Knowledge about Governing Bodies''.] Reno, Nevada: Ospray Bookmakers, 1999.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rulersofevil.com/ |title=Index.HTML |website=www.rulersofevil.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021116132808/http://www.rulersofevil.com/ |archive-date=16 November 2002 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
During his fugitive years, Saussy pursued his suspicions about the religious element in the origins of American government. In prison, he collated his research and prepared a final manuscript, which was published in 1999 by Osprey under the title ''Rulers of Evil: Useful Knowledge about Governing Bodies''.<ref>Saussy, F. Tupper. [https://archive.org/details/F.TupperSaussyRulersOfEvilUsefulKnowledgeAboutGoverningBodies ''Rulers of Evil: Useful Knowledge about Governing Bodies''.] Reno, Nevada: Ospray Bookmakers, 1999.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rulersofevil.com/ |title=Index.HTML |website=www.rulersofevil.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021116132808/http://www.rulersofevil.com/ |archive-date=16 November 2002 |url-status=dead}}</ref>


Saussy also expanded on his book's historical speculation later in alleging conspiracies about 9/11 being orchestrated by Dick Cheney and the Pope, whom Saussy calls "the undesignated de facto Chairman of the United States corporation". As Saussy writes: "9/11 could only have been a ruse created by the American Presidency to furnish a pretext for restricting the rights and property of Americans in order to redistribute American funds and forces to the middle east and soon elsewhere, pursuant to the Papacy's design".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tuppersaussy.com/museum/html/writings/articles/cheney.html |title=Sympathy for mr cheney |website=www.tuppersaussy.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070524005854/http://www.tuppersaussy.com/museum/html/writings/articles/cheney.html |archive-date=24 May 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
Saussy also expanded on his book's historical speculation later in alleging conspiracies about 9/11 being orchestrated by Dick Cheney and the Pope, whom Saussy calls "the undesignated de facto Chairman of the United States corporation". As Saussy writes: "9/11 could only have been a ruse created by the American Presidency to furnish a pretext for restricting the rights and property of Americans in order to redistribute American funds and forces to the middle east and soon elsewhere, pursuant to the Papacy's design".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tuppersaussy.com/museum/html/writings/articles/cheney.html |title=Sympathy for mr cheney |website=www.tuppersaussy.com |access-date=15 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070524005854/http://www.tuppersaussy.com/museum/html/writings/articles/cheney.html |archive-date=24 May 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref>


Saussy's Warner Brothers albums were reissued in 2004 under the Rhino Handmade label. In April 2006, Tupper Saussy resumed his composer/pianist/performer persona with the Nashville debut of "The Chocolate Orchid Piano Bar," a cycle of new and vintage songs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/apr/21/popandrock|title=Bob Stanley celebrates the return of a polymath|first=Bob|last=Stanley|date=April 21, 2006|website=Theguardian.com}}</ref> His first new musical release in 37 years, the CD was recorded in Nashville and produced by Warren Pash.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://mixonline.com/recording/business/audio_nashville_skyline_92/|title=nashville recording studios-news and projects from nashville recording studios<!-- Bot generated title -->|website=Mixonline.com}}</ref>
Saussy's Warner Brothers albums were reissued in 2004 under the Rhino Handmade label. In April 2006, Tupper Saussy resumed his career as composer, pianist, and performing musician with the Nashville debut of ''The Chocolate Orchid Piano Bar'', an album of new and vintage songs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/apr/21/popandrock|title=Bob Stanley celebrates the return of a polymath|first=Bob|last=Stanley|date=April 21, 2006|website=Theguardian.com}}</ref> His first new musical release in 37 years, the CD was recorded in Nashville and produced by Warren Pash.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://mixonline.com/recording/business/audio_nashville_skyline_92/|title=nashville recording studios-news and projects from nashville recording studios<!-- Bot generated title -->|website=Mixonline.com}}</ref>


Saussy was first married to Lola Haun, a Nashville socialite, whom he met during his tenure as a teacher at [[Montgomery Bell Academy]]. The pair, who divorced in 1972, had a son, Caleb Powell [[Haun Saussy]], and a daughter, Melinda Cavanaugh Saussy. By his second wife, Frederique Louise Blanco, the musician had two more sons, Pierre Philippe Saussy and Laurent Amaury Saussy, and a stepdaughter, Alexia Camille Vallord.
Saussy was first married to Lola Haun (1940-1995), a Nashville socialite, whom he met during his tenure as a teacher at [[Montgomery Bell Academy]]. Before their divorce in 1972, they had a son, Caleb Powell Haun Saussy—whose professional name is [[Haun Saussy]]—and a daughter, Melinda Cavanaugh Saussy. With his second wife, Frederique Louise Blanco, Saussy had two more sons: Pierre Philippe Saussy and Laurent Amaury Saussy. He also had a stepdaughter, Alexia Camille Vallord.{{Citation needed |date=December 2023}}


Tupper Saussy died on March 16, 2007, at his home in [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]], [[Tennessee]] of a heart attack, two days before the release of ''The Chocolate Orchid Piano Bar'' on CD. He was 70 years old. Saussy's death occurred one day after the 20th anniversary of Don Gant's death.
Tupper Saussy died on March 16, 2007, at his home in Nashville of a heart attack, two days before the release of ''The Chocolate Orchid Piano Bar'' on CD. He was 70 years old.{{Citation needed |date=December 2023}}


==Publications==
==Publications==
Line 54: Line 56:
*[http://honestthings.blogspot.com Honest Things] Blog
*[http://honestthings.blogspot.com Honest Things] Blog
*[http://www.moorestevie.com/3/ts/index.html a Tupper Saussy Shrine] photos & info about his Monument LPs
*[http://www.moorestevie.com/3/ts/index.html a Tupper Saussy Shrine] photos & info about his Monument LPs
*[http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-18-98/memphis_n_fea.html Memphis Flyer 1998 article]
*[http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-18-98/memphis_n_fea.html Memphis Flyer 1998 article] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070322221149/http://weeklywire.com/ww/05-18-98/memphis_n_fea.html |date=2007-03-22 }}
*[http://www.rhinohandmade.com/browse/ProductLink.lasso?Number=7844 Brilliant Colors: Neon Philharmonic set on Rhino Handmade]
*[http://www.rhinohandmade.com/browse/ProductLink.lasso?Number=7844 Brilliant Colors: Neon Philharmonic set on Rhino Handmade]
*[https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9269288 Profile of Saussy] from [[NPR]] retrieved on April 1, 2007
*[https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9269288 Profile of Saussy] from [[NPR]] retrieved on April 1, 2007
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[[Category:Monument Records artists]]
[[Category:Monument Records artists]]
[[Category:People from Statesboro, Georgia]]
[[Category:People from Statesboro, Georgia]]
[[Category:Sewanee: The University of the South alumni]]
[[Category:Tax protesters in the United States]]
[[Category:Tax protesters in the United States]]
[[Category:American conspiracy theorists]]
[[Category:American conspiracy theorists]]

Latest revision as of 17:11, 27 December 2023

Frederick Tupper Saussy III (July 3, 1936 – March 16, 2007) was an American composer, musician, author, artist, and conspiracy theorist. He was a self-styled theologian, restaurant owner, ghostwriter of James Earl Ray's biography, King assassination conspiracy theorist, anti-government pamphleteer, and radical opponent of the federal government’s taxation and monetary authority.[1]

He was born in Statesboro, Georgia; grew up in Tampa, Florida; and graduated from the University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee, in 1958.[2] His jazz combo there put out a university-subsidized album, Jazz at Sewanee, which included several original compositions.[3] Thereafter Saussy taught English at Montgomery Bell Academy in Nashville, Tennessee, co-founded an advertising agency, McDonald and Saussy, and kept his musical career alive with recording dates and club sessions.

With the Nashville Symphony, he composed a work called The Beast with Five Heads (1965/66), based on "The Bremen Town Musicians", designed to replace Peter and the Wolf as a work to teach schoolchildren about the instruments of the orchestra, which continued to be used for the next fifteen years.[4] For its 1968/69 season, the Nashville Symphony commissioned him to write a piano concerto for Bill Pursell; it was performed by the Symphony on January 14, 1969, with Thor Johnson conducting.[5]

Saussy's activities as tax protester led him to be sentenced to prison and to be a fugitive from the law between 1987 and 1997. After his arrest, he served 14 months and was released in 1999.

[edit]

Tupper Saussy was perhaps best known as the songwriter and keyboardist for the psychedelic pop band The Neon Philharmonic, whose vocalist was Don Gant. The Neon Philharmonic's single "Morning Girl" rose to Top Twenty status and was nominated for two Grammy awards in 1969. Earlier in Saussy's career, Monument Records had released several albums of his jazz compositions: Discover Tupper Saussy, Said I to Shostakovitch, and The Swingers' Guide to Mary Poppins (this last featuring songs from the namesake Disney movie). In the 1960s and 1970s, he composed works for the Nashville Symphony Orchestra and the Chattanooga Symphony. Saussy also composed two pop songs for The Wayward Bus, "The Prophet: Predictions by David Hoy" and "Love Hum". He also worked with Chet Atkins and Ray Stevens, and wrote arrangements for Mickey Newbury's Harlequin Melodies, as well as arrangements for Boudleaux Bryant, Bobby Bare, and Roy Orbison. The Neon Philharmonic's two albums, The Moth Confesses and The Neon Philharmonic were released by Warner Brothers in 1969. The group disbanded in 1972, but producer David Kastle bought the name and used it on recordings until 1975, even recording one of Saussy's songs, "Making Out the Best I Can".

Painting

[edit]

Saussy was the great-nephew of the Savannah painter Hattie Saussy. His first exhibition of watercolors was given in 1972 at Cheekwood in Nashville and his works can be found in the permanent collection of the Tennessee State Museum.[6]

Theater

[edit]

In 1972, he published the play, To Watch a Beautiful Sunrise, through Samuel French Inc., a comedy concerning a radical anarchist with the House of the Rising Sons who is assigned to kill his own stepfather. Saussy first acted by replacing an actor in a regional production of Cactus Flower at The Circle Theater in Nashville after the original actor got pneumonia. A friend was playing Stephanie and recommended him for the role.[7]

Politics

[edit]

Saussy published a book on what he called "the Vatican Jesuit Global Conspiracy"[8] in which he claims that "the American Revolution and its resulting constitutional republic have been single-handedly designed and supervised by a Jesuit named Lorenzo Ricci—this country's true founding father". Between 1980 and 1987, Saussy edited The Main Street Journal, advising and reporting on political action aimed at restoring the gold and silver monetary system in the U.S. and arguing against federal taxes. Convicted on federal income tax charges in Chattanooga in 1985 and unsuccessful in his appeals, Saussy became a fugitive in 1987 rather than begin serving a one-year sentence at the federal prison in Atlanta.[1]

Later, he befriended James Earl Ray, who had confessed to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. Ray had read of Saussy's defense in Tennessee newspapers and inquired by postcard if Saussy would be interested in helping him write and publish his autobiography. This resulted in the publication in 1987 of Tennessee Waltz: The Making of An American Political Prisoner.[9] After its publication in 1987, Saussy was sued by Ray, who disavowed parts of their book.[1]

[edit]

In the early 1980s, the federal government had begun cracking down on outspoken tax protesters, whose numbers were then estimated by the Internal Revenue Service at 40,000 or more. In 1985 Saussy was found guilty of willfully failing to file a tax return for the year 1977, and sentenced to serve one year in Atlanta Federal Prison Camp.[10] He filed a Fifth Amendment return, a discredited tax dodge that was popular with tax protesters in the 1970s and early 1980s. He also issued what he called PMOC, or "Public Money Office Certificates," and used them instead of money to pay for some services while living in Sewanee.[1]) Saussy fled in 1987 rather than begin serving a sentence at the federal prison in Atlanta. US marshals pursued him until his arrest in November 1997 outside of his home in Venice Beach, California.[1]

Saussy's appeal was denied by the Supreme Court. Saussy eventually served a 14-month sentence at Taft Correctional Institution in Taft, California. Saussy was given the job of chapel music director and piano instructor to prisoners.[11] Saussy was released from prison on May 12, 1999.[12]

Later years

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During his fugitive years, Saussy pursued his suspicions about the religious element in the origins of American government. In prison, he collated his research and prepared a final manuscript, which was published in 1999 by Osprey under the title Rulers of Evil: Useful Knowledge about Governing Bodies.[13][14]

Saussy also expanded on his book's historical speculation later in alleging conspiracies about 9/11 being orchestrated by Dick Cheney and the Pope, whom Saussy calls "the undesignated de facto Chairman of the United States corporation". As Saussy writes: "9/11 could only have been a ruse created by the American Presidency to furnish a pretext for restricting the rights and property of Americans in order to redistribute American funds and forces to the middle east and soon elsewhere, pursuant to the Papacy's design".[15]

Saussy's Warner Brothers albums were reissued in 2004 under the Rhino Handmade label. In April 2006, Tupper Saussy resumed his career as composer, pianist, and performing musician with the Nashville debut of The Chocolate Orchid Piano Bar, an album of new and vintage songs.[16] His first new musical release in 37 years, the CD was recorded in Nashville and produced by Warren Pash.[17]

Saussy was first married to Lola Haun (1940-1995), a Nashville socialite, whom he met during his tenure as a teacher at Montgomery Bell Academy. Before their divorce in 1972, they had a son, Caleb Powell Haun Saussy—whose professional name is Haun Saussy—and a daughter, Melinda Cavanaugh Saussy. With his second wife, Frederique Louise Blanco, Saussy had two more sons: Pierre Philippe Saussy and Laurent Amaury Saussy. He also had a stepdaughter, Alexia Camille Vallord.[citation needed]

Tupper Saussy died on March 16, 2007, at his home in Nashville of a heart attack, two days before the release of The Chocolate Orchid Piano Bar on CD. He was 70 years old.[citation needed]

Publications

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Books

Book contributions

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "News & Opinion: The Amazing Tupper Saussy (Memphis Flyer . 05-18-98)". Weeklywire.com. Archived from the original on 2007-03-22. Retrieved 2007-03-19.
  2. ^ "None". Tennessean.com.
  3. ^ Andy Zax. "A Conversation with Tupper Saussy." Brilliant Colors: The Complete Warner Bros. Recordings. Liner notes. Page 5.
  4. ^ Zax, 6-7.
  5. ^ Zax, 7
  6. ^ "Tennessee State Museum - Nashville Attractions". Tnmuseum.org.
  7. ^ Zax, 8.
  8. ^ "Books". www.tuppersaussy.com. Archived from the original on 18 May 2007. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  9. ^ "News & Opinion: The Missing Link (Memphis Flyer . 05-04-98)". Weeklywire.com.
  10. ^ "A Belle Meade renegade, a Nashville original". Nashville Post.
  11. ^ "About tupper". tuppersaussy.com. Archived from the original on 4 September 2004. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  12. ^ "Inmate Locator". Bop.gov.
  13. ^ Saussy, F. Tupper. Rulers of Evil: Useful Knowledge about Governing Bodies. Reno, Nevada: Ospray Bookmakers, 1999.
  14. ^ "Index.HTML". www.rulersofevil.com. Archived from the original on 16 November 2002. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  15. ^ "Sympathy for mr cheney". www.tuppersaussy.com. Archived from the original on 24 May 2007. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  16. ^ Stanley, Bob (April 21, 2006). "Bob Stanley celebrates the return of a polymath". Theguardian.com.
  17. ^ "nashville recording studios-news and projects from nashville recording studios". Mixonline.com.
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