The Royal Artillery Band - Sousa: Music for Wind Band, Vol. 1 (2001)
BAND/ARTIST: Keith Brion, The Royal Artillery Band
- Title: Sousa: Music for Wind Band, Vol. 1
- Year Of Release: 2001
- Label: Naxos
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks+booklet)
- Total Time: 55:31 min
- Total Size: 273 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. March: Hands across the Sea
2. March: Manhattan Beach
3. By the Light of the Polar Star
4. Beneath the Southern Cross
5. Mars and Venus
6. March: The Invincible Eagle
7. March: Hail to the Spirit of Liberty
8. Waltz: Colonial Dames
9. March: Inperial Edward
10. March: Foshay Tower (Washington Memorial)
11. Humoresque of George Geshwin's Swanee
12. March: Daughters of Texas
13. March: Kansas Wildcats
14. March: Power and Glory
John Philip Sousa personified turn-of-the-century America, the comparative Innocence and brash energy of a still new nation. His ever touring band represented America across the globe and brought music to hundreds of American towns. John Philip Sousa, born on 6 November 1854, reached this exalted position with startling quickness. In 1880, at the age of 26, he became conductor of the U.S. Marine Band. In twelve years the vastly improved ensemble won high renown and Sousa’s compositions earned him the title of “The March King.” Sousa went one better with the formation of his own band in 1892, bringing world acclaim.
In its first seven years the band gave 3500 concerts; in an era of train and ship travel it logged over a million miles in nearly four decades. There were European tours in 1900, 1901, 1903, and 1905, and a world tour in 1910–11, the zenith of the band era.
The unprecedented popularity of the Sousa Band came at a time when few American orchestras existed. From the Civil War to about 1920, band concerts where the most important aspect of musical life in the United States of America. No finer band than Sousa’s was ever heard. Sousa modified the brass band by decreasing the brass and percussion instruments, increasing its woodwinds, and adding a harp. His conducting genius attracted the finest musicians, enabling him to build an ensemble capable of executing programmes almost as varied as those of a symphony orchestra. The Sousa Band became the standard by which American bands were measured nationally, causing a dramatic upgrading in quality.
Sousa’s compositions also spread his fame. Such marches as The Stars and Stripes Forever, El Capitan, Washington Post, and Semper Fidelis are universally acknowledged as the best of the genre. Sousa said a march “should make a man with a wooden leg step out,” and his surely did. Although he standardised the march form as it is known today, he was no mere maker of marches, but an exceptionally inventive composer of over two hundred works, including symphonic poems, suites, operas and operettas. His principles of instrumentation and tonal colour influenced many classical composers. His robust, patriotic operettas of the 1890s helped introduce a truly native musical attitude in American theatre.
Sousa: Works for Wind Band, Volume I
The library of Sousa’s Band contained over ten thousand titles. Among them are the numerous band compositions of Sousa. This new series, ‘Sousa: Works for Wind Band’ seeks to record them for the world to hear.
Keith Brion
In its first seven years the band gave 3500 concerts; in an era of train and ship travel it logged over a million miles in nearly four decades. There were European tours in 1900, 1901, 1903, and 1905, and a world tour in 1910–11, the zenith of the band era.
The unprecedented popularity of the Sousa Band came at a time when few American orchestras existed. From the Civil War to about 1920, band concerts where the most important aspect of musical life in the United States of America. No finer band than Sousa’s was ever heard. Sousa modified the brass band by decreasing the brass and percussion instruments, increasing its woodwinds, and adding a harp. His conducting genius attracted the finest musicians, enabling him to build an ensemble capable of executing programmes almost as varied as those of a symphony orchestra. The Sousa Band became the standard by which American bands were measured nationally, causing a dramatic upgrading in quality.
Sousa’s compositions also spread his fame. Such marches as The Stars and Stripes Forever, El Capitan, Washington Post, and Semper Fidelis are universally acknowledged as the best of the genre. Sousa said a march “should make a man with a wooden leg step out,” and his surely did. Although he standardised the march form as it is known today, he was no mere maker of marches, but an exceptionally inventive composer of over two hundred works, including symphonic poems, suites, operas and operettas. His principles of instrumentation and tonal colour influenced many classical composers. His robust, patriotic operettas of the 1890s helped introduce a truly native musical attitude in American theatre.
Sousa: Works for Wind Band, Volume I
The library of Sousa’s Band contained over ten thousand titles. Among them are the numerous band compositions of Sousa. This new series, ‘Sousa: Works for Wind Band’ seeks to record them for the world to hear.
Keith Brion
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