Searching for Wind Band Music? Visit the Wind Band Music Shop
We've found 961 matches for your search. Order by

Results

  • £48.95

    Concert Gallop

    Here is a charming, easy-going solo for all B-flat or E-flat brass instruments from the prolific Philip Wilby. This brass band version also comes with alternative solo parts for euphonium duet or trio and euphonium quartet (two baritones and two euphoniums).

    Estimated dispatch 7-9 working days
  • £49.95

    On the Face Too! (Value Set)

    Value Set includes: a score and one of each part:Part A: Trumpet 1 in BbPart B: Trumpet 2 in BbPart C: Horn in EbPart C: Horn in FPart C: Trombone/Euphonium TCPart C: Trombone/Euphonium BCPart D: Trombone TCPart D: Trombone BCPart D: Bass in EbPart D: Tuba BDPercussionAdditional score and parts are also available individually.On the Face Too! is to the secondary school brass teacher as On the Face! is to the primary: namely a collection of pieces for intermediate brass ensemble in various jazz and popular styles, aiming to give a ready supply of material for concerts and assemblies, which nevertheless still allows for the developing technique of the young players to whom it is addressed.Generally speaking, the technical difficulty of the material here goes no further than grade 4 or 5 (even the first trumpet part never goes higher than a written G), though some pieces will offer considerable rhythmic challenges.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £38.95

    Unity Series Band Journal - Numbers 482 - 485, October 2019

    482: Euphonium Solo - The Spirit within (Joel Collier)This accessible solo for Euphonium is based on the popular song Move, Holy Spirit! (S.A.S.B. 323).483: Waltz - I love to Sing (David Edmonds)A light and simple waltz based on Gsta Blomberg's song I love to sing (S.A.S.B. 845).484: Walking in faith and victory (Daniel Elson)A relaxed arrangement of the well-known chorus Be bold, be strong.485: Unto Thee (Ruben Schmidt)This piece is based on the old hymn Unto thee, O Saviour-King (S.A.S.B. 686).

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £214.95

    Christmas Collection - Wind Band Set - March Card Size

    The wind band set contains 30 parts in march card size only:Flute 1 x2Flute 2 x2Oboe x1Bassoon x1Clarinet 1 Bb x2Clarinet 2 Bb x2Soprano Saxophone Bb x1Alto Saxophone 1 Eb x1Alto Saxophone 2 Eb x1Tenor Saxophone Bb x1Baritone Saxophone Eb x1Horn 1 in F x1Horn 2 in F x1Solo & 1st Cornet Bb x22nd Cornet Bb x2Trombone 1 B.C. x1Trombone 2 B.C. x1Bass Trombone x1Euphonium B.C. x1Euphonium Bb T.C. x1Tuba B.C. x2String Bass x1Percussion x1

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £19.95

    Timepiece (Brass Quartet)

    For brass quartet (2 Trumpets/Cornets, Horn Eb and Euphonium). Commissioned for the 1994 Swiss Quartet Championships. (Horn in F and Euphonium bass clef parts included).

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £29.95

    Unity Series Band Journal October 2014 Numbers 422 - 425

    No. 422 March - Jubilant Day! (Harold Burgmayer)This accessible march was written for the small, but faithful, corps band in Lock Haven, Pannsylvania, USA, on the occasion of the corps' 125th anniversary.No. 423 Euphonium Solo - Abide with me (Martin Cordner)A sensitive three-verse setting of William H. Monk's well-known tune for Euphonium and band.No. 424 March - God's Faithfulness! (Howard Davies)This march was written to assist celebrations for a recent Salvation Army Congress held in the Indonesian Territory. The music is deliberately written in the style of a 'parade (or street) march' with a steady and unhurried tempo.No. 425 Song Arrangement - Oi, oi, we are gonna praise the Lord! (Doug Engle)This chorus by Doug Horley uses some 'invented' words, but it clearly communicates how our response should be to a God who loves us.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £44.95

    Judd: Euphony

    Previously only available in manuscript form, this euphonium solo with brass band accompaniment is now available in printed format. Euphony (meaning a pleasant, sweet sound) is based on the tunes of Sidney Cox with material taken from the songs; 'He found me', 'This one thing I know', 'You can tell out the sweet story' and 'Deep and wide'. At the time of writing, the composer remarked; 'The euphonium is often associated with melodies and harmonies that lend themselves to pleasing sounds'. That is true of this solo but it also presents considerable technical challenges for the soloist in terms of range and technique.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £49.99

    Marcho Brioso (Brass Band - Score and Parts)

    Marcho Brioso was commissioned by The Brioso Brass, a British-style brass band from Hokkaido, Japan. They gave the first performance in January 2012.The commission was for a bright and breezy march that the band could use as their theme tune, so Marcho Brioso falls into the composer's series of Broadway-style marches, which includes Slipstream, The Bandwagon and Jubiloso. After a short introduction a solo cornet plays the main theme, accompanied by a euphonium counter-melody. A secondary phrase from the horns and baritones leads to a tutti version of the main theme which is followed by the traditional 'bass' strain. A change of key heralds the trio section, which features a cantabile melody on euphonium; this is then taken up by the full band after a short bridge passage and further change of key.This takes us back to the home key which sees a quiet staccato version of the main theme lead to a recapitulation and a short coda which brings the march to a close.Duration: 3:40

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £74.95

    Eden (Score and Parts)

    This work was commissioned by the Brass Band Heritage Trust as the test piece for the final of the 2005 Besson National Brass Band Championship, held at the Royal Albert Hall, London.The score is prefaced by the final lines from Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost (completed in 1663), in which Adam and Eve, expelled from Paradise, make their uncertain way into the outside world:"...The world was all before them, where to chooseTheir place of rest, and providence their guide:They hand in hand with wandering steps and slow,Through Eden took their solitary way."My work is in three linked sections. In the first, the characters of Adam, Eve and the serpent guarding the Tree of Knowledge are respectively represented by solo euphonium, cornet and trombone. The music opens in an idyllic and tranquil mood and leads into a duet between euphonium and cornet. Throughout this passage the prevailing mood darkens, though the soloists seem to remain oblivious to the increasingly fraught atmosphere. A whip-crack announces the malevolent appearance of the solo trombone who proceeds to engage the solo cornet in a sinister dialogue.The second section interprets the Eden story as a modern metaphor for the havoc mankind has inflicted upon the world, exploiting and abusing its resources in the pursuit of wealth. Though certainly intended here as a comment on the present-day, it is by no means a new idea: Milton himself had an almost prescient awareness of it in Book I of his poem, where men, led on by Mammon:"...Ransacked the centre and with impious handsRifled the bowels of their mother earthFor treasures better hid. Soon had his crewOpened into the hill a spacious woundAnd digged out ribs of gold."So this section is fast and violent, at times almost manic in its destructive energy. At length a furious climax subsides and a tolling bell ushers in the third and final section.This final part is slow, beginning with an intense lament featuring solos for tenor-horn, flgel-horn and repiano cornet and joined later by solo baritone, soprano cornet, Eb-bass and Bb-bass.At one stage in the planning of the work it seemed likely that the music would end here - in despair. Then, mid-way through writing it, I visited the extraordinary Eden Project in Cornwall. Here, in a disused quarry - a huge man-made wound in the earth - immense biomes, containing an abundance of plant species from every region of the globe, together with an inspirational education programme, perhaps offer a small ray of hope for the future. This is the image behind the work's conclusion and the optimism it aims to express is real enough, though it is hard-won and challenged to the last.John Pickard 2005

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £29.50

    Eden (Score Only)

    This work was commissioned by the Brass Band Heritage Trust as the test piece for the final of the 2005 Besson National Brass Band Championship, held at the Royal Albert Hall, London.The score is prefaced by the final lines from Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost (completed in 1663), in which Adam and Eve, expelled from Paradise, make their uncertain way into the outside world:"...The world was all before them, where to chooseTheir place of rest, and providence their guide:They hand in hand with wandering steps and slow,Through Eden took their solitary way."My work is in three linked sections. In the first, the characters of Adam, Eve and the serpent guarding the Tree of Knowledge are respectively represented by solo euphonium, cornet and trombone. The music opens in an idyllic and tranquil mood and leads into a duet between euphonium and cornet. Throughout this passage the prevailing mood darkens, though the soloists seem to remain oblivious to the increasingly fraught atmosphere. A whip-crack announces the malevolent appearance of the solo trombone who proceeds to engage the solo cornet in a sinister dialogue.The second section interprets the Eden story as a modern metaphor for the havoc mankind has inflicted upon the world, exploiting and abusing its resources in the pursuit of wealth. Though certainly intended here as a comment on the present-day, it is by no means a new idea: Milton himself had an almost prescient awareness of it in Book I of his poem, where men, led on by Mammon:"...Ransacked the centre and with impious handsRifled the bowels of their mother earthFor treasures better hid. Soon had his crewOpened into the hill a spacious woundAnd digged out ribs of gold."So this section is fast and violent, at times almost manic in its destructive energy. At length a furious climax subsides and a tolling bell ushers in the third and final section.This final part is slow, beginning with an intense lament featuring solos for tenor-horn, flgel-horn and repiano cornet and joined later by solo baritone, soprano cornet, Eb-bass and Bb-bass.At one stage in the planning of the work it seemed likely that the music would end here - in despair. Then, mid-way through writing it, I visited the extraordinary Eden Project in Cornwall. Here, in a disused quarry - a huge man-made wound in the earth - immense biomes, containing an abundance of plant species from every region of the globe, together with an inspirational education programme, perhaps offer a small ray of hope for the future. This is the image behind the work's conclusion and the optimism it aims to express is real enough, though it is hard-won and challenged to the last.John Pickard 2005

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days