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  • £11.50

    AMAZING GRACE (New Orleans Style) (score) - McKenzie, Jock

    Needs a minimum of 10 brass players + 2 percussion, with parts for brass band brass and orchestral brass, plus percussion. Grade 5-6 standard.

    In Stock: Estimated dispatch 1-3 working days
  • £37.50

    AMAZING GRACE (New Orleans Style) (score & parts) - McKenzie, Jock

    Needs a minimum of 10 brass players + 2 percussion, with parts for brass band brass and orchestral brass, plus percussion. Grade 5-6 standard.

    In Stock: Estimated dispatch 1-3 working days
  • £80.00

    A Walk In New Orleans - Bertrand Moren

    Estimated dispatch 5-14 working days

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  • £35.60

    NEW ORLEANS FUNCTION - Traditional - Colter Vince

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £48.00

    Red Vest Man (Brass Band - Score and Parts) - Waterman, Steve

    Red Vest Man was composed as a dedication to cornet player Buddy Bolden, one of the first jazz musicians. He was reputed to always perform wearing a red vest. The piece is a New Orleans funeral march, something Bolden would have been called to do many times in his career. It starts with a slow mournful march, featuring solos from trumpet and trombone and finishes with a joyful 2nd line New Orleans rhythm. Duration: 8.00. Suitable for 2nd Section Bands and above.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £30.00

    Black Bottom Stomp - Jelly Roll Morton

    Ferdinand Joseph LaMothe, professionally known as Jelly Roll Morton, was an American ragtime and early jazz pianist, bandleader and composer who started his career in New Orleans, Louisiana. Widely recognised as a pivotal figure in early jazz, Morton is perhaps most notable as jazz's first arranger, proving that a genre rooted in improvisation could retain its essential spirit and characteristics when notated. His composition "Jelly Roll Blues" was the first published jazz composition in 1915. Morton is also notable for writing such standards as "King Porter Stomp", "Wolverine Blues", "Black Bottom Stomp", and "I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say". Notorious for his arrogance and self-promotion, Morton claimed to have invented jazz outright in 1902, much to the derision of fellow musicians and the critics. At the age of fourteen, Morton began working as a piano player in a brothel (or, as it was referred to back then, a sporting house). In that atmosphere, he often sang smutty lyrics and took the nickname "Jelly Roll". While working there, he was living with his religious, church-going great-grandmother; who he convinced that he worked as a night watchman in a barrel factory. After Morton's grandmother found out that he was playing jazz in a local brothel, she kicked him out of her house and told him that "devil music" would surely bring about his downfall. Born in downtown New Orleans, Louisiana, his exact birth date differs depending to whichever source you want to believe; his half-sisters claimed he was born in September 1885, but his World War 1 draft card showed September 1884 and his California death certificate listed his birth as September 1889. He died in 1941 in Los Angeles.