Searching for Wind Band Music? Visit the Wind Band Music Shop
We've found 15 matches for your search. Order by

Results

  • £82.95

    ROYAL PARKS (Brass Band - Score and Parts) - Lloyd, George

    .

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £37.95

    ROYAL PARKS (Brass Band - Score only) - Lloyd, George

    .

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £82.95

    Royal Parks (Score and Parts)

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £37.95

    Royal Parks (Score Only)

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £82.95

    Royal Parks - George Lloyd

    Estimated dispatch 5-14 working days
  • £61.99

    Somethin' Stupid - Carson Parks - Frank Bernaerts

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £50.90

    Somethin' Stupid - Carson Parks - Alan Fernie

    Estimated dispatch 5-10 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £39.60

    SOMETHIN' STUPID - Parks Carson - McAllen Tom

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £29.95

    Kingdom of Dragons (Brass Band - Score only) - Harper, Philip

    The 'Kingdom of Dragons' is Gwent in South Wales, known in ancient times as the Kingdom of Gwent, and more recently home to the Newport Gwent Dragons Rugby Union team.This piece was commissioned by the Gwent Music Service with additional funding from Ty Cerdd - Music Centre Wales to celebrate the 50th anniversary in 2010 of the formation of the Gwent Youth Brass Band.Although the music is continuous, it is divided into four distinct sections, each one representing one of the unitary authorities which make up the County of Gwent.Monmouthshire, which has a large number of ancient castlesBlaenau Gwent, an historic area of iron and coal miningTorfaen, where Pontypool Park is a notable landmarkNewport, the largest city in the regionThe music begins with a two-bar fanfare, which sets out all the thematic material of the piece. The mood of pageantry that follows describes some of the ancient castles in Monmouthshire, with rolling tenor drums and fanfaring cornets. After a majestic climax the music subsides and quite literally descends into the coal mines of Blaenau Gwent. The percussion provides effects that suggest industrial machinery clanking into life, and the music accelerates to become a perilous white-knuckle ride on the underground railroad. There is a brief respite as a miner's work-song is introduced and, after a protracted build-up, this is restated at fortissimo before the music comes crashing to an inglorious close, much like the UK's mining industry itself. The middle sonorities of the band portray the tranquillity of Pontypool Park, a place of great natural beauty. Brief cadenzas for cornet and euphonium lead to a full band reprise of the pastoral mood. At the end of this section we find ourselves at the top of the park's 'Folly Tower' from which the distant castle turrets of Monmouthshire are visible. Pontypool RFC was one of eleven clubs in the first Welsh league in 1881 and a brief but bruising musical portrayal of the formidable Pontypool front-row, the 'Viet Gwent' leads into the work's final section. This portrays Newport, a symbol for progress and optimism for the future, ideals shared by the Gwent Youth Band itself. The music is a vigorous fugue which advances through various keys and episodes before the final triumphant augmented entry which brings the work to a magnificent conclusion.Duration: 12:00

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days