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  • £76.99

    Music from O Brother, Where Art Thou?

    In a quirky retelling of Homer's The Odyssey, this recent movie from Joel and Ethan Coen is set in Mississippi in 1937. The musical style is early country/folk/bluegrass, and Michael Brown's concert band setting is unique and inviting. Includes: Down to the River to Pray, I Am A Man of Constant Sorrow, Keep on the Sunny Side, and I'll Fly Away. For added flavor, use the optional guitar/banjo parts.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £435.40

    Symphony No 1 for Wind Band - Solitude Standing - Stig Nordhagen

    The two movements in this symphony have quite similar structure and length, and this is no coincidence. As a composer, I try to create two musical stories that comes from the same starting point and thought, but they sound and feel different. Music often describes something you cant say in words. This composer stands in the middle of the symphony, here personalized as trombone solo (or euphonium) and tries "Solitude Standing" to make a bridge between the two parts. - Stig Nordhagen -

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £54.99

    Music For The Kings Feast - Henry Purcell

    A strong work for young band, this work will bring a touch of class to any concert. (2:00)

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £84.99

    Start Up the Band - Gilbert Tinner

    The music society Melodia Goldach from Switzerland commissioned Gilbert Tinner to write Start Up the Band, an ideal opening piece for any concert. Following a lively, fanfare-like brass introduction, high-spirited woodwind phrases and powerful bass and timpani lines, the theme is heard - in a rock style. The middle section, if played softly, can also be used as background music for presentation and announcements.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £134.99

    Four Original Warm-Ups For Band - Bert Appermont

    From his experience as a conductor and adjudicator, Bert Appermont knows that bands often experience the same problems: lack of sound control, intonation difficulties, uncontrolled articulation and insufficient phrasing. Practising these aspects is very demanding and there is little material available that is also enjoyable to play. Four Original Warm-Ups consists of four fun warm-up pieces. Each piece focuses on one of the problems without the music being dull. The four pieces work equally well when played together or as individual items either at rehearsals or in a concert.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £38.50

    The Music of the Night - Andrew Lloyd Webber

    This easy arrangement of the tender and moving ballad from The Phantom of the Opera will sound great with just about any band.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £168.50

    Music for Prague (1968) - Karel Husa

    This impressive and historically significant work is found on state lists all across the country and is highly respected as an important contribution to the contemporary literature for concert band. Composed in 1968 and memorializing the 1968 Soviet bloc invasion of Czechoslovakia, Husa arranged this for orchestra soon after. One year later Husa was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his String Quartet No. 3.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £82.80

    I've Got the Music in Me - Bias Boshell

    "I've Got the Music in Me" is a pop song by The Kiki Dee Band, released in 1974. It was written in 1973 by Bias Boshell, Kiki Dee Band's keyboardist. It is also the title of a Kiki Dee Band album released in 1974 and re-mastered and re-released in 2008 with bonus tracks. Expertly and very effectively arranged by master arranger Lorenzo Bocci.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £58.50

    Music From 'West Side Story'

    Score and Parts for Concert Band.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £126.50

    Slava! - Wind Band - Leonard Bernstein

    The first theme of Slava! is a vaudevillian razz-ma-tazz tune filled with side-slipping modulations and sliding trombones. The second theme is a canon, and after a brief development section, the two themes recur in reverse order. Near the end, they are combined with a quotation (proclaimed by the ubiquitous trombones) from the Coronation Scene of Moussorgsky's 'Boris Goudonov', where the chorus sings the Russian word slava!, meaning, glory! In this way, the composer is paying homage to his friend Mistislav Rostropovich, called 'Slava' by his friends and to whom the overture is fondly dedicated. The overture was written to celebrateRostropovich's inauguration as music director of the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C., in 1977. Leonard Bernstein, the son of a Russian immigrant, was born near Boston, Mass., and studied composition at Harvard. Called 'an authentic American hero, an arts hero,' Bernstein had a distinguished career as composer and conductor. - James Huff

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days