Searching for Brass Band Music? Visit the Brass Band Music Shop
We've found 1000 matches for your search

Results

  • £104.99

    Fanatic Winds - Thomas Doss

    Fanatic Winds is a lively concert work with a youthful character. With it's freshness and fast tempo this piece is an ideal work to open any concert. The title reflects the healthy fanaticism that musicians must have to go to rehearsals every week after work or school dedicating many hours to their band. Following much hard work this fanaticism is always rewarded by the joy of performing and the audience's applause during a concert. Along with a passion for playing, the positive reactions of the audience provide the necessary encouragement to keep the players coming back for rehearsals time and time again.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £84.99

    The Ecstasy of Gold - Ennio Morricone

    The Ecstasy of Gold is the famous theme from the movie The Good, The Bad and The Ugly that leads up to and is heard during the movie's climax, the showdown! The complete soundtrack to The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was released in 1966 and sold millions of copies. Since 1983, heavy-metal band Metallica have been opening concerts with Morricone's dramatic and exciting song, The Ecstasy of Gold. Lorenzo Bocci has created an equally exciting arrangement for concert band. Optional parts for electric guitar, piano, soprano (vocal), and choir are not listed in the score but are also available.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £137.99

    An English Sea Song Suite - Philip Sparke

    The four tunes used in this suite have been made universally popular in Sir Henry Wood?s Fantasia on British Sea Songs, which is an ever-present ingredient in The Last Night of the Proms.He introduced this colourful suite into the Proms in 1905,to celebrate the centenary of Nelson?s brilliant victory at Trafalgar, when ?Britannia? really did ?rule the waves?. Bring the excitement of The Last Night of The Proms to any concert with this stirring new edition.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £104.99

    Prelude and Polonaise - Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov

    Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908) composed his opera The Night before Christmas in 1894-95. The premiere took place on December 10 1895 in St. Petersburg. The libretto to the opera came from Rimsky-Korsakov himself and is based on a tale by Nikolai Gogol, which some years earlier had already served as operatic material for Pjotr Tchaikovsky. The opera tells the story of Vakula, the blacksmith of a small Ukranian village. He is madly in love with Oxana who demands - as proof of his love - a most unusual Christmas present: the magnificent slippers of the Empress. Knowing full well that, in normal circumstances, he would never be able to fulfil Oxana's wish, Vakula seekssupernatural assistance and finds it in the shape of the devil, who comes up with a ploy to help him. The devil carries him on his back to St. Petersburg, where during a lavish reception at court Vakula finds an opportunity to present his request to the empress. The Empress actually agrees to Vakula's wish and hands over her slippers to him. Thereupon he returns to his own village. Here, in the meantime, he had been given up for dead, and Oxana had been plunged into great sorrow as she had come to realise that she also truly loved Vakula. In the end, however, all misunderstandings are resolved and all adversities overcome: Oxana receives her extravagant present, the lovers are united, and the church bells call the villagers to the Christmas service.The vibrant Polonaise is played in the 3rd act of the opera at the entrance of the Empress, whose appearance is anticipated in the prelude by the fanfare motives. The music paints a vivid picture of the party atmosphere and the marvellous dcor at the imperial court of St. Petersburg, which Rimsky-Korsakov conjures up in his opera and which can also be played outside of the Advent and Christmas season, for example as an opening piece to any festive concert.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £84.99

    Englishman in New York - Sting

    Sting's song about an Englishman who lives in New York but still sees himself as an outsider became a huge hit for the singer-songwriter and has gone on to be a true classic. The central message 'Be yourself, no matter what they say' is as timeless and universal as the melody of the song, which in Roland Kernen's wind band arrangement is sure to delight your audience.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £104.99

    Triumphal March - Franco Cesarini

    The Gran Finale from the second act of Verdi's famous opera Aida, composed in 1869, is a complex part of the drama as in one single scene many different characters, allwith contrasting emotions, appear onstage at the same time. The scene opens in Ancient Egypt when the Egyptian general Radames and his troops, which have just beaten Ethiopia, come marching in. The Egyptians sing a celebration song for him and there is a sound of trumpets playing the triumphal march to receive the hero. The well-known triumphal march, transcribed in this edition for concert band by Franco Cesarini, closely follows Verdi's original score and will bring any concert to a dramatic close.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £109.99

    Toward The Bright Future - Naoya Wada

    Naoya Wada's style is characterised by a positive and optimistic undertone. This is also the case in this composition, with the expressive title Towards the Bright Future. The opening fanfare is played by the brass and immediately provides the basis for the themes in a composition where melodious passages alternate with blaring brass and several flashing changes of time. This work was composed on commission to the Kokura Nishi High School Band for its 110th anniversary. The composer dedicated it to Hirofumi Matsumoto, the school''s director.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

     PDF View Music

  • £59.95

    Caught in the Web - Lesley Vincent

    I am always inspired to write music by a good storyline so turning to Shakespeare's plays I was particularly caught by his imagery of the spider and the web. There is always some web of intrigue in Shakespeare's plots, and...

    Estimated dispatch 5-7 days
  • £59.95

    Weird Sisters - Richard Haydn Taylor

    Weird Sisters 'something wicked this way comes' celebrates the 400th anniversary of William Shakespeare's death and takes its inspiration from Macbeth: Act 4, scene 1. The three witches (Weird Sisters) are stirring the bubbling cauldron, ready for Macbeth's arrival. The...

    Estimated dispatch 5-7 days
  • £95.00

    The Pageant of London - Frank Bridge

    Frank Bridge was one of the finest English composers of the first half of the 20th century. The Pageant of London is his only work for wind band, comprising of two marches, one scored from Bridge's best known organ piece and including the chimes of Big Ben, plus three short renaissance pastiche items, one arranged from Playford (later used by Peter Warlock in Capriol Suite). The music is tuneful, approachable and, in the words of wind band 'legend' Timothy Reynish makes a fine alternative to Holst's two suites, which were composed around the same time. Reynish has introduced this work to concert bands right across the world. It has been performed in USA and the Far East, recorded by the celebrated Kosei Wind Orchestra of Japan and also by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales in the Chandos edition of Bridge Orchestral Music.

    In stock: Estimated delivery 1-3 days