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The Moaning Trombone, Carl D. Bethel arr Sandy Coffin. Brass Band

The Moaning Trombone, Carl D. Bethel arr Sandy Coffin. Brass Band
Produsent: The Music Company
Tilgjengelighet: På lager
Varenummer: SCTMC-001
520 kr
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That Moaning Trombone


This arrangement of That Moaning Trombone = a comic march one step has been crafted by Sandy Coffin to recreate the unique style and sounds of the legendary Harlem Hellfighters band, through close listening of their available archive recordings.


SKU: SCTMC-001
Category: Brass Band Music
Tags: brass band, harlem hellfighters, james reese europe, one-step, sandy coffin


Description


Comic March One-Step


Commissioned by John Wallace, this arrangement of That Moaning Trombone has been crafted by Sandy Coffin through close listening of the available recordings of the Harlem Hellfighters Band.  Sandy had been heavily involved with the Historic Brass Society symposium 2017 held in New York and assisted John with his research on this fascinating band and the style of music it generated.


Eye-witness accounts refer to the 369th band dancing rather than marching. Above all, in modern performance, finding a dancing beat is crucial to a successful performance of this Ragtime march in order to do justice to the great pioneering work of James Reese Europe.  Note the the reckless abandon with which glissando, at that time a novel effect, is used!


Background to the Harlem Hellfighters


The US Army 369th Regiment, made up largely of African-Americans from New York, became known as the Harlem Hellfighters because of the heroic reputation which accrued to them during the actions they engaged in during the First World War in Europe.


James Reese Europe was one of the most active African-American composer/musical directors in the pre-war American music scene.  The legendary Harlem Hellfighters Band, which he assembled in 1917 from African-American and Puerto Rican musicians, came at an important transitional point in musical history.  A new form of music called jazz was emerging from Ragtime and the performing style of Europes band was immersed in the flow of this new direction.


Europes Harlem Hellfighters influenced and inspired everyone who heard them, including the welcoming crowd when they disembarked in France, bowled over by their swinging rendition of La Marseillaise.  Reese Europe became a war hero, commanding a machine-gun unit as well as the band.


On return from War in 1919 the band led a ticker-tape parade along Fifth Avenue in New York and soon made about 30 shellac recordings. These recordings display some of the fingerprints of their performing style: ragging, improvising, muting, wailing, smearing (their word for glissando) and from the evidence of their recordings they took the printed page as a blueprint for individuality.


In May 1919 during the Hellfighters triumphant coast-to-coast tour after their return, James Reese Europe was tragically murdered, bringing to premature close, at the age of 39, the work of a great musical innovator.




That Moaning Trombone


This arrangement of That Moaning Trombone = a comic march one step has been crafted by Sandy Coffin to recreate the unique style and sounds of the legendary Harlem Hellfighters band, through close listening of their available archive recordings.


SKU: SCTMC-001
Category: Brass Band Music
Tags: brass band, harlem hellfighters, james reese europe, one-step, sandy coffin


Description


Comic March One-Step


Commissioned by John Wallace, this arrangement of That Moaning Trombone has been crafted by Sandy Coffin through close listening of the available recordings of the Harlem Hellfighters Band.  Sandy had been heavily involved with the Historic Brass Society symposium 2017 held in New York and assisted John with his research on this fascinating band and the style of music it generated.


Eye-witness accounts refer to the 369th band dancing rather than marching. Above all, in modern performance, finding a dancing beat is crucial to a successful performance of this Ragtime march in order to do justice to the great pioneering work of James Reese Europe.  Note the the reckless abandon with which glissando, at that time a novel effect, is used!


Background to the Harlem Hellfighters


The US Army 369th Regiment, made up largely of African-Americans from New York, became known as the Harlem Hellfighters because of the heroic reputation which accrued to them during the actions they engaged in during the First World War in Europe.


James Reese Europe was one of the most active African-American composer/musical directors in the pre-war American music scene.  The legendary Harlem Hellfighters Band, which he assembled in 1917 from African-American and Puerto Rican musicians, came at an important transitional point in musical history.  A new form of music called jazz was emerging from Ragtime and the performing style of Europes band was immersed in the flow of this new direction.


Europes Harlem Hellfighters influenced and inspired everyone who heard them, including the welcoming crowd when they disembarked in France, bowled over by their swinging rendition of La Marseillaise.  Reese Europe became a war hero, commanding a machine-gun unit as well as the band.


On return from War in 1919 the band led a ticker-tape parade along Fifth Avenue in New York and soon made about 30 shellac recordings. These recordings display some of the fingerprints of their performing style: ragging, improvising, muting, wailing, smearing (their word for glissando) and from the evidence of their recordings they took the printed page as a blueprint for individuality.


In May 1919 during the Hellfighters triumphant coast-to-coast tour after their return, James Reese Europe was tragically murdered, bringing to premature close, at the age of 39, the work of a great musical innovator.



Produktspesifikasjoner
Fabrikat-ForlagThe Music Company
Komponist-ForfatterBethel, Carl D.
ArrangørCoffin, Steve
BesetningBrass Band
Produktspesifikasjoner
Fabrikat-ForlagThe Music Company
Komponist-ForfatterBethel, Carl D.
ArrangørCoffin, Steve
BesetningBrass Band
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