Sousa and Pryor Bands: Original Recordings
Liner Notes   Cat. No. 80282     Release Date: 1977-01-01

The Sousa and Pryor Bands
by James R. Smart

From the Civil War to the 1920s band concerts formed one of the most important aspects of musical life in the United States. While very few communities could afford an orchestra, many could afford a band. In addition to these civic groups there were employee bands sponsored by business, police bands, school and military bands, and others. Foremost were the large privately run professional bands, made up of the finest players and directed by leaders of national and even international fame. These organizations obtained the most lucrative engagements in large resort parks and at least once a year undertook long city-to-city tours of one-night stands. By 1900 these fine ensembles were attracting immense audiences and through their skilled playing were setting new performance standards.

During this period bands achieved great popularity chiefly because they offered one of the few ways for the general public to hear large instrumental ensembles. With limited transportation, few people could journey to large cities to attend music performances. There was no radio and no sound movies, and the phonograph industry was in its infancy. A band of brass and woodwind instruments plus a variety of percussion could ably fill the gap. These instruments are more easily transported than the more fragile string instruments of a symphony orchestra, are capable of the large volume of sound necessary for outdoor performance, and are adaptable to all sorts of musical expression.

Although the band had its roots in the military – even today most school bands wear military like uniforms – the bands’ repertoire during their golden age went far beyond the march, quickstep, and other martial music. The bands played arrangements of popular songs of the day (frequently featuring a solo cornet), all kinds of dance music from the waltz to the ragtime cakewalk, medleys of opera and operetta tunes, descriptive and novelty pieces, and transcriptions from the standard orchestral literature. Of necessity bands built up large libraries of music. The professional bands were proud of their special arrangements, often unpublished, which were theirs exclusively (the huge library of the Sousa Band, for instance contained hundreds of special arrangements by Sousa or members of the band, and most were never published). In short, the band was ready to play any type of music the public wanted to hear. Besides giving concerts, bands played for civic functions, fairs and expositions, and, of course, parades. The professional bands, however, avoided this last duty, and the Sousa Band is believed to have marched on only about seven occasions during its forty-year history.

[Excerpt from the liner notes]


Various Artists

Sousa and Pryor Bands: Original Recordings

MP3/320 $14.00
FLAC $14.00
WAV $14.00
Federal March
John Philip Sousa
Buy
Creole Belles
J. Bodewalt Lampe
Buy
At a Georgia Camp Meeting
Mills
Buy
The Patriot
A. Pryor
Buy
Pasuinade
Gottschalk
Buy
Glory of the Yankee Navy
John Phillip Sousa
Buy
Trombone Sneeze
A. Pryor
Buy
A Musical Joke on "Bedelia"
Bellstedt
Buy
The Ben-Hur Chariot Race March
Paull
Buy
General Pershing March
Vandersloot
Buy
General Mixup, U.S.A.
Buy
March Sannon
arr. Alvin [?] Willis
Buy
Battleship Connecticut March
James E. Fulton
Buy
Alagazam March
Holzman
Buy
Yankee Shuffle
Moreland
Buy
The Teddy Bear's Picnic
Bratton
Buy
Down the Field March
Friedman
Buy
Falcon March
W. Paris Chambers
Buy
Repasz Band March
Sweeley
Buy