Marching Band History

Words: 1535
Pages: 7

This paper briefly overviews five different wonderments that reside within the monumental realms and musical spheres that have rooted into our complex society. After careful examination of the topics such as the existence of marching band, the evolution of bands through time, the overall most influential composer throughout the art’s history, the overall benefits you receive from being in the band, and finally the most popular genre of music and overall, why? Throughout the various topics we will describing each of them thoroughly simultaneously within the text keeping the description of each given topic to minimization in the overall interests of the paper.
Keywords: marching band, music, band, influential, wonderments, art
…show more content…
“As musicians became less and less important in directing the movement of troops on the battlefield, the bands moved into increasingly ceremonial roles,” (New World Encyclopedia,2014). With the origins of marching band subject to our conscious minds we turn our eyes to the individual who popularized and pioneered the framework for the general rules a marching band follows throughout the ensemble’s performance. “John Philip Sousa, who headed the U.S. Marine Band from 1880 until 1892,”(New World Encyclopedia,2014). As the leader of band for the ages, Sousa toured his band across the country and worldwide throughout his career with Marine Band. Leaving his distinguished legacy on the new-founded art yet, in current time marching band has conformed to the shape our society which has surrounded itself around the sport football. Bands have taken performances at halftimes between these contests for advantages making them wildly popular. For example the beginning of such practice started when “The first halftime show performed by a marching band at a football game was the University of Illinois Marching Illini in 1907,” (New World Encyclopedia,2014). The idea was so contagious that colleges and high schools nation-wide now follow suit with their own bands and their own halftime …show more content…
Mastering the organ and violin at a young age, Bach had obtained quite the experience in and around the instruments he had mastered and a greater knowledge of music generally from his studies. “In 1717, Bach moved on to another post, this time as Kapellmeister at the court of Prince Leopold in Cöthen,”(Sherrane, R, (n.d.)). Working from this position, Bach composed “a great deal of instrumental music: hundreds of pieces for solo keyboard, orchestral dance suites, trio sonatas for various instruments, and concertos for various instruments and orchestra,”(Sherrane, R, (n.d.)). Within these works, they included “for solo instruments, the six Suites for violoncello and the Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin,”(Sherrane, R, (n.d.)). In addition to these works they also included “the six concerti grossi composed for the Duke of Brandenburg in 1721, and the Brandenburg Concerto no. 3 exemplifies the style of the concerto grosso,”(Sherrane, R, (n.d.)). These examples are just a few works he composed within his lifetime, Bach wrote countless of works for his favorite instrument as well, the Organ. “One such work is the tremendous Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor,”(Sherrane, R, (n.d.)). Bach’s works overall have influenced and inspired any composer in some form that have wrote after him if they have any