Band
histories
and
analysis
Thomas
P
Swatland,
@00027703
BA
(Hons)
Music,
Year
3
University
of
Salford
The
brass
band
movement
(in
its
modern
form
as
we
see
it
today)
saw
its
first
light
of
day
in
the
early
19th
century,
growing
arguably
as
a
part
of
the
industrial
revolution
that
took
place
in
Great
Britain.
The
industrialization
produced
a
large
working
class
population
and
also
saw
the
possibility
of
mass
production,
thus
making
it
possible
for
miners
and
factory
workers
to
get
hold
of
inexpensive
musical
instruments,
and
get
together
off-the-clock
to
make
music.
This
was
happening
all
over
the
country,
and
before
long
(ca.
1840-50)
the
movement
had
grown
to
include
almost
10,000
brass
instrumentalists.
Naturally,
with
that
amount
of
amateur
bands
and
musicians
in
the
country,
some
competition
was
called
for
to
rate
the
best
bands
in
the
country.
The
first
national
brass
band
contest
was
held
at
Belle
Vue,
Manchester
(now
known
as
the
British
Open
held
annually
in
Birmingham)
in
1853.
In
the
early
stages
of
brass
band
contesting
there
werent
any
test-pieces
as
such
written
for
the
medium,
the
bandleaders
would
take
older
works
held
in
high
regard
and
transcribe
them
to
fit
the
brass
band.
These
works
mainly
concerned
operatic
overtures,
excerpts
from
large-scale
symphonies
and
masses.
Around
the
turn
of
the
20th
century,
the
brass
band
movement
had
flourished
furiously,
and
the
contesting
scene
grew
with
it.
In
September
1913,
over
100,000
people
packed
into
the
Crystal
Palace
pleasure
gardens
to
hear
over
100
bands,
whose
members
had
travelled
from
all
parts
of
the
country
to
compete
for
five
trophies
in
the
thirteenth
National
Brass
Band
Festival.1
With
this
growth
in
popularity
came
the
demand
for
composers
to
write
original
music
for
the
brass
band
medium,
and
most
famous
of
these
is
Percy
Fletcher,
whose
Labour
and
Love
of
1913
marked
the
start
of
a
transition
from
contest
selections
to
later
and
more
creative
pieces.2
Fletcher
stuck
to
the
traditional
form
of
the
music
that
preceded
it,
shaping
the
piece
like
an
operatic
selection,
aiming
to
story
the
work
around
the
life
of
a
working
class
man.
One
of
the
most
prolific
composers
(and
of
course
musician!)
was
the
late
Eric
Ball.
His
contributions
to
the
brass
band
movement,
be
it
Salvation
Army
or
contesting
bands,
cannot
be
overlooked.
His
most
profound
work
is
undoubtedly
his
Resurgam
(I
Shall
Rise
Again).
The
piece
was
dedicated
to
his
sister-in-law,
Elsie
Dorsett,
whom
he
nicknamed
Elsa
affectionately.
Elsa
died
of
tuberculosis
at
the
young
age
of
25,
and
the
score
has
the
following
quotation
from
the
Book
of
Wisdom:
The
souls
of
the
righteous
are
in
the
hand
of
God,
And
no
torment
shall
touch
them.
In
the
eyes
of
the
foolish
they
seemed
to
have
died;
Their
departure
was
accounted
to
be
their
hurt,
And
their
journeying
away
from
us
to
be
their
ruin:
But
they
are
in
peace.
1
Herbert,
Trevor,
The
British
Brass
Band
A
Musical
and
Social
History,
(Oxford,
Oxford
University
Press,
2000)
2
Newsome,
Roy,
Brass
Roots,
(Ashgate,
1998)
Band
histories
and
analysis
Thomas
P
Swatland,
@00027703
BA
(Hons)
Music,
Year
3
University
of
Salford
Growing
up
around
this
era
was
Gilbert
Vinter.
Vinter
spent
most
of
his
life
writing
and
performing
light
music,
and
dedicated
his
days
of
composing
for
brass
band
to
experimenting
with
rhythms
and
musical
flavour,
going
against
all
the
norms
that
had
characterized
the
music
up
until
then.
He
added
tuned
percussion
to
the
score,
and
introduced
a
wider
range
of
muted
effects
to
make
the
band
sound
more
colourful.
Organ-like,
homogeneous
scoring
was
no
longer
the
only
way
to
write
for
brass
band.
This
new
approach
to
sound
was
realized
by
arrangers
and
composers
alike.3
Variations
on
a
Ninth
(1964)
is
a
composition
that
clearly
has
its
foundations
in
Vinters
light
music
background,
with
romantic
melodies
and
Caribbean
rhythms
in
abundance.
The
piece,
like
Symphony
of
Marches,
was
met
with
more
than
a
few
raised
eyebrows,
but
it
is
testament
to
the
longer
lasting
appeal
of
Vinters
music
that
it
is
now
an
accepted
addition
to
the
repertoire.
In
this
piece,
many
different
emotions
are
present,
with
the
music
changing
between
optimistic,
wistful,
serious,
idyllic,
whimsical
and
jubilant
throughout
the
variations.
Vinter
further
expands
the
range
of
harmonic
vocabulary
for
the
Brass
Band
in
this
piece,
and
it
becomes
clear
that
this
composer
is
no
flash
in
the
pan,
as
many,
Im
sure,
dismissed
him.
During
the
early
1960s
the
Brass
Band
repertoire
was
widely
conceived
as
being
very
stagnant
with
most
of
a
Brass
Bands
library
being
made
up
of
original
works
from
the
earlier
part
of
the
twentieth
century,
and
orchestral
arrangements.
Music
for
contests
was
coming
mostly
from
the
pen
of
Frank
Wright
and
others
like
him
in
the
form
of
orchestral
arrangements
(Berlioz
was
among
the
most
popular),
as
well
as
new
music
by
Eric
Ball
(the
only
real
forward
thinking
composer
in
the
movement).
Older
original
works
were
also
used.
However,
original
music
for
Brass
Band,
despite
the
work
of
Eric
Ball
and
suchlike,
was
still
some
eighty
or
ninety
years
behind
mainstream
classical
music
harmonically,
rhythmically,
and
stylistically
speaking
and
had
fallen
into
a
bit
of
a
rut.
Gilbert
Vinters
orchestral,
military,
wind
band
and
light
music
experience,
meant
that
not
only
did
he
have
a
vast
knowledge
of
texture
and
tone
colour,
but
he
also
had
a
good
understanding
for
what
the
public
would
want
to
hear.
However,
in
the
same
motion,
he
also
introduced
daring
new
harmonies,
rhythms
and
styles
into
Brass
Band
music,
thus
gaining
attention
as
a
pioneer.
Vinter
was
also
the
first
composer
to
really
use
mutes
to
alter
the
sound,
tone
and
texture
of
brass
instruments.
Reminiscent
of
Gilbert
Vinter,
both
in
the
regularity
of
the
appearance
of
new
works
and
in
the
way
each
one
seems
to
develop
from
its
predecessor,
Wilby
leads
band
constantly
into
new
musical
territories.
Technical
demands
are
usually
very
high
and
he
often
injects
spatial
elements
into
the
music,
demanding
that
players
move
to
different
positions
on
the
stage.
In
Dove
Descending
a
recording
of
a
blackbird
singing
is
required
for
the
work.
He
describes
his
Revelation
as
a
Symphony
for
Double
Brass
and
calls
for
a
special
seating
formation.4
3
Herbert,
Trevor,
The
British
Brass
Band
A
Musical
and
Social
History,
(Oxford,
Oxford
University
Press,
2000)
4
Newsome,
Roy,
The
Modern
British
Brass
Band:
from
the
1930s
to
the
new
millennium,
(Ashgate,
2006)
Band
histories
and
analysis
Thomas
P
Swatland,
@00027703
BA
(Hons)
Music,
Year
3
University
of
Salford
Philip
Wilby
has
embraced
a
view
of
the
musical
past
of
the
band
movement
with
perhaps
the
greatest
sense
of
purpose.
He
has
strong
convictions
about
the
place
and
purpose
of
the
composer.5
Philip
Wilby
was
born
in
Pontefract,
England
in
1949.
His
interest
in
composition
came
to
life
while
attending
extra-curricular
composition
classes
led
by
Herbert
Howells,
while
playing
violin
in
the
National
Youth
Orchestra
of
Great
Britain.
During
his
years
at
Keble
College,
Oxford,
he
developed
a
serious
commitment
to
composition,
and
gained
a
B
Mus
in
1971.
His
music
writing
continued
even
while
working
as
a
professional
violinist
(first
at
Covent
Garden
and
later
with
the
City
of
Birmingham
Symphony
Orchestra).
In
1972
Wilby
returned
to
Yorkshire,
and
took
up
the
position
as
Principal
Lecturer
of
Composition
at
the
University
of
Leeds.
In
recent
years,
Wilby
has
established
a
very
significant
reputation
in
the
field
of
brass
band
and
wind
band
music.
In
1990
he
received
his
first
commission
for
brass
band,
the
result
being
The
New
Jerusalem
for
the
National
Youth
Brass
Band.
The
piece
was
an
instant
success,
and
led
to
further
commissions.
Wilby
is
probably
most
famous
for
his
involvement
of
themes
and
quotes
from
works
by
the
old
masters
like
Mozart,
Paganini,
Verdi,
Purcell
and
Vivaldi,
thus
providing
nostalgia
and
familiarity
while
introducing
new
musical
ideas
and
challenging
lines
for
the
players.
One
example
of
this
comes
from
his
Paganini
Variations,
referring
to
Caprice
no.
24
by
the
great
violin
soloist
and
virtuoso
Niccolo
Paganini.
# % # % # % # % " " " " ! " $ " "&" " " ' $ "% "(" " " " $ " "&" " " "# ) " $ " "&" " " ' $ "% "(" " " " $ " "&" " " "# )
Paganini
Variations
was
the
result
of
a
commission
by
the
BBC
for
their
Band
of
the
Year
1991,
the
Grimethorpe
Colliery
Band.
In
the
opening
statement,
a
sense
of
excitement
is
provided
from
the
very
first
bar.
His
use
of
triplets
and
legatos
going
in
to
straight
quavers
in
bar
2
captures
the
listeners
interest
from
the
word
go.
Also,
the
first
bar
and
the
first
quaver
of
the
second
bar
are
all
in
unison,
before
branching
out
more
and
more
before
ending
on
a
C7
chord
(in
Bb
pitch).
Con brio q = 138 % % % % % ! ! 3% % % % % $$($ $ $ &$'$ $($ $ $ $ &, ) * + ## $ , Solo Cornet " ! #&$ $ $'$ $ $
+ p 3 3 3 % $ $ $ 'ff % % % $ % 3
! % % % % % $$($ $ $ &$ / 1st Cornet " ! #&$ $ $'$ $ $ )# .
p 3 3 3 % % % % ff % ! #&3% $ $'$ $ $ $$($ $ $ &$ $ $ $ '$ # . $ $% % % % /
2nd Cornet " ! ) p 3 3 3
% % % % ff %% %% % ! #&3% $ $'$ $ $ $$($ $ $ &$ $ $ $&$ # . $ / 3rd Cornet " ! "
)
p
3 3 3
%- % 3 % % 3 % % % $$ #&&$ $&'$$&$ $&&$ $&'$$&$&'$$&$ $ $ $ # %) % % % %$ $ $ %%
p
3 3
/ / /
ff
Here
we
see
the
tonality
Wilbys
going
with.
In
the
duet
in
bar
3
the
cornets
move
chromatically
a
minor
3rd
apart.
The
sequence
is
repeated
from
bar
5,
only
a
tone
up
and
this
time
the
solo
cornets
are
a
perfect
4th
apart.
ff
5
Herbert,
Trevor,
The
British
Brass
Band
A
Musical
and
Social
History,
(Oxford,
Oxford
University
Press,
2000)
Band
histories
and
analysis
Thomas
P
Swatland,
@00027703
BA
(Hons)
Music,
Year
3
University
of
Salford
The
first
taste
of
the
Paganini
theme
comes
at
bar
15,
then
lower
brass
(baritones,
euphoniums
and
basses)
play
the
following:
1st Baritone
" ! # ! $ # ! (" $
% % % % %
2nd Baritone
Euphonium
! + *# " Bass in Bb ! + " *" #
Bass in Eb
! *"+ #
' " & ' " & ' " & ' " & ' " &
" & " & " & " & " &
(" & (" & (" & " & " &
" & " & " & " & " &
" & " & " & " & " &
) ) ) () () ()
Again,
the
theme
is
unison
but
followed
by
a
dense
chord
involving
Eb,
G
and
A
(Bb
pitch).
This
is
characteristic
of
Wilbys
music,
and
aids
the
music
in
keeping
a
high
intensity
throughout
his
pieces.
The
main
theme
is
introduced
for
the
first
time
fully
as
a
euphonium
solo
in
bar
17.
Having
just
the
one
player
perform
the
melody,
the
accompaniment
stays
mostly
silent.
After
the
first
8
bars
Wilby
uses
stabbing
notions
in
the
trombone
and
bass
sections.
The
theme
is
altered
into
15
variations,
going
through
all
sorts
of
colours
with
muted
effects
and
chord
progressions,
creating
white
hot
intensity
and
testing
the
players
on
all
levels.
This
was
Wilbys
first
test
piece,
so
although
he
utilizes
percussion
gear
like
tubular
bells,
tom
toms
and
tambourine,
he
hasnt
quite
set
off
down
the
path
of
exploration
in
the
ways
of
percussion
just
yet.
In
1993
Philip
Wilby
wrote
a
centenary
tribute
to
Verdis
last
opera
Falstaff.
The
piece
was
given
the
title
Masquerade,
and
was
commissioned
for
the
1993
British
Open
Brass
Band
Championships.
The
basis
for
the
piece
is
taken
from
and
inspired
by
the
final
scene
of
Verdis
opera,
when
Falstaff
has
been
caught
lying.
The
composer
writes
in
the
score:
Falstaff
has
been
caught
in
a
web
of
his
own
lies
by
the
ladies
of
the
town,
who
propose
to
teach
him
a
lesson.
The
story
opens
at
night
in
Windsor
Great
Park.
The
plotters,
variously
disguised
in
Halloween
fashion,
assemble
in
the
park
to
await
Falstaffs
arrival
(musicologists
will
perhaps
note
a
rare
use
of
large
bottle
in
F
being
used
during
this
scene
of
suppressed
alcoholic
revelry!)
In
this
test
piece
he
has
interwoven
the
music
of
Verdi,
and
the
plot
of
Shakespeares
play
to
pay
homage
to
the
tradition
of
standard
operatic
brass
band
repertoire.
Bear
in
mind
this
operatic
tribute
doesnt
necessarily
mean
Wilby
doesnt
engage
in
the
use
of
percussion
and
chords
and
rhythms
that
are
slightly
askew!
Band
histories
and
analysis
Thomas
P
Swatland,
@00027703
BA
(Hons)
Music,
Year
3
University
of
Salford
The
opening
from
Masquerade
is
quite
similar
to
the
one
of
Paganini
Variations:
Soprano Cornet in Eb
! Cornet in Bb # " "
! ! #"
Presto Leggiero q.=160
$ $
The
Soprano
cornet
and
3
of
the
4
solo
cornets
play
the
second
bar,
the
solo
cornets
Already
here
Philip
Wilby
starts
experimenting
with
different
sounds
and
possibilities,
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' & & (& & & )& & ' ' (& & ' %& & & (& & (& & & & & & + % % ,# ' & ' ' ' ' ' ' * '* '* f* & &)* pp ' ' ' ' ' mute (& & ' ' ( ' ' ' ' -& & + & & & (& & & (& (& (& & & %&&((&&-&&)-&&((&&-&&((&&--&& ))&&--&&)&&-(&&-- -& (((& -&(&-& )&& % % , # , # & & & &&( && && ,# pp ' ' ' ' ' ' *
mute f
playing
a
crunching
chromatic
descending
line
of
triplets
joined
by
the
top
solo
cornet
in
bar
3.
introducing
a
bottle
to
the
percussion
parts.
Again
he
makes
use
of
the
tambourine,
timpani
and
side
drum,
and
here
he
has
also
written
a
short
solo
for
triangle!
Revelation
was
a
test
piece
that
certainly
gained
instant
success.
Written
in
1995,
it
marked
the
tercentenary
of
the
death
of
Henry
Purcell,
and
was
written
as
a
tribute
to
his
music
and
the
spirit
of
his
age.
The
piece
is
split
up
into
5
major
sections:
1
Prologue
2
Variations
on
a
ground
bass
I
3
Fugue
4
Variations
on
a
ground
bass
II
5
Epilogue
and
Resurrection
The
score
uses
many
features
of
the
Concerto
Grosso
from
the
baroque
era,
and
the
composer
has
split
up
the
band
in
two
equal
choirs.
Revelation
quotes
freely
from
Purcells
own
piece
Three
Parts
on
a
Ground
in
which
he
has
composed
a
brilliant
sequence
of
variations
over
a
repeating
six-note
bass
figure.
The
original
motif
can
be
heard
clearly
beneath
the
duet
for
Cornet
and
Soprano
at
the
beginning
of
the
second
section:
!% # " $!
p
$! %
$! %
$! %
$! %
$! %
' ( & %
As
the
title
suggests
there
is
a
religious
dimension
to
the
piece,
and
lines
by
the
17th
century
poet
John
Donne
preface.
His
Holy
Sonnet
paraphrases
the
Book
of
Revelation
in
which
the
dead
are
raised
at
the
sounds
of
the
last
trumpet.
At
the
round
Earths
imagined
corners,
blow
your
trumpets,
angels,
and
arise,
arise
from
death,
you
numberless
infinities
Of
souls,
and
to
your
scattered
bodies
go.
All
whom
the
flood
did,
and
fire
shall
oerthrow
All
whom
war,
dearth,
age,
agues,
tyrannies,
Despair,
law,
chance
hath
slain,
and
you
whose
eyes
Shall
Behold
God,
and
never
taste
deaths
woe.
John
Donne
After
Revelation
Ch.
11
v.15
Band
histories
and
analysis
Thomas
P
Swatland,
@00027703
BA
(Hons)
Music,
Year
3
University
of
Salford
In
Revelation,
Wilby
starts
to
expand
the
use
of
percussion.
He
writes
for
two
bass
drums,
two
triangles,
tam-tam
and
vibraphone,
as
well
as
the
standard
cymbals,
snare
drum
and
timpani.
Quite
early
in
the
piece
Wilby
specifies
that
the
suspended
cymbal
should
be
played
with
wire
brushes.
Here,
as
with
Paganini
Variations
and
Masquerade,
he
makes
use
of
the
quick
rhythms
combined
with
close,
dissonant
chords.
An
example
is
a
semiquaver
passage
between
cornets
1,
2,
3
and
4:
! ! Cornet 1 # " $
Cornet 2
$ $ $ $
! #" $ ! #" $
pp
% &% % % % % % % % &% % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % ' % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % ' % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % ' % % % &% % % % % % % % &% % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % '
mp mp mp mp
pp
Cornet 3
! Cornet 4 # " $ "
pp
pp
So,
as
we
see,
Philip
Wilby
has
made
an
enormous
contribution
to
the
ever-expanding
world
of
brass
band
composition,
especially
with
regards
to
test
pieces.
Although
Gilbert
Vinter
gets
much
of
the
credit
(and
rightly
so!)
for
the
evolution
of
tonality
and
use
of
percussion
in
the
brass
band
movement,
Philip
Wilby
has
followed
in
his
footsteps.
Many
musicians
will
agree
that
due
to
the
nature
of
the
brass
band
and
the
instruments
involved,
the
sound
colour
and
texture
can
often
come
across
as
being
monotonous
and
boring.
But
by
pushing
boundaries
and
crossing
lines,
Philip
Wilby
ensures
that
there
is
always
something
new
and
exciting
about
his
music,
and
that
the
sound
of
a
brass
band
is
far
from
as
monotonous
as
some
people
claim.
Music
is
constantly
evolving,
and
one
can
only
but
wait
to
see
where
it
will
next
take
us.
Band
histories
and
analysis
Thomas
P
Swatland,
@00027703
BA
(Hons)
Music,
Year
3
University
of
Salford
APPENDIX
Major
works
for
Brass
Band
by
Philip
Wilby
1991
1992
1993
1995
1999
2006
2010
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bainbridge,
C.
(1980)
Brass
Triumphant,
Frederick
Muller
Ltd.
Herbert,
T.
(ed.)
(2000)
British
Brass
Band
A
Musical
and
Social
History,
The,
Oxford
University
Press
Herbert,
T.
(ed.)
(1991)
Popular
Music
in
Britain
Bands,
Oxford
University
Press
Newsome,
R.
(1992)
Beyond
the
Bandstand,
Caron
Publications
Taylor,
A.
(1979)
Brass
Bands,
Granada
Publishing
Ltd.
Paganini
Variations
Lowry
Sketchbook
Masquerade
Revelation
BBC
Band
of
the
Year
commission
National
Finals
commission
British
Open
Championships
commission
British
Open
Championships
commission
British
Open
Championships
commission
British
Open
Championships
commission
For
Black
Dyke
Band
at
the
2010
EBBC
Dove
Descending
Vienna
Nights
Red
Priest