A Sourcebook of Nineteenth-Century American Sacred Music for Brass Instruments
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:7th Aug '97
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This exploration of the parallel development of the brass band movement and religious fervor in late 19th-century America also includes scores for 22 works.
Extensive historical notes, old-time illustrations, and sacred music make this a most interesting and useful reference book.
An enormous amount of music was written and arranged for the popular brasswinds at the time, some of which was sacred music for the church.
Exploring the parallel development of the brass band movement and religious fervor in late 19th-century America, this work includes illustrations from original materials as well as scores for 22 works. While the choral tradition has remained strong in churches, in this earlier period both choral and instrumental forms were equally popular. This study begins with solo cornet parts, used by men like George Ives to lead the singing at revival meetings, and ends with an extensive band arrangement of Pleyel's Hymn. Extensive historical notes, old-time illustrations, and sacred music make this a most interesting and useful reference book.
An enormous amount of music was written and arranged for the popular brasswinds at the time, some of which was sacred music for the church. Changing taste and secularism resulted in the loss of the entire body of written and arranged sacred music for brass, once as cherished in church performance as the choral tradition is today. For scholars and performers interested in the variety of music produced in the United States during the 19th century.
ISBN: 9780313303807
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
144 pages