The Yankee Brass Band
In 1985, Paul Maybery of St. Paul, Minnesota, Mark Elrod of Germantown, Maryland, and a small host of brass players from around the country, gathered at the Hotel Coolidge in White River, Junction. Vt., and the first Yankee Brass Band performed in the Upper Valley of Vermont/New Hampshire. What was created was an historically accurate recreation of an American Brass Band circa 18401870 performing music of the period in an appropriate style and on the original instruments. The musicians are clothed in uniforms which are reproductions of firemens shirts (red flannel shirts and red kepis), which was common attire for bands of the era.
In 1977, the Minnesota Historical Society invited Maybery and his quintet to play period music at its annual meeting. While delving into the historical collections of Minnesota, Maybery became hooked on the music and instruments of the 19th century. His first project was to reconstruct the music of Russell Mungers Great Western Band of St. Paul.
Using old posters and band programs which gave him clues to titles of songs, Maybery went on a search for the original musical scores of the 1850s and 60s. David Briggs, an old college band friend, and one of the directors of the River City Arts Forum of Hartford, Vermont, provided Maybery with a contact in the East.
In Manchester, New Hampshire, Maybery discovered the Dignam collection of music where he found many of the pieces for which he had been searching. Walter Dignam was the leader of the famed Manchester Cornet Band, which had the distinction of performing for President Franklin Pierce. Due to the costliness of printed material in the 19th century, music was copied by hand and passed on from band to band. This enabled Maybery to find surviving copies of music in the Dignam collection and several pieces common to both the Great Western Band and the Manchester Cornet Band.
Not only are the largest collections of period music located here in New England, but many local town bands still have them in their libraries. The Nevers Band of Concord (N.H.) still uses its ancestors (the 2nd N.H. Regiments Band) music books.
Today, each July, the Friends of the Yankee Brass, Inc., bring musicians together from all over the country to perform in the Yankee Brass Band. They come as true enthusiasts of the old time band, eager for a chance to play on the 19th century instruments provided by Mark Elrod and Jon Hall. The earliest instrument is a bass drum from approximately 1835, owned by Jon Hall, of Portland, Maine.
For those who are new to the band, it takes about two days to make the musical transition back to the 1800s. Some of the instruments play much like modern ones, but others require some adjustments. A lot of these musicians dont know what they are getting into, says Paul Maybery. They are playing 140-year old instruments that dont transcribe well for modern music. Once they hear it, and play it, though, they are hooked. Its contagious!
The modern musicians do have to adapt to the valve action on the antique instruments. Todays horns, such as trumpets or cornets, use piston valvesa piston moves up and down to shorten or lengthen the tube of the brass instrument, altering the pitch. Some of the old instruments have valves using a rotary actionthe valves revolve rather than plunge to alter the length of the tube.
Aside from these differences, the instruments have some modern names: tuba, B-flat and E-flat cornets, alto horn, tenor horn, and baritone horn. But, there are two instruments in the band which have become extinct in the modern erathe keyed bugle and the ophicleide.
Several members of the current Yankee Brass Band were involved in the production of the PBS Civil War series, and Maybery assisted in the arrangement of the historic music. Maybery also appeared as guest conductor at the Fords Theatre Commemorative Concert on the anniversary of Lincolns assassination. Some historic instruments of this period were seen in the Civil War film Glory.
The musicians in the Yankee Brass Band (engineers, doctors, teachers, consultants, professional musicians and other enthusiastslike those of the bands of the last century), come from all walks of life. come from around the United States to share a common love and respect for the music of the early brass bands. Many of them direct or perform with similar bands in their own home towns.
The integrated expertise of these musicians produces one of northern New Englands most entertaining and informative musical events. With its collection of antique instruments and authentic music scores, the Yankee Brass Band gives the audience an auditory living-history experience they will long remember. The quicksteps, gallops, polkas, mazurkas, schottisches and waltzes, and the many overtures and medleys popular in the mid-19th century make up the program of the typical brass band concert of yesteryear.
Through their participation, the members of the Friends of the Yankee Brass, Inc., the musicians of the Yankee Brass Band, and director Paul Maybery, encourage serious scholarship and research. Their goals are to create a hightened awareness of the traditions of historic American band music, instruments, celebrated personalities, brass band literature, and styles of historic performance practice. These goals are accomplished through scholarly research and application in presentations of an educational nature.
The Yankee Brass Band performs in New England during the last full week of July every year. Before they begin their concert tour, they spend two and one-half days at Norwich University, in Northfield, Vermont. There they gather for intensive rehearsal... each one is an outstanding musician in his/her own right, but when they combine... the result is a high-caliber professional brass band.
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