CHAPTER 7 | BAND MUSIC AFTER THE CIVIL WAR 169
date: 1897
performers: The U.S. Marine Band
genre: march
meter: duple
form: long march
Listening Guide 7.1 The Stars and Stripes Forever JOHN PHILIP SOUSA
timing section comments
0:00 introduction Four-bar introduction: full band playing a single melodic line in octaves, then
dividing into harmony. Syncopation in bar 2 foreshadows later syncopation
0:03 A Sprightly 16-bar melody in trumpets, doubled in high woodwinds; second half
( bars 9–16) alternates soft and loud in 2-bar units.
0:17 A Literal repeat of A.
0:31 B New 16-bar melody stated by trumpets and trombones in octaves. Syncopation in
bar 5.
0:46 B Repeat of B adds contrasting soft and loud dynamics in 4-bar units.
1:00 trio
C
Subdominant key. Lyrical 32-bar melody. Syncopation at bar 13.
1:29 D Break strain (24 bars): New texture of alternating low- and high-register
instruments, agitated harmony, active rhythms.
1:51 C Lyrical melody combined with a new countermelody in piccolos suggesting
Revolutionary-era fi fes.
2:19 D Repeat of break strain.
2:41 C Lyrical melody combined with piccolo countermelody and new low-register
countermelody in trombones.
WHAT TO LISTEN FOR
- multiple strains, each melodically distinct
and each repeated - key change at trio
- contrasting texture at break strain
- addition of countermelodies (piccolo, then
trombones) at repetitions of trio strain
CD 1.22
Listen & Refl ect
- How does Sousa make use of the resources of the wind band; in other words, what makes
this music particularly well suited to the wind band? - Conversely, what are some features of this music that might survive if it were played by
any of the other instrumental combinations mentioned in the text in relation to Sousa’s
march El Capitan? - In other words, what features of this music are entirely independent of the sound of the
wind band?
172028_07_162-182_r3_ko.indd 169 23/01/13 10:19 AM