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Brooke's Triumphal March: Study Score Sargeant Edition
Contributor(s): Seitz, Roland F. (Author), Sargeant, Richard W., Jr. (Editor)
ISBN: 1608740994     ISBN-13: 9781608740994
Publisher: Serenissima Music
OUR PRICE:   $8.50  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: November 2013
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Music | Printed Music - Band & Orchestra
- Music | Printed Music - Opera & Classical Scores
- Music | Individual Composer & Musician
Physical Information: 0.05" H x 8.25" W x 11" (0.18 lbs) 24 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The American bandmaster, composer and publisher Roland Forrest Seitz was born in Shrewsbury, Pennsylvania, a township of Glen Rock, PA. One of eight children, his father died while Roland was still a boy, and he went to work as a printer's apprentice at a young age. Passionate about music, he studied on his own, learning the flute, then euphonium and cornet, and performed in his family band, as well as in the Glen Rock Band. He was only able to start formal music training at age 27 when he enrolled at the Dana's Musical Institute in Warren, OH, graduating from there in 1898. He returned to Glen Rock and became a full-time music teacher of winds, brass and percussion. He played in several bands in the area and became conductor of the Glen Rock Band. Seitz had begun composing works for band early in his career, and founded the Seitz Music Publishing Co. in Glen Rock, through which he published more than 50 of his own marches. As his publishing business expanded he also published works by many other major American band composers, including W. Paris Chambers and Karl King. A number of Seitz's marches were written for specific groups or people, such as the "New York Journal March" (published 1897), and the well-known "University of Pennsylvania Band March," written in 1900. He wrote two marches for Thomas P. Brooke, the conductor of the famous Chicago Marine Band: "Brooke's Chicago Marine Band March" (1901), and "Brooke's Triumphal March" of 1904. Of the two, "Brooke's Triumphal March" has remained the most popular. Richard Sargeant's edition is a welcome addition to the standard band repertoire, with its easy-to-read format which can be used as study or performance score. It is scored for extended winds, with Seitz' original B-flat bass clarinet line notated, plus SATB saxophones, full brass, and snare drum, cymbals and bass drum.