Band Music from the Civil War Era now available on American Memory

From: Elizabeth L. Brown (ebro@loc.gov)
Date: Tue Aug 01 2000 - 09:39:47 EDT

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    Sender: American Memory Fellows <AMFELLOWS@SUN8.LOC.GOV>
    Poster: "Elizabeth L. Brown" <ebro@LOC.GOV>
    Subject: Band Music from the Civil War Era now available on American
                  Memory
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    As you can see it has been a very busy summer for the staff working with
    the American Memory online collections. Here is our latest collection
    release. As usual it is being widely posted. Please accept our apologies
    for any duplicate postings.

    On September 27, 1974, the Music Division of the Library of Congress
    re-created a typical concert of brass band and vocal music from
    mid-nineteenth-century America. That concert has become the
    starting-point for Band Music from the Civil War Era
    <http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cwmhtml/cwmhome.html>, an online collection
    that brings together musical scores, recordings, photographs, and essays
    documenting an important but insufficiently explored part of the
    American musical past. This collection features over 700 musical
    compositions, as well as 8 full-score modern editions and 19 recorded
    examples of brass band music in performance.

    The cornets and saxhorns that made up the all-brass bands of the 1850s
    remained a popular, though decreasingly prominent, feature of American
    wind bands through the nineteenth century. Bands of this kind served in
    the armies of both the North and the South during the Civil War, in the
    field as well as for the entertainment of the officers. Most of the
    sheet music used by these brass bands, which typically existed only in
    "part books" for individual instruments, has long been lost. This
    online collection presents several of the surviving examples of this
    music (both printed and manuscript) from the collections of the Music
    Division of the Library of Congress. Also included are the Manchester
    Cornet Band Books from the Walter Dignam Collection of the Manchester
    Historical Society (Manchester, New Hampshire). The part books are
    presented both in their original order and are also grouped by song
    title. Several of the compositions from these part books are also
    presented in full-score modern editions created especially for this
    online collection.

    In addition to the musical scores and parts, Band Music from the Civil
    War Era includes a gallery of photographs and drawings selected from
    several Library of Congress collections. These illustrations capture the
    nature of life in the Civil War's military bands and help explain the
    variety of the band books in this collection.

    Band Music from the Civil War Era also presents the original recordings
    and notes from the 1974 concert at the Library. In addition, Music
    Division chief Jon Newsom's essay "The American Brass Band Movement: A
    Historical Overview," which synthesizes two works Mr. Newsom wrote in
    1974 in conjunction with the Library's concert, details the rise of
    marching and concert bands during the Civil War era. "About the
    Instruments" complements the essay with a discussion of the band
    instrumentation used in the re-creation concert.

    Band Music from the Civil War Era is an unusual Music Division online
    collection in that it is not based on a permanent collection within the
    division but has instead been created solely for presentation online.
    The Music Division is pleased to present such a wealth of material
    delving into a little-known, yet fascinating period of American musical
    history.

    Please direct any questions about this collection to ndlpcoll@loc.gov



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