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  • £19.95

    ELEPHANT, The (Brass Band Set)

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £29.95

    THE ELEPHANT - Saint-Saens arr. Peter Graham

    From Carnival of the Animals, thisarrangement features the tuba section.

    In stock: Estimated dispatch 1-3 days

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  • £19.95

    ELEPHANT, The (Brass Band Set) - J. Ord Hume

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £68.00

    Baby Elephant Walk - Henry Mancini

    Estimated dispatch 5-14 working days
  • £40.00

    Elephant Patrol - Harper, P

    A real feel-good concert item to put a smile on your audience's faces. The music is in the style of a patrol, starting quietly in the distance, reaching its peak in the middle and then fading to close and depicts a majestic line of elephants passing by. Featuring the bass section!Check out Cory Band's video3rd section +Duration 4 mins

    In stock: Estimated dispatch 1-3 days

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  • £19.95

    Elephant, The (Brass Band - Score and Parts)

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £29.50

    Punchinellie - William Rimmer - Jonathan Bates

    Kick start your programme with music from the Brass Band march kingaAof sorts! The opening bars of 'Punchinello" are amongst the most famous written in any march, however what follows them in this arrangement will certainly raise a few eyebrows and chuckles from your audience. The brilliance of William Rimmer descends into the comedy tune of the famous elephant (& your trombonists are let loose with the trunk calls!). An awesome, tongue in cheek arrangement that would suit both concerts & entertainments contests (watch out for the odd weasel popping up too!).

    In stock: Estimated dispatch 1-3 days
  • £10.00

    Endurance

    DescriptionMen wanted for hazardous journey.Small wages, bitter cold,long months of complete darkness,constant danger, safe return doubtful.Honour and recognition in case of success.- Ernest Shackleton, 4 Burlington StreetEndurance takes its title from the ship used by Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition in 1914-15. After many months of fundraising (and reputedly running the above advert in The Times) the Endurance set sail from Plymouth on 6 August 1914. Whilst at sea news of the outbreak of war led Shackleton to put his ship and crew at the disposal of the Admiralty, but their services were not required and they were encouraged to continue. On October 26 1914 they left Grytviken on South Georgia for the Antarctic continent, hoping to find the pack ice shrinking in the Antarctic spring. Two days later, however, they encountered unseasonable ice which slowed their progress considerably. On 15 January 1915, when Endurance was only 200 miles from her intended landfall at Vahsel Bay, the ship became beset by ice which had been compressed against the land to the south by gale force winds. Trapped in the ice of the Weddell Sea, the ship spent the Antarctic winter driven by the weather further from her intended destination until, on 21 November 1915 Endurance broke up forcing the crew to abandon ship and set up camp on the ice at a site they named "Patience Camp".The crew spent several weeks on the ice. As the southern spring started to reduce the extent of the ice shelf they took to their three lifeboats, sailing across the open ocean to reach the desolate and uninhabited Elephant Island. There they used two of the boats to build a makeshift shelter while Shackleton and five others took the largest boat, an open lifeboat named the 'James Caird' and sailed it for 800 terrifyingly dangerous miles across the vast and lonely Southern Atlantic to South Georgia - a journey now widely regarded as one of the greatest and most heroic small-boat journeys ever undertaken. After landing on the wrong side of the island and having to climb over a mountain range in the dark with no map, Shackleton and his companions finally stumbled back into the Grytviken whaling station on 19 May 1916.After resting very briefly to recover his strength, Shackleton then began a relentless campaign to beg or borrow a ship to rescue the rest of his crew from Elephant Island; whaling ships were not strong enough to enter polar ice, but on 30 August 1916, over two years after their departure from Plymouth, Shackleton finally returned to Elephant Island aboard a steam tug borrowed from the Chilean government. Although some were in poor health, every member of the Endurance crew was rescued and returned home alive.Endurance is dedicated to the memory of my mum, who passed away in September 2017.Listen to a computer generated preview and follow the score below:

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days
  • £34.99

    Ivory Ghosts (Brass Band - Score and Parts) - Higgins, Gavin

    Gavin Higgins wrote Ivory Ghosts in 2006 for brass ensemble as one of a collection of short pieces composed in support of the charity Brass Band Aid. It is a haunting miniature created in response to the horrors of the illegal trade in African elephant ivory. This definitive version for brass band and percussion was prepared for the Tredegar Town Band.

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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  • £53.20

    BIG MANCINI, THE (Brass Band) - Mancini, Henry - Barry, Darrol

    Includes: Peter Gunn Theme; Baby Elephant Walk; It Had Better Be Tonight; The Pink Panther; Peter Gunn Theme - Reprise. Grade: Medium

    Estimated dispatch 7-14 working days

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