Fourth movement of Gustav Holst's Second Suite in F for Military Band, based on the folk song of "Dargason" whilst "Greensleeves" clearly wovens into the fantasia in the end.
Author: The Air Combat Command (ACC) Heritage of America Band
16-tet scale on C (75 cent steps). Easley Blackwood, Jr.'s notation for 16 equal temperament. Intervals are notated similarly to those they approximate and there are fewer enharmonic equivalents. MIDI pitch bend appears to match intervals (0,56, etc.).
21-tet scale on C (57.14 cent steps). Easley Blackwood, Jr.'s notation for 21 equal temperament. Intervals are notated similarly to those they approximate and there are distinct enharmonic equivalents (E-sharp-down = F-down). MIDI pitch bend matches intervals.
A12 4 7 10 on C. Traditional notation: C B♭ E. MIDI pitch bend matches intervals. Other non-octave tunings investigated by Bohlen besides the Bohlen-Pierce scale include twelve steps in the tritave, named A12 by Enrique Moreno [1] and based on the 4:7:10 chord.
Author: Created by Hyacinth (talk) using Sibelius 5.
National anthem of Pakistan performed instrumentally by the United States Navy circa 2003.中文(简体):巴基斯坦国歌Hrvatski: Državna himna Pakistana - Pak sarzamin shad bad
Danse macabre by Saint-Saëns performed by the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski. "Record date is 4/29/1925, with master numbers CVE-27929 and CVE-27930. Also, the subtle "VE" stamp reveals this to be an early electrical recording. It doesn't have quite the brilliance of the 1927 and -28 Victor productions, but still captures the violins nicely. Victor 6505-A and B, concatenated from the original 2 sides."
Author: Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra, Stokowski, Victor 6505
Second Suite in F for Military Band I. "March: Morris dance, Swansea Town, Claudy Banks" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 2 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
Second Suite in F for Military Band "III. Song of the Blacksmith" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 4 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
Second Suite in F for Military Band IV. "Fantasia on the Dargason" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 5 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
Second Suite in F for Military Band "II. Song Without Words, I'll Love My Love" performed by the 553rd United States Air National Guard Band of the Northeast. Track 3 from Golden Anniversary (1992). Major Patrick M. Jones, commander and conductor.[1][2]
waltz by Chopin (Op. 64, No. 2). According to the little book in the CD cover the piano is a "Steinway grand". Paderewski was very associated with Steinway, he and William Steinway together created the program called Steinway Artists.
Chromatic fourth in Johann Sebastian Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier (the chromatic fourth is indicated by a red bracket). From Fugue No. 2 in D minor of the second book of Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier (BWV 875). Entered into Finale 2006, with red bracket added in Photoshop. The music this excerpt comes from is public domain. My selection and addition of bracket is GFDL.
Author: The original uploader was Hyacinth at English Wikipedia.
FREDERIC CHOPIN, THE ETUDES PAN 107 (1810 - 1849) Martha Goldstein, Piano (Erard, 1851) Opus 10 - Twelve Grand Etudes dedicated to Franz Liszt, published 1833 c minor- Allegro con fuoco Supposedly written in Stuttgart shortly after Chopin received news of the taking of Warsaw by the Russians September 8, 1831, this Etude is popularly called The Revolutionary."