231 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "George"

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02:18
John Philip Sousa's Suite from The American Maid: "Dream Picture-Bivouac" performed by the United States Marine Band. Performed January 6, 2013 in Center for the Arts Concert Hall at George Mason University. Colonel Michael J. Colburn, conducting.
Author: Untitled
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11:55
Franz Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 in D-flat major (arranged for wind band) performed by "The President's Own" United States Marine Band. Performed by the Marine Band on Jan. 5, 2014, at George Mason University's Center for the Arts Concert Hall. Col Michael J. Colburn, conducting.
Author: Untitled
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02:14
John Philip Sousa's march "The United States Field Artillery", performed by the United States Marine Band at the Center for the Arts Concert Hall at George Mason University.
Author: Untitled
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05:36
John Philip Sousa's Suite from The American Maid: "You Do Not Need a Doctor" performed by the United States Marine Band. Performed January 6, 2013 in Center for the Arts Concert Hall at George Mason University. Colonel Michael J. Colburn, conducting.
Author: Untitled
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02:07
Historically significant 1911 recording by duo Arthur Collins and Byron G. Harlan of "Alexander's Ragtime Band" (1911), originally composed by Irving Berlin. Recorded for Victor Records (#16908-B), this particular comedic duet of the song became a smash hit due to its farcical emphasis.
Author: Arthur Collins and Byron G. Harlan (vocals); Irving Berlin (music and lyrics)
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00:41
Two flat barges, relatively big, are docked side-by-side (at berth) and rubbing against one another due to choppy conditions. Raw audio edited to remove moments of intense, booming wind noise. Recorded on january 22, 2021 at the staten island ferry terminal & vessel depot in st. George, staten island, new york city, new york, usa on a zoom h4npro recorder with on-board x-y microphone, aimed downward at the barges from an elevated position.
Author: Ericnorcross
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04:35
Title/Work: Trumpet Concerto in E Flat Content: - Genre(s): Chamber music Author(s)/(Composer(s): Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) Music arranger(s): none Lyricist(s): none Performer(s): Philharmonia Orchestra; Trumpet: Harry Mortimer (1902-1992); Organ: Reginald Foort (1893-1980) Conductor: George Weldon (1908-1963) Place of recording: EMI Studio No. 1, Abbey Road, London (United Kingdom) 1st release date: 1949 1st recording date: 19 June 1946
Author: Untitled
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03:20
Sunflower Slow Drag is a ragtime composition by Scott Joplin and Scott Hayden, performed as a wind band arrangement of a piano original. Recorded between May 23 and 27, 1994 by the United States Marine Corps Band at the Center for the Arts at George Mason University in Fairfax County, Virginia.
Author: Untitled
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00:57
A scene from the border of santa monica and west los angeles on one of a couple of nights of rioting and looting in downtown santa monica during the may-june 2020 george floyd protests. One or more sports cars can be heard tearing down the freeway at the intersection of the i-405 and the i-10. Several police cars are en route chasing after the speeding car(s). Recorded from a rooftop from a block or two away. The whole scene gradually fades away.
Author: Cloud Canvas
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03:20
Sunflower Slow Drag is a ragtime composition by Scott Joplin and Scott Hayden, performed as a wind band arrangement of a piano original. Recorded between May 23 and 27, 1994 by the United States Marine Corps Band at the Center for the Arts at George Mason University in Fairfax County, Virginia.
Author: Untitled
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03:05
The staten island ferry "molinari" on final approach into st. George, staten island, late in the afternoon on april 04, 2021. The recording was made from the rear port side of the upper deck (where people are supposed to be quiet, but clearly don't obey the rules). Although the ambience is the in the public domain, the docking announcement over the pa system may need to be licensed through the dot. Note: this is a raw recording from a zoom h4n using the on-board x-y microphone. No processing has taken place. Ste-034. Wav, ambiance session on april 04, 2021.
Author: Ericnorcross
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02:03
Tell me pretty maiden from Leslie Stuart and Owen Hall's Florodora (1899 in London; 1900 on Broadway). Sung by the "Edison Sextette" (Ada Jones, George S. Lenox, Corinne Morgan, Grace Nelson, Bob Roberts and Frank C. Stanley) for Edison Records. It Edison Gold Moulded Record #8260. Florodora was the first big hit musical of the 20th century. "Tell me pretty maiden" was the runaway hit. "Tell me pretty maiden" is a double sextet, sung by six girls, matched in looks, all 5'4" inches tall and 130lbs, and their six suitors. This recording cuts their number in half, since, although it is difficult to get six people in front of a recording horn, it is even more difficult to get twelve.[1] This recording consists of only the first verse. A vocal score is available at The International Music Score Library Project.
Author: Owen Hall (real name, James Davis, 1853-1907) and Leslie Stuart (1863–1928)
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00:57
Musical exercise composed by Pastor Jean-Georges Stuber (late 18th c.).
Author: en:Jean-Georges Stuber
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01:03
This historic "flute clock" (orgeluhr) is a precious mechanical clock, with a small organ is combined. Given time to hear music from a pen-driven roller. Flötenuhrbaues the heyday was the late 18th out century. Flute clocks were built for affluent, culturally sophisticated circles, educated people with appropriate art and music understanding. The finest pieces built in vienna and berlin. Easier flute watches were up to about 1850 in large quantities in the black produced. They played for entertainment in guest houses. Several well-known composers wrote works specially for this instrument, as george frideric handel, carl philipp emanuel bach, haydn, antonio salieri, wolfgang amadeus mozart or ludwig van beethoven. Flute watches with great restrictions than their recorded music era to consider it forced the composer to be exact instructions in execution ornamentation and tempo. The coupling of wind plant and roll can be traced back to minimum tempos and makes historical flute clocks so interesting for issues of historical performance practice. Record with tascam hd-p2 and beyerdynamic mce82soundsystem: pro tools le.
Author: Ohrwurm
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01:52
A flötenuhr (also orgeluhr) is a precious mechanical clock, with a small organ is combined. Given time to hear music from a pen-driven roller. Flötenuhrbaues the heyday was the late 18th out century. Flute clocks were built for affluent, culturally sophisticated circles, educated people with appropriate art and music understanding. The finest pieces built in vienna and berlin. Easier flute watches were up to about 1850 in large quantities in the black produced. They played for entertainment in guest houses. Several well-known composers wrote works specially for this instrument, as george frideric handel, carl philipp emanuel bach, haydn, antonio salieri, wolfgang amadeus mozart or ludwig van beethoven. Flute watches with great restrictions than their recorded music era to consider it forced the composer to be exact instructions in execution ornamentation and tempo. The coupling of wind plant and roll can be traced back to minimum tempos and makes historical flute clocks so interesting for issues of historical performance practice. Recorded at "deutsches musikautomaten museum bruchsal"recording: tascam hd-p2 and beyerdynamic mce82;soundsystem: pro tools le.
Author: Ohrwurm
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02:06
Prelude to Act 1 for Carmen by Georges Bizet Prélude à l'acte I de Carmen de Georges Bizet
Author: Musopen
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01:46
Georges Bizet: L'Arlésienne Suite Nr. 1, 1. Satz (Ausschnitt) Sinfonie-Orchester des Hessischen Rundfunks, Kurt Schröder (Dirigent) Aufnahme vom 8. September 1948 im großen Sendesaal Eschersheimer Landstraße Georges Bizet: L'Arlésienne Suite no. 1, first movement (excerpt) Frankfurt Radio Symphony, Kurt Schröder (conductor) recording from 8 September 1948 in the Eschersheimer Landstraße broadcasting studio
Author: hr-Sinfonieorchester
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01:52
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing is an English Christmas carol which first appears in its modern form in 1850. The original lyrics are adapted from Charles Wesley's 1739 hymn ""Hark! how all the welkin rings", set it to the same tune as Christ the Lord is Risen Today. George Whitefield altered the opening lyrics to the more familiar "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing", and various others also made small alterations in the following years. In the early 1840s, Felix Mendelssohn wrote "Festgesang", a cantata in celebration of the presumed 400 year anniversary of Johannes Gutenberg's invention of the printing press. The tune to the second part of this piece, "Vaterland, in deinen Gauen", was adapted to fit the revised Wesley lyrics in 1855 by William H. Cummings, assembling the hymn tune into its more-or-less final form. It is performed by the chorus of U.S. Army Band "Pershing's Own", led by Colonel Thomas Rotondi, Jr. (Leader & Commander) and CSM Debra L. McGarity (Command Sergeant Major) c. 2010.
Author: Untitled
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03:17
La Marseillaise (words and music by Rouget de l'Isle) Sung by Georges Thill, tenor of the Opera, and played by the band of the Garde Républicaine. Directed by Pierre Dupont Columbia DF 760 L 3408
Author: Méhul & Chenier
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05:41
Away in a Manger (jazz rendition) performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 10 from Christmas Time is Here (1998). Recorded at the Center For The Arts, George Mason University, January 24-27, 1998. Credits: Alto Saxophone – Technical Sergeant Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – Senior Master Sergeant Joe Eckert* Baritone Saxophone – Master Sergeant Don New* Bass – Master Sergeant Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sergeant Dudley Hinote* Directed By – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Drums – Senior Master Sergeant C. E. Askew* Engineer [Assistant] – Master Sergeant Kendall Thomsen* Engineer, Edited By – Bruce Leek Guitar – Technical Sergeant Shawn Purcell* Layout [Graphic] – Master Sergeant Dudley J. Hinote*, Master Sergeant Judith J. Thompson*, Technical Sergeant Robert K. McConnell* Liner Notes – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Mixed By – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Percussion – Master Sergeant Pat Shrieves* (tracks: 2, 4 to 11) Piano – Master Sergeant Wade Beach Jr.* Producer – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Tenor Saxophone – Senior Master Sergeant Saul Miller Jr.* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – Chief Master Sergeant Pete BarenBregge* Trombone – Technical Sergeant Jeff Martin* Trombone [Assistant Lead] – Technical Sergeant Ben Patterson* Trombone [Lead] – Master Sergeant Joe Jackson* Trumpet – Master Sergeant Rich Sigler*, Technical Sergeant Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – Master Sergeant Dave Detwiler* Trumpet [Lead] – Master Sergeant Bruce Gates* Vocals – Master Sergeant Tracey Wright*
Author: Composition: James Murray; Arrangement: TSgt Alan Baylock; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
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00:45
library of congress recording, and before 1911 -- public domain traditional Omaha Indian song. From here Notes This song was collected by Alice Cunningham Fletcher and Francis La Flesche. It is included on Omaha Indian Music: Historical Recordings from the Fletcher/La Flesche Collection (AFC L71). From the liner notes of the Omaha Indian Music album: Composers of love songs used melody and vocables to convey emotion (1893, pp. 53-54, 146-150; 1911, pp. 319-321). The true love-song, called by the Omaha Bethae waan, an old designation and not a descriptive name, is sung generally in the early morning, when the lover is keeping his tryst and watching for the maiden to emerge from the tent and go to the spring. They belong to the secret courtship and are sometimes called Me-the-g'thun wa-an - courting songs. . . . They were sung without drum, bell or rattle, to accent the rhythm, in which these songs is subordinated to tonality and is felt only in the musical phrases. . . . Vibrations for the purpose of giving greater expression were not only affected by the tremolo of the voice, but they were enhanced by waving the hand, or a spray of artemesia before the lips, while the body often swayed gently to the rhythm of the song (Fletcher, 1894, p. 156). George Miller's probable year of birth is 1852.
Author: Performed by Miller, George (Inke'tonga) (Big Shoulder), Recorded by Alice Cunningham Fletcher and Francis La Flesche.
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03:29
Pasquale Amato's 1911 rendition of the "Toreador Song" from Georges Bizet's 1875 opera Carmen (1875) This is Victor Matrix C-11213-1, recorded in Camden, New Jersey, on 11 September 1911, and released on a variety of labels
Author: Singer: Pasquale Amato (1878-1942) Composer: Georges Bizet (1838-1875)
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04:06
Good King Wenceslas and His Merry Band performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 1 from Christmas Time is Here (1998). Recorded at the Center For The Arts, George Mason University, January 24-27, 1998. Credits: Alto Saxophone – Technical Sergeant Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – Senior Master Sergeant Joe Eckert* Baritone Saxophone – Master Sergeant Don New* Bass – Master Sergeant Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sergeant Dudley Hinote* Directed By – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Drums – Senior Master Sergeant C. E. Askew* Engineer [Assistant] – Master Sergeant Kendall Thomsen* Engineer, Edited By – Bruce Leek Guitar – Technical Sergeant Shawn Purcell* Layout [Graphic] – Master Sergeant Dudley J. Hinote*, Master Sergeant Judith J. Thompson*, Technical Sergeant Robert K. McConnell* Liner Notes – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Mixed By – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Percussion – Master Sergeant Pat Shrieves* (tracks: 2, 4 to 11) Piano – Master Sergeant Wade Beach Jr.* Producer – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Tenor Saxophone – Senior Master Sergeant Saul Miller Jr.* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – Chief Master Sergeant Pete BarenBregge* Trombone – Technical Sergeant Jeff Martin* Trombone [Assistant Lead] – Technical Sergeant Ben Patterson* Trombone [Lead] – Master Sergeant Joe Jackson* Trumpet – Master Sergeant Rich Sigler*, Technical Sergeant Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – Master Sergeant Dave Detwiler* Trumpet [Lead] – Master Sergeant Bruce Gates* Vocals – Master Sergeant Tracey Wright*
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: SMSgt Mike Crotty; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
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08:36
December Makes Me Feel This Way ("Joy to the World") performed by the Airmen of Note of the United States Air Force Band. Track 6 from Christmas Time is Here (1998). Recorded at the Center For The Arts, George Mason University, January 24-27, 1998. Credits: Alto Saxophone – Technical Sergeant Andy Axelrad* Alto Saxophone [Lead] – Senior Master Sergeant Joe Eckert* Baritone Saxophone – Master Sergeant Don New* Bass – Master Sergeant Paul Henry* Bass Trombone – Master Sergeant Dudley Hinote* Directed By – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Drums – Senior Master Sergeant C. E. Askew* Engineer [Assistant] – Master Sergeant Kendall Thomsen* Engineer, Edited By – Bruce Leek Guitar – Technical Sergeant Shawn Purcell* Layout [Graphic] – Master Sergeant Dudley J. Hinote*, Master Sergeant Judith J. Thompson*, Technical Sergeant Robert K. McConnell* Liner Notes – Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Mixed By – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Percussion – Master Sergeant Pat Shrieves* (tracks: 2, 4 to 11) Piano – Master Sergeant Wade Beach Jr.* Producer – Senior Master Sergeant Mike Crotty*, Chief Master Sergeant Peter C. BarenBregge* Tenor Saxophone – Senior Master Sergeant Saul Miller Jr.* Tenor Saxophone [Lead] – Chief Master Sergeant Pete BarenBregge* Trombone – Technical Sergeant Jeff Martin* Trombone [Assistant Lead] – Technical Sergeant Ben Patterson* Trombone [Lead] – Master Sergeant Joe Jackson* Trumpet – Master Sergeant Rich Sigler*, Technical Sergeant Tim Leahey* Trumpet [Assistant Lead] – Master Sergeant Dave Detwiler* Trumpet [Lead] – Master Sergeant Bruce Gates* Vocals – Master Sergeant Tracey Wright*
Author: Composition: George Frederick Handel; Arrangement: TSgt Alan Baylock; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Airmen of Note; Recording: United States Air Force
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00:17
日本語: ビゼー作曲「カルメン」第2幕の「カンツォネッタ」の一部 Part of Georges Bizet's Carmen
Author: jsdfErai
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03:60
Air De La Fleur sung by w:Edward Johnson, written by w:Georges Bizet.
Author: Recording w:Edward Johnson, songwriter w:Georges Bizet
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02:29
An orchestral arrangement of the "Toreador Song" from Georges Bizet's 1875 opera Carmen, played by the Damrosch Orchestra in 1903. The refrain of the "Toreador Song" begins at about 1:07, and is preceded by other music from Carmen.
Author: Georges Bizet / Damrosch Orchestra
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03:26
NOTE: Edited version (noise reduced, volume boosted), original is at File:PDP-CH_-_Opéra_Comique_-_Élie_Cohen_-_Joseph_Rogatechwsky_-_Romance_de_Nadir_-_Les_pêcheurs_de_perles_-_Bizet_-_Cormon_-_Carré_-_Columbia-12527-lx90.flac. 1st release date: 1929 1st recording date: 1928 Place of recording: unknown Author(s)/Composer(s): Georges Bizet (1838-1875) Lyricist(s): Eugène Cormon (1810-1903) and Michel Carré (1821-1872) Music arranger(s): none Conductor: Élie Cohen (unknown birth/death date) Performer(s): Joseph Rogatechwsky (1891-1985) de l'Opéra Comique Vocal range: tenor with orchestra accompaniment Title/Work: Les pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers) (opera) Content: Romance de Nadir Synonym: This is a "Je crois entendre" encore[1] Genre(s): Opera terminology
Author: Untitled
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04:01
1st release date: 1936 1st recording date: 26 April 1935 Composer: Georges Bizet (1838-1875) Lyricists: Henri Meilhac (1831-1897) and Ludovic Halévy (1834-1908) Conductor: Franco Ghione (1886-1964) Performer: Beniamino Gigli (Tenor) (1890-1957) and Members of La Scala Orchestra, Milan Work: Carmen (Act 2) Content: Il fior che avevi a me tu dato (See here, thy flow' ret) Music genre: Opera terminology
Author: Georges Bizet (1838-1875), Henri Meilhac (1831-1897) and Ludovic Halévy (1834-1908)
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02:27
1st release date: 1932 1st recording date: 18 May 1931 Place of recording: Teatro alla Scala, Milan (Italy) Author(s)/Composer(s): Georges Bizet (1838-1875) Lyricist(s): Henri Meilhac (1831-1897) and Ludovic Halévy (1834-1908) Music arranger(s): none Conductor: Carlo Sabajno (1874-1938) Performer(s): Gabriella Besanzoni (1888-1962), mezzo-soprano, Enrico Spada (1885-?), basso, Nerina Ferrari (1907-?), soprano, Tamara Beltacchi (1898-?), mezzo-soprano and members of the La Scala Theatre Orchestra and Chorus Vocal range: Bass, Mezzo-Soprano, Soprano, choir and orchestra accompaniment Title/Work: Carmen (opera) Content: Part 15: Act 2: Or ben, Pastià desia (Senor Pastia declares) Genre(s): Opera terminology
Author: Untitled
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