445 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Marching Band"

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Drum section from a parade marching band stop and perform while the crowd claps along, eventually breaking into applause.
Author: Alienistcog
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02:22
Garryowen, a late-18th century Irish air performed by the U.S. Army Band Strings, under the leadership of Colonel Thomas Rotondi, Jr. and Command Sergeant Major Debra L. McGarity.
Author: Traditional Irish air, with no known composer. Performed by The U.S. Army Band "Pershing's Own" Strings
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02:36
Bombasto performed by the Concert Band of the United States Air Force Band of the Rockies. Track 5 from Footlifters! (1998).[1] Recorded Feb. and June 1998, Pikes Peak Center, Colorado Springs, CO. H. Bruce Gilkes, conductor; Gena R. Stuchbery, associate conductor.[2]
Author: Composition: Orion R. Farrar; Performance: United States Air Force Band of the Rockies, Concert Band; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:48
A Warrior Bold performed by the Concert Band of the United States Air Force Band. Track 19 from Front & Center (1998). Recorded at The Center for the Performing Arts, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, June 6 to 8, 1998. Col. Lowell E. Graham, conducting.[1][2][3]
Author: Composition: Frank Panella; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Concert Band; Recording: United States Air Force
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01:15
Revolutionary war re-enactment players' marching band returns from battle, playing drum and fife.
Author: Alienistcog
00:00
02:60
Inno e Marcia Pontificale ("Papal Anthem and March"), the de jure national anthem of Vatican City; composed by Charles Gounod.
Author: Untitled
00:00
03:16
The Glory of the Yankee Navy performed by the USMC Band. March, “The Glory of the Yankee Navy" (1909) - The musical comedy The Yankee Girl was in need of a spirited march, so Sousa was prevailed upon to provide one. The march, one of Sousa’s most interesting musically, was dedicated to the star of the show, Blanche Ring. Lyrics were provided by Kenneth S. Clark. The title underwent a process of evolution. The earliest known manuscript was labeled “Uncle Sam’s Navy.” Prior to the opening, newspapers referred to the march as “The Honor of the Yankee Navy.”
Author: Untitled
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03:24
John Philip Sousa's "The Boy Scouts of America" (1916) as performed by the United States Marine Band. Track 75 from the band's 2018 album The Complete Marches of John Philip Sousa: Vol. 4 (1899-1916). Conducted by Lieutenant Colonel Jason K. Fettig.
Author: Untitled
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04:08
The Chicago Tribune performed by the Concert Band of the United States Air Force Band of the Rockies. Track 11 from Footlifters! (1998).[1] Recorded Feb. and June 1998, Pikes Peak Center, Colorado Springs, CO. H. Bruce Gilkes, conductor; Gena R. Stuchbery, associate conductor.[2]
Author: Untitled
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04:04
The march "New York Hippodrome" by John Philip Sousa, played by the United States Marine Band. Performed October 30, 2007 in Newport, Rhode Island during the 2007 National Concert Tour. Col. Michael J. Colburn, conducting.
Author: Composition: John Philip Sousa Performance: United States Marine Band
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03:26
The United States Air Force Band joined with percussionists from the Marine Band, Army Band, and Coast Guard Band perform a percussion rendition of the American patriotic classic, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home". Arranged by USAF Band composer and staff arranger, Master Sgt. John Bliss. Done in celebration of Veterans' Day. Credits: Colonel Don Schofield - Executive Producer Master Sgt. Adam Green - Producer Chief Master Sgt. Dennis Hoffmann, Master Sgt Jeremy Koch - Videographers Technical Sgt. Tim Hilgert - Video Editor Technical Sgt. Jim Woolf - Audio Engineer Musicians: Master Sgt. Adam Green, The United States Air Force Band “Chief’s Own” - marimba, vibraphone, xylophone, orchestral bells, field drum Sergeant 1st Class Sidonie McCray, The United States Army Band “Pershing’s Own” - vibraphone, xylophone, orchestral bells Master Sgt. Kenneth Wolin, “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band - xylophone, shekere, vibraphone, orchestral bells, field drum Staff Sgt. Michael Hopkins, “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band - orchestral bells, cowbell, vibraphone, xylophone Musician Petty Officer 1st Class Nathan Lassell, The United States Coast Guard Band - drum set, vibraphone, xylophone, orchestral bells
Author: Composition: Patrick Gilmore Arrangement: Master Sgt. John Bliss Performance: Percussionists from the the United States Air Force Band, the United States Marine Band, the United States Army Band, and the United States Coast Guard Band Recording: United States Air Force
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00:32
An American march composed in 1938 with lyrics written in 1947. Performed by the United States Air Force Band. The U.S. Air Force song, from the 1998 album Espirit de Corps.
Author: Untitled
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00:40
Hail, Columbia, the former (unofficial) national anthem of the United States of America, preceded by four ruffles and flourishes as would be played for the Vice President of the United States, performed by the United States Navy Band Ceremonial Band. Featured on the 1990s album Music For Honors and Ceremonies.
Author: Untitled
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02:43
The march "On Jersey Shore" by Arthur Pryor (1904), performed by the United States Marine Band. Recorded Thursday, November 7, 2002 at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst Fine Arts Center Concert Hall as part of the 2002 National Concert Tour. Colonel Timothy W. Foley, conducting.
Author: Composition: Arthur Pryor Performance: United States Marine Band
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03:40
St. Louis Blues March performed by the Shades of Blue jazz ensemble of the United States Air Force Band of Mid-America. Track 5 from Heroes Lost And Fallen (1997). Recorded January 28-31, 1997 at the Scottish Rite Cathedral, St. Louis, Missouri. Major Sam Pohl, conducting.[1][2][3][4][5]
Author: Composition: W. C. Handy; Transcription: Cecil T. Pomeroy; Performance: United States Air Force Band of Mid-America, Shades of Blue; Recording: United States Air Force
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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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00:39
Hail, Columbia, the former (unofficial) national anthem of the United States of America, preceded by four ruffles and flourishes as would be played for the Vice President of the United States, performed by the United States Navy Band Ceremonial Band. Featured on the 1990s album Music For Honors and Ceremonies.
Author: Untitled
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02:50
John Philip Sousa's "Semper Fidelis" Recording date not clear according to CD booklet metadata suggests 1989. Semper Fidelis: Music of John Philip Sousa
Author: Untitled
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02:28
w:John Philip Sousa's w:The Thunderer, performed in 1896 by the w:United States Marine Corps Band, From Fife and Drum (1988, track 3). This is a Columbia Phonograph Company cylinder recording under the band directorship of Francesco Fanciulli.
Author: John Philip Sousa
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02:58
w:John Philip Sousa's "King Cotton" Recording date not clear according to CD booklet metadata suggests 1989
Author: John Philip Sousa, performed by the United States Marine Corps Band from Semper Fidelis: Music of John Philip Sousa
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02:58
2015 recording of the U.S. Marine Band performing "In Memoriam" by John Philip Sousa
Author: U.S. Marine Band
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10:26
The President's Own United States Marine Chamber Orchestra performs Max Bruch's Kol Nidrei, Op. 47 on March 3, 2013 at the Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall and Arts Center in Alexandria, Va.
Author: Composition: Max Bruch; Performance and recording: United States Marine Band
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00:44
The national anthem of China, the "March of the Volunteers", performed by the United States Navy Band and uploaded to the Wikimedia Commons by Keith Lehwald. Italiano: L'inno nazionale della Repubblica popolare cinese: la "Marcia dei Volontari", suonata dalla banda della marina statunitense. 中文(简体):中华人民共和国国歌《义勇军进行曲》,美国海军乐团演奏 中文(繁體):中華人民共和國國歌《義勇軍進行曲》,美國海軍樂團演奏
Author: Untitled
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03:11
Livery Stable Blues by the Original Dixieland Jass Band, recorded on 26 February 1917. It was released on the Victor label on 7 March 1917, and was the first released jazz recording. 78RPM, transferred to .ogg from a .mp3 file from The Internet Archive.
Author: Original Dixieland Jass Band (performer); Ray Lopez, Alcide Nunez (composers)
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00:58
The national anthem of South Korea. The composer's widow Lolita Ahn and her family then relinquished all rights to "Aegukga" to the South Korean government on 16 March 2005.
Author: Untitled
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00:09
This sound is an excerpt of 244429__milton__army-band. Wav , available here in freesound: http://www. Freesound. Org/people/milton. /sounds/244429/i have edited a four bars loop in audacity to change the format to wav and mono sound with a depth of16 bits. Also i have applied a soft fade in and fade out in order to avoid artefacts.
Author: Brote
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02:40
Movement I of Ottorino Respighi's The Pines of Rome, entitled The Pines of Villa Borghese. It portrays noisy children playing soldiers and marching in the pine groves of the Borghese gardens.
Author: The President's Own Marine Band
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01:30
Harry Connick, Jr. and band playing "When the Saints Go Marching In". Harry Connick, Jr. plays a Steinway grand piano. (The singer is a child from the audience that Harry Connick, Jr. has invited up on the stage to sing). Harry Connick Junior et son orchestre, interprétant When the Saints Go Marching In le 21 février 2010 lors d'un concert à la Maison-Blanche à Washington, District de Columbia, aux États-Unis. L'enfant qui l'accompagne a été choisi dans l'assistance et invité à venir chanter sur scène.
Author: Unknown authorUnknown author
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02:12
An a cappella, choral arrangement of the traditional American folk song "Shenandoah" performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 9 from America (2017). Recorded between January 2015 and March 2017 at Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall, Joint Base Anacostia-Boiling, and Bias Studios. Featuring soloist Master Sgt. Emily Wellington.[1]
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: CMSgt (ret.) Floyd Werle and CMSgt (ret.) Michael Davis; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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02:12
An a cappella, choral arrangement of the traditional American folk song "Shenandoah" performed by the Singing Sergeants of the United States Air Force Band. Track 9 from America (2017). Recorded between January 2015 and March 2017 at Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall, Joint Base Anacostia-Boiling, and Bias Studios. Featuring soloist Master Sgt. Emily Wellington.[1]
Author: Composition: traditional; Arrangement: CMSgt (ret.) Floyd Werle and CMSgt (ret.) Michael Davis; Performance: United States Air Force Band, Singing Sergeants; Recording: United States Air Force
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03:11
Livery Stable Blues by the Original Dixieland Jass Band, recorded on 26 February 1917. It was released on the Victor label on 7 March 1917, and was the first released jazz recording. 78 RPM, transferred to .ogg from a .mp3 file from The Internet Archive. Die erste kommerzielle Jazz-Aufnahme: Livery Stable Blues, der Original Dixieland Jass Band, von 1917. Le premier enregistrement commercial de jazz : Livery Stable Blues en 1917, par l’Original Dixieland Jass Band. Italiano: La prima registrazione commerciale di musica Jazz: Original Dixieland Jass Band, Livery Stable Blues, del 1917 Norsk nynorsk: Jazz-songen «Song from a Cotton Field» av Bessie Brown
Author: Original Dixieland Jass Band (performer); Ray Lopez (1889–1979), Alcide Nunez (1884–1934) (composers)
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03:15
I'm at the corner of 5th and kansas not far from kair 93. 7fm studios. This sound starts with the band from part1 departing and a truck passing. Children talk and yell and a man yells something. Another band approaches. A woman seems to tell someone to say cheese in the distance. The file ends when the band gets a bit too loud for my microphone. Recorded with goldwave with an asus laptop in my backpack and a microsoft lifecam3000 poking out of it facing behind me clothes-pinned to one of the handles of the pack. Unfortunately microsoft no longer supports their lifecam apps so it's not possible to turn down the internal mic gain.
Author: Kbclx
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10:03
In 's-hertogenbosch in holland we have carnival every year. This is a recording in the centre of the city. A recording of several 'dweilorkesten' that is a band that plays musing in the street. 'literal' translation is 'mop band or mopping band'. The go trough the streets like someone mopping the floor. This recording at the market-place is made with hundreds of people around. The ambience here is totally different from other places in the town and the world. It complete different than the south american carnival. Recorded: march 7th 2011, markt, 's-hertogenbosch, holland. Rode svm > sony pcm d50 recorder. Re-uploaded as public domain.
Author: Klankbeeld
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04:12
On March 11, 2018, the Marine Band presented a Living History program titled Marine Corps Women’s Reserve Band Tribute. The program told the story of the talented and adventurous women who served our country in a most unique and unprecedented manner. Author of the book Bands of Sisters: U.S. Women’s Military Bands During World War II, Dr. Jill Sullivan served as a guide through the personal accounts of those very women who blazed a trail for many to follow. The Marine Corps Women’s Reserve Band of Camp Lejeune was established under the watch of 'The President’s Own' to support bond drives and was active during World War II from 1943–45. In 1944, the ensemble even sat in for one of the Marine Band’s popular 'Dream Hour' broadcasts, a program that will be reenacted in its entirety as part of this concert. The performance took place in Schlesinger Concert Hall at Northern Virginia Community College in Alexandria, Va. Conducted by Capt. Michelle A. Rakers.
Author: Composition: Frank W. Meacham; Performance/Recording: United States Marine Band
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03:11
Livery Stable Blues by the Original Dixieland Jass Band, recorded 26 February 1917. It was released on the Victor label on 7 March 1917, and was the first released jazz recording. 78 RPM, transferred to .ogg from a .mp3 file from The Internet Archive. This version has been edited to reduce the hiss. Українська: «Livery Stable Blues» від «Ориджінал диксиленд джаз-банд», записаний 26 лютого 1917 року, перший випущений джазовий запис.
Author: Original Dixieland Jass Band (performer); Ray Lopez (1889–1979), Alcide Nunez (1884–1934) (composers)
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31:06
Soundsnippets for a sound performance for 100 people with bicycles in hammerbrook. We're doing a public performance of music for 1000 bicycles at bullerdeich 7 on 18 june 2022. We will perform an 40 minutes choreography composed by padyak hamburg (nils knott, cooperfrau melissengeist, tintin patrone, dayang yraola) by attaching speakers on our bikes. We'll be like a marching band on bikes.
Author: Cooperfrau
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32:01
Soundsnippets for a sound performance for 100 people with bicycles in hammerbrook. We're doing a public performance of music for 1000 bicycles at bullerdeich 7 on 18 june 2022. We will perform an 40 minutes choreography composed by padyak hamburg (nils knott, cooperfrau melissengeist, tintin patrone, dayang yraola) by attaching speakers on our bikes. We'll be like a marching band on bikes.
Author: Cooperfrau
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03:36
John Philip Sousa's patriotic march The Stars and Stripes Forever, performed by the United States Marine Band. The Stars and Stripes Forever – amerykański patriotyczny marsz autorstwa Johna Philipa Sousy w wykonaniu orkiestry Korpusu Piechoty Morskiej Stanów Zjednoczonych. Эрзянь: Джон Филип Соузань The Stars and Stripes Forever эсь масторонь стройсэ якамо коесь. Налкси АВШ-нь Иневедень оркестрась.
Author: John Phillip Sousa
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04:33
Stars and Stripes Forever March, by John Philip Sousa, performed by Sousa's Band for Edison Records in November 1909. This is Edison Amberol cylinder number 4M-285 (A- ..22). It is NPS object catalog number: EDIS 36682
Author: John Philip Sousa (1854-1932)
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02:45
John Philip Sousa's march "Comrades of the Legion" (1920), from "The President's Own" United States Marine Band's album "Semper Fidelis": Music of John Philip Sousa; Colonel John R. Bourgeois, Director
Author: The President's Own United States Marine Band
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01:38
Recorded on the municipal wharf at santa cruz, california on 20 oct 2012 using a zoom h2. Sea lions calling. These sea lions live at the wharf. In the distance, sounds from the amusement park and from a marching band contest. See http://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=t7i9gckt-e0 for a short video of the sea lions.
Author: Vflefevre
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05:01
This was all recorded in enumclaw, wa on july 4th, 2013. I used a yamaha pocketrak recorder throughout the day and into evening when the fireworks started. There's an old piano outside the music store and i just caught the end of a young guy playing some nice music. I then just walked down the street recording the sounds. You can hear me talking to a guy who's working for a local politician. The b-25 mitchell bomber flyover was totally unexpected and i was lucky to have had the recorder going. It made two passes right over me and i love the sounds of those engines. It was a great day. Please comment on what you will use it for. Thanks. :^).
Author: Tubbers
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