United States Navy Band
{{Short description|Official musical organization of the US Navy}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2017}}
{{Single source|date=December 2024}}
{{Infobox military unit
| unit_name = United States Navy Band
| image = Seal of the United States Navy Band.png
| caption =
| start_date = {{Start date and age|1925}}
| country = {{Flagu|United States}}
| allegiance =
| branch = {{Naval|United States}}
| type =
| role =
| size =
| command_structure =
| garrison = Washington Navy Yard
| garrison_label =
| nickname = "The World's Finest"
| patron =
| motto =
| colors =
| colors_label =
| march = "Anchors Aweigh"
| mascot =
| equipment =
| equipment_label =
| battles =
| anniversaries = 4 March 1925
| decorations = 6 Meritorious Unit Commendations
| battle_honours =
| disbanded =
| flying_hours =
| website = {{URL|http://www.navyband.navy.mil|navyband.navy.mil}}
| commander1 = Cmdr. Robert Coats
| commander1_label = Commanding Officer/Leader
| commander2 = Lt. Cmdr. Kelly Cartwright
| commander2_label = Executive Officer
| commander3 = MUCM James Armstrong III
| commander3_label = Senior Enlisted Advisor
| commander4 = Lt. J.G. David Drescher
| commander4_label = Concert/Ceremonial Department Head
| commander5 = Lt. J.G. Antonio Garcia
| commander5_label = Specialty Groups Department Head
| commander6 = Ensign Kyle Beltram
| commander6_label = Staff Department Head
| notable_commanders =
| identification_symbol = 200px
| identification_symbol_label = Wordmark
| identification_symbol_2 =
| identification_symbol_2_label =
}}
The United States Navy Band, based at the Washington Navy Yard in Washington, D.C., has served as the official musical organization of the U.S. Navy since 1925. The U.S. Navy Band serves the ceremonial needs at the seat of U.S. government, performing at presidential inaugurations, state arrival ceremonies, state funerals, state dinners, and other significant events.
The band performs a broad range of music, including ceremonial ruffles and flourishes, classical, rock, jazz, and country.
Organization and personnel
File:United_States_Navy_Band_in_2007.jpg
Since its official designation in 1925, the United States Navy Band has grown into a diverse organization of multiple performing units. The organization features six performing ensembles: the Concert Band, the Ceremonial Band, the Commodores jazz ensemble, Country Current country-bluegrass ensemble, the Cruisers contemporary entertainment ensemble, and the Sea Chanters chorus. There are also several chamber music groups. The multiple ensembles help meet the public demand for different types of music and the needs of Navy recruiting.
File:Militarymusic Parade 10.jpg
File:Militarymusic Parade 12.jpg
The United States Navy Band is composed of 172 enlisted musicians and four officers, under the direction of Capt. Kenneth Collins.
=Concert Band=
The Concert Band is the Navy's premier wind ensemble. Along with the Ceremonial Band, this band was part of the original Navy Band in 1925. The group plays concerts in the Washington, D.C. area and performs a month-long national tour each year.
=Ceremonial Band=
The Ceremonial Band performs ceremonies in and around the Washington, D.C. area. Their primary mission is performing for funerals at Arlington National Cemetery. Additionally, the Ceremonial Band performs at command changes, retirements, patriotic openers, wreath-layings, and arrivals.
=Sea Chanters=
{{main|Sea Chanters}}
In 1956, Lt. Harold Fultz, then the band's assistant leader, organized a Navy School of Music group to sing chanteys and patriotic songs for the State of the Nation dinner. An immediate success, ADM Arleigh Burke, then chief of naval operations, transferred them to the Navy Band, named them the Sea Chanters, and tasked this all-male chorus with perpetuating the songs of the sea. In 1980, the group added women to their ranks and expanded their repertoire to include everything from Brahms to Broadway.
=Commodores=
Founded in 1969, the Commodores are a jazz ensemble. Performers who have appeared with the group include Ray Charles, Stanley Turrentine, Louie Bellson, Terry Gibbs, Chris Potter, Jerry Bergonzi, Bob Mintzer, Dave Leibman, James Moody, and Clark Terry.
=Country Current=
This seven-member group was formed in 1973 and specialized in country and bluegrass music.
=Cruisers=
A contemporary entertainment ensemble with eight members was formed in 1999.
History
=Early music in the Navy=
The earliest music of the United States Navy was the shantyman's song. These melodies of the sea helped soften the rigors of shipboard life. Next came trumpeters, drummers, and fifers who were carried on the early frigates to sound calls, give general orders, and perform at funerals and other ceremonies. Military bands became a separate section of the crew on many Navy vessels.
The development of shore-based bands in the 19th century led to the creation of the Naval Academy Band, which grew in size and importance during the American Civil War. Other band units afloat and ashore played a significant role in promoting sailors' and civilians' morale.
At the start of World War I, many musicians left their orchestras to join the United States Navy, using their talents to further the war effort.
=Establishment of the U.S. Navy Band=
In 1916, a 16-piece band from the battleship {{USS|Kansas|BB-21|6}} was ordered to the Washington Navy Yard to augment a 17-piece band aboard the Presidential Yacht {{USS|Mayflower|PY-1|2}}. The new unit became known as the "Washington Navy Yard Band" and was given rehearsal space near the power plant's coal pile. The increasing tempo of the band's duties led the bandmaster to seek more suitable quarters in the yard's "Sail Loft", and sailmakers were soon cutting and stitching their canvas to the rhythms of the music. The United States Navy Band still occupies the Sail Loft as its headquarters and rehearsal hall.
In 1923, a 35-man contingent from the Navy Yard Band accompanied President Warren G. Harding on his trip to the Alaska Territory. After the president's unexpected death in San Francisco, the band performed the hymn "Nearer My God to Thee" as his body was placed aboard a train destined for Washington, D.C.
With the band growing in importance and prestige, President Calvin Coolidge signed into law a 1925 bill stating "hereafter the band now stationed at the Navy Yard, known as the Navy Yard Band, shall be designated as the United States Navy Band." The legislation also allowed the band to take its first national tour in 1925.
Among those praising the early United States Navy Band was the Boston Post newspaper, which printed on 13 March 1929: "…Some folks have an idea perhaps that Navy music is made up of a few chantey choruses, a jig, and "The Star-Spangled Banner". To the average American Citizen the performance last night must have been a truly startling eye-opener. They performed like a company of first-rank virtuosi…"
Under the baton of Lt. Charles Benter, the band's first leader, the United States Navy Band was featured at many historic occasions, including the 1927 return of Charles Lindbergh following his trans-Atlantic flight. Two years later, the band performed for the return of Adm. Richard E. Byrd from his famous South Pole flight.
The need for qualified musicians led Lt. Benter to found the Navy School of Music under his charge in 1935. Many of the faculty were bandsmen who taught in addition to their performance duties.
Throughout much of the 1960s, the band's leader was Anthony A. Mitchell, a classical clarinetist and accomplished composer who had joined the band in 1937. During his tenure as the Band's director LCDR Mitchell composed the popular march Our Nation's Capital, later honored as the official march of Washington, D.C.{{cite news
|url= https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/05/AR2010060503389.html
|access-date= 4 October 2011
|title= Dreaming of taking the District by song
|first= John
|last= Kelly
|date= 6 June 2010
|newspaper= The Washington Post
|archive-date= 5 March 2016
|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160305021138/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/05/AR2010060503389.html
|url-status= live
}} He also wrote a march for the yet-unbuilt National Cultural Center in Washington, D.C. The National Cultural Center March was first performed and recorded by the band in 1963 and was performed at fundraising events for the Center throughout the early 1960s. In 1964 the center was renamed the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to honor the fallen president. The march's title was changed to the John F. Kennedy Center March in 1964, though it is still often referred to by its original title.
=Crash=
{{main article|1960 Rio de Janeiro mid-air collision}}
There was an aerial collision between two aircraft over Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on February 25, 1960 which carried members of the band.{{cite news|last=Schudel|first=Matt|title=A Local Life: Anthony A. Mitchell, 91 – He Served His Country With Music|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/28/AR2009032801770.html|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=29 March 2009|archive-date=23 December 2015|access-date=30 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151223231648/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/28/AR2009032801770.html|url-status=live}}
=Capitol concerts=
Among the Navy Band's many accomplishments were weekly Monday night concerts, and smaller daily concerts held at the U.S. Capitol.{{citation|title=The National Cultural Center Presents the United States Navy Band|publisher=RCA Victor|year=1963|id=LSP 2688}}
Held on a special stage located on the east side of the Capitol, the daily and weekly concerts ran without interruption from the 1930s until the early 1970s.
In the 1960s, the Navy Band began a series of popular children's performances, known as "Lollypop Concerts".
=Past leaders of the Navy Band=
class="wikitable" | ||
Leader | Years | |
---|---|---|
1 | LT Charles Benter | 1925–1942 |
2 | CDR Charles Brendler | 1942–1962 |
3 | LCDR Anthony A. Mitchell | 1962–1968 |
4 | CDR Donald W. Stauffer | 1968–1973 |
5 | CDR Ned Muffley | 1973–1978 |
6 | CDR William J. Phillips | 1978–1984 |
7 | CDR Allen E. Beck | 1984–1989 |
8 | CDR Phillip H. Field | 1989–1992 |
9 | CAPT William J. Phillips | 1992–1995 |
10 | LCDR John R. Pastin | 1995–1998 |
11 | CAPT Ralph M. Gambone | 1998–2007 |
12 | CAPT George N. Thompson | 2007–2009 |
13 | CAPT Brian O. Walden | 2010–2015 |
14 | CAPT Kenneth Collins | 2015–2024 |
15 | CDR Robert Coats | 2024–
| |
=Radio performances=
From 1929 to 1939, the United States Navy Band took to the airwaves with Arthur Godfrey on NBC's "Hour of Memories" radio program. During World War II, the United States Navy Band supported the sale of war bonds. It assisted in national recruiting efforts, although most of the band's time was spent performing at the daily funerals at Arlington National Cemetery.
At the close of the war in 1945, the radio program "The Navy Hour" was born. It featured such entertainers as Lt. Robert Taylor and Lt.(j.g.) Gene Kelly, with whom the band had appeared in the film Anchors Aweigh. When it went off the air in 1968, "The Navy Hour" had set a record for one of the longest tenures in radio.
=Other notable performances=
File:US_Navy_090826-N-5843P-024_Members_of_the_U.S._Navy_Band,_led_by_drum_major_Master_Chief_Musician_Joe_D._Brown,_marches_on_to_the_parade_grounds_in_front_of_the_Manege_Militaire_de_Quebec_as_part_of_the_opening_ceremony_of_the.jpg, Master Chief Joe D. Brown, wearing a bearskin hat and holding a ceremonial mace while leading members of the United States Navy Ceremonial Band as they march onto the parade grounds in front of the Quebec City Armoury as part of the opening ceremony of the Quebec Music Festival.]]
The United States Navy Band has performed at the following ceremonies and events:
- 1927 – Washington ceremony for Charles Lindbergh.
- 1929 – Washington ceremony for Adm. Richard E. Byrd
- 1962 – Washington, D.C. ceremony for astronaut John Glenn.
- 1963 – Funeral parade and funeral for President John F. Kennedy.
- 1966 – First performance by the Navy Band at New York City's Carnegie Hall
- 1981 – Return of the hostages during the Iran Hostage Crisis
- 1993 – Re-dedication of the Statue of Freedom and the Bicentennial of the United States Capitol
- 1995 – Dedication parade of the Korean War Veterans Memorial
- 1997 – Dedication of the Women in Military Service for America Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery and the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Ceremony of Dedication
- 1998 – Re-dedication of the Wright Brothers National Memorial in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina
- 1999 – Veterans of Foreign Wars 100th Anniversary celebration at their national convention in Kansas City, Missouri
- 2000 – International Naval Review festivities in New York City
- 2001 – "United in Memory" memorial service at the Pentagon
- 2002 – "Beam of Hope" remembrance ceremony at Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C.
=Discography of the U.S. Navy Band=
- 1963 – The National Cultural Center Presents the United States Navy Band, RCA Victor
- 1992 – Music for Honors and Ceremonies
- 1996 – Commemoration
- 1997 – Ports of Call
- 1997 – That Holiday Feeling
- 1998 – Seawolf
- 1998 – Coast to Coast II
- 1999 – Mystic Chords of Memory
- 2000 – American Salute
- 2000 – 75th Anniversary Collection
- 2001 – Celebrations
- 2002 – Music for Chamber Winds
- 2002 – Happy Holidays
- 2003 – Overtures and Finales
- 2005 – Light Cavalry Overture...and other Warhorses
- 2006 – Sail Loft Sounds
- 2006 – World Class Marches
- 2007 – Holiday Wishes
- 2009 – Command Performance
- 2009 – Directions
- 2011 – Derivations
- 2022 – Premieres
= Notable members =
- Victor Salvi, Italian-American harpist, played with the band during World War II, and later with the New York Philharmonic and the NBC Symphony Orchestra, before founding Salvi Harps.
Music
{{div col|colwidth=350px}}
{{Listen|type=music|pos=left|help=no
|filename=Hands Across the Sea.ogg
|title=Hands Across the Sea
|description=John Philip Sousa, "Hands Across the Sea"
|filename2=The Fairest of the Fair.ogg
|title2=The Fairest of the Fair
|description2=Sousa's "The Fairest of the Fair"
|filename3=Eternal Father - U.S. Navy Band.ogg
|title3=Eternal Father, Strong to Save
|description3=William Whiting's "Eternal Father, Strong to Save"
|filename4=A Dream of a Witches' Sabbath - transcribed by Lt. Col. Jack T. Cline - U.S. Navy Band Concert Band.ogg
|title4=A Dream of a Witches' Sabbath
|description4=The fifth movement from Hector Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique, also known as A Dream of a Witches' Sabbath
|filename5=Under the Double Eagle.ogg
|title5=Under the Double Eagle
|description5=Josef Wagner's "Under the Double Eagle"}}
{{Listen|type=music|style=float:left|image=none|help=no
|filename=March Grandioso.ogg
|title=March Grandioso
|description=Roland F. Seitz's "March Grandioso"
|filename2 = Belford's Carnival.ogg
|title2 = Belford's Carnival
|description2= Russell Alexander's "Belford's Carnival"
|filename3 = Anchors Aweigh, 1929 recording.oga
|title3 = Anchors Aweigh (1929)
|description3= 1929 acetate recording of Charles A. Zimmermann's "Anchors Aweigh"
|filename4 = Anchors Aweigh.ogg
|title4 = Anchors Aweigh
|description4= Zimmerman's "Anchors Aweigh"
|filename5 = Auld Lang Syne - U.S. Navy Band.ogg
|title5 = Auld Lang Syne
|description5=Robert Burns "Auld Lang Syne"}}
{{Listen|type=music||style=float:left|image=none
|filename = Florentiner March.ogg
|title = Florentiner March
|description =Julius Fučík's "Florentiner March"
|filename2 = Finale Tchaikovsky Symphony No 4.ogg
|title2 = Finale of Symphony No. 4 in F minor
|description2= Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36
|filename3 = Oberon Overture.ogg
|title3 = Oberon Overture
|description3= Carl Maria von Weber's overture to Oberon
|filename4 = In Storm and Sunshine.ogg
|title4 = In Storm and Sunshine
|description4= John Clifford Heed's "In Storm and Sunshine"}}
{{div col end}}
Gallery
File:US_Navy_011200-N-0773H-003_United_States_Navy_Band.jpg|The United States Navy Band Concert Band performs traditional and popular holiday music for the television special, "Happy Holidays" at DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., 2001.
File:United States Navy Band "Sea Chanters" chorus.jpg|A group photo of the "Sea Chanters" chorus.
File:US Navy 040611-N-1810F-003 The U.S. Navy Band marches into position during the Rotunda Service honoring former President Ronald Reagan in Washington, D.C.jpg|The United States Navy Ceremonial Band marching into position during a 2004 departure ceremony held at the United States Capitol Building during the state funeral of Ronald Reagan in 2004.
File:US Navy 090618-N-0773H-083 Capt. George N. Thompson, commanding officer of the U.S. Navy Ceremonial Band leads band members as they render honors during a 21-gun salute.jpg|Captain George N. Thompson, commanding officer of the United States Navy Ceremonial Band, leads the Drum Major and band members as they render honors during a 19-gun salute at the swearing-in ceremony for Secretary of the Navy (SECNAV) the Honorable Ray Mabus at the Washington Navy Yard.
File:US Navy 071001-N-0773H-059 The United States Navy Ceremonial Band, under the direction of Drum Major, Master Chief Musician Joe D. Brown Jr., stands at attention as Marine Gen. Peter Pace approaches their formation during the c.jpg|The United States Navy Ceremonial Band, under the direction of the Drum Major, Master Chief Musician Joe D. Brown Jr., standing at attention as Marine General Peter Pace approaches their formation during the change of command ceremony for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
File:US Navy 090827-N-0773H-269 The U.S. Navy Band along with La Musique du Royal 22e Regiment, marches off during the closing ceremony of the Quebec Tattoo at the Pepsi Coliseum.jpg|The United States Navy Band along with La Musique du Royal 22e Régiment, marches off during the closing ceremony of the Quebec Tattoo at the Pepsi Coliseum, 27 August 2009.
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
This article incorporates public domain text from a U.S. federal government website.{{clarify|date=March 2021|reason=Which?}}
External links
- {{official|https://www.navyband.navy.mil/}}
{{US Navy navbox}}
{{United States military bands|state=collapsed}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Bands of the United States Navy
Category:Musical groups established in 1925