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Free Streaming Concert Tonight 9/17/2025

Streaming Concert Tonight: 7:00 PM EDT, USA

Morris Plains Community Band

Church website for livestream https://mppresby.org/pcmp-live-stream-worship/ or follow the YouTube below.
Go to YouTube, then search Morris Plains Community Band

Background:

The modern American community band is rooted in European tradition. Immigrants, like the German Moravians who settled in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, brought the band tradition with them. The Moravians organized bands in towns where they settled and they offered both secular and religious music selections. The Moravian bands are still playing in Moravian communities, such as in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Community bands in the United States often emerged from militia or military bands. The earliest amateur bands in the United States did occasionally include woodwind instruments but band and band music emphasized primarily the brass instruments. The popularity of early community bands can be attributed to the participation of thousands of ordinary citizens in these ensembles and the patriotic appeal of the music and performance.
There is one estimate that there were 10,000 bands in the United States in 1889. Of those, close to 100 are still active.[1] Wartime patriotism, such as the War of 1812, the Civil War, World War I and II, and even the war with Iraq have added to the popularity and number of community bands.
In 1921, the famous band composer Karl King was influential in establishing the Iowa Band Law, which allowed cities to levy a local tax "for the maintenance and employment of a band for musical purposes". This law was eventually adopted by 28 other states.[2]

Community bands experienced a great dying out after the end of World War I, victims of the automobile, new mass media and a large cultural shift. This actually led to a rise in school music programs when the death of community bands left instrument manufacturers without a market for their product, so they marketed heavily to schools.
The increased number of musicians who learned to play an instrument in high school or college bands but did not pursue music as a career has also provided a rich pool of amateur talent seeking an outlet for their musical abilities. An increased availability of music written for concert band has also benefitted the community band from after World War II to the present.
A community band is a concert band or brass band ensemble composed of volunteer (non-paid) musicians in a particular geographic area. It may be sponsored by the local (municipal) government or self-supporting. These groups rehearse regularly and perform at least once a year. Some bands are also marching bands, participating in parades and other outdoor events. Although they are volunteer musical organizations, community bands may employ an Artistic Director (conductor) or various operational staff.

Community bands can also be known as "town", "citizen", "city", "municipal" (which may pay their members) or "civic" bands. They may use the terms "wind orchestra", "wind symphony" or "wind ensemble" in place of "band" or some variation of the terms (e.g. "symphonic winds"). A group of this type often includes the name of the community or organization which sponsors it, the town or county where it is based, or a local geographical landmark or regional term in its name.

There was a time when almost every village and hamlet had a town band – concerts in the park, people of all ages playing their instruments, families of two and three generations playing in the band together.
In Morris Plains, the town band was led by the village blacksmith, a man named Larry Monahan who taught free music lessons to the kids in town, and when they were ready, formed them into a band that he led continuously for fifty-three years. On his death in 1940, the members of the band renamed it the L. Monahan Memorial Band and kept it going for another 13 years until it finally disbanded in 1953.
And now, after a hiatus of 62 years, there is a town band in Morris Plains once again. Organized by retired musician and bandleader Larry Ripley, our first rehearsal, October 21, 2015, drew twenty players, ages 11 to 70+ with a pretty good balance of instruments.

Years later, the band continues to grow playing a wide range of music from movie and Broadway tunes to popular classical works to traditional American music and marches
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exexec · 70-79, C
Thanks for the reminder. I have a note posted.

 
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