Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (Percussion Arrangement)
This is an all-percussion arrangement I attempted of another military march by John Philip Sousa; this is entitled "Nobles of the Mystic Shrine." All that really has changed was me experimenting with concert percussion instead of using the battery percussion I usually do. It's good to experiment, though; it gets boring doing the same things over and over again.
To play it this way, you need the following instruments:
3 sets of glockenspiels
3 sets of crotales
3 xylophones
Tubular bells
4 vibraphones
6 marimbas (2 grand staff, 2 treble clef, 2 bass clef)
Concert Percussion 1 (snare drum, bass drum, crash cymbals)
Concert Percussion 2 (triangle, tambourine)
3 sets of steel drums (grand staff)
This arrangement © me and me alone
Original music is now public domain
Nobles of the Mystic Shrine: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGQ4CMqXw60
To play it this way, you need the following instruments:
3 sets of glockenspiels
3 sets of crotales
3 xylophones
Tubular bells
4 vibraphones
6 marimbas (2 grand staff, 2 treble clef, 2 bass clef)
Concert Percussion 1 (snare drum, bass drum, crash cymbals)
Concert Percussion 2 (triangle, tambourine)
3 sets of steel drums (grand staff)
This arrangement © me and me alone
Original music is now public domain
Nobles of the Mystic Shrine: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGQ4CMqXw60
Category Music / Classical
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 120 x 63px
File Size 3.04 MB
Listed in Folders
Battery percussion are the drums you hear when you're officiating those football games. It sounds like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lokGCoiGHE8
Whereas concert percussion is what you hear in a concert band or symphony orchestra.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lokGCoiGHE8
Whereas concert percussion is what you hear in a concert band or symphony orchestra.
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