This Sousa wind band series continues to grow. One has to admit 
                that Sousa’s prolific output of stirring tunes is justly acknowledged 
                by Naxos. This inventive composer has found many textural corners 
                to turn in a march, even if some of his musical devices have become 
                predictable. 
                  
                The most interesting track for many will be the long forgotten 
                
El Capitan: in this compilation there is a generous selection 
                covering the numbers from this Broadway show. Many forget that 
                Sousa was an enthusiastic composer for the stage, with nine operettas 
                to his name, written between the 1880s and early 1900s. Of them 
                
El Capitan is the most notable. A 
Bride Elect selection 
                was included in Volume 4 of this series, and marches from both 
                operettas appeared in Volume 7. 
                  
                Some of the titles provide little indication of the music to follow. 
                In 
The Northern Pines, the only connection happens to be 
                the location of a national music camp in Michigan. Likewise, the 
                
Crusader March having associations with the Knights Templar, 
                carries no aural link yet it is a good piece with an excellent 
                sense of flow, punctuated by fanfare sections. 
                  
                Sousa is always sparkling in style. His fun and humour is perhaps 
                most apparent in his use of novel decoration for the comic cuts 
                introduced in track 7, 
On the Campus, the only track to 
                include a chorus. Up to now, the most famous of Sousa marches 
                that had been missing from the previous volumes in this series, 
                
The Washington Post, now makes an appearance as the last 
                track. This sturdy piece echoed round many a circus ring in Britain 
                and on the Continent as well as America before being flung into 
                popularity by the BBC’s 
Monty Python programme. In contrast 
                the delicately phrased waltz style, 
O Warrior Grim is a 
                tranquil piece with carefully balanced cornet solo (by Martin 
                Hinton). 
                  
                Keith Brion needs to be congratulated for the most successful 
                ambience. Then there’s precision playing by the Royal Artillery 
                Band and a recording nicely balanced by Mike Purton. In military 
                music there is often a tendency for the percussion to mask the 
                more delicate phrases of woodwind, yet here much sensitivity is 
                shown to provide us with wide dynamics and colour. 
                  
                The notes, in English only, are adequate yet disappointing; all 
                the more so when the jewel case is filled with a lavish catalogue 
                on heavy-weight paper of Naxos American Classics. This catalogue 
                is likely to be discarded. More information about Sousa’s background 
                and influences would have been welcomed, considering his enormous 
                output of some two hundred pieces. 
                  
                
Raymond J Walker