Eric 
                COATES (1886 – 1957) The 
                Dam Busters – Film Theme (1954) 
                DAVIS 
                Jenny Wren 
                Robert FARNON 
                (1917 – 2005) Smiles ‘N’ Chuckles 
                
                Jaime TEXIDOR 
                (1884 – 1957) Amparito Roca (1925) 
                
                Ronald BINGE 
                (1910 – 1979) Flash Harry 
                Arthur PRYOR 
                (1870 – 1942) The Whistler and his 
                Dog (1905) 
                John Philip 
                SOUSA (1854 – 1932) High 
                School Cadets 
                Easthope MARTIN 
                (1882 – 1925) Evensong 
                John BELTON 
                (pseudonym for Tony 
                LOWRY and Douglas 
                BROWNSMITH (1902 – 1965)) Down 
                the Mall (1927) 
                P BEECHFIELD-CARVER 
                The Jolly Airman 
                Harry PARR-DAVIS 
                (1914 – 1955) Sing As We Go (1934) 
                
                Jack STRACHEY 
                (1894 – 1972) Eros in Piccadilly 
                
                Eric COATES 
                Knightsbridge (from London Suite) 
                Eduard WAGNES 
                Die Bosniaken Kommen 
                Joseph BERGEIM 
                Music in the Park 
                Arnold STECK 
                (pseudonym for Major 
                Leslie STATHAM MBE) (1905 – 1974) 
                Royal Review 
                Vivian DUNN 
                (1908 – 1995) Cockleshell Heroes 
                – Film Theme 
                Hermann STARKE 
                With Sword and Lance 
                Edrich SIEBERT 
                (pseudonym for Stanley 
                SMITH–MASTER) (1903 – 1984) Over 
                the Sticks 
                Tony LOWRY 
                Golden Spurs 
                James L TARVER 
                (b 1916) El Charro 
                Kenneth J ALFORD 
                (pseudonym for Frederick 
                Joseph RICKETTS) (1881 – 1945) 
                The Great Little Army (1916) 
                Roger BARSOTTI 
                (b 1901) New Post Horn Galop 
                A E SIMS 
                March of the Royal Air Forces Association 
                
                Karl KOMZAK 
                (1850 – 1905) Vindobona 
                Alexander BORODIN 
                (1833 – 1887), arranged by Dan 
                GODFREY (1868 – 1939) Prince 
                Igor - llet Dances (1869/1887) 
                Band of H M Grenadier Guards/Capt George 
                Miller (Knightsbridge, Starke); Band 
                of The Queen’s Royal Regiment/Roger 
                Barsotti (Barsotti); Band of The Royal 
                Marines School Of Music/Vivian Dunn 
                (Dunn); Band of The Royal Netherlands 
                Navy/Capt G Nieuwland (Lowry, Steck); 
                BBC Wireless Military Band/B Walton 
                O'Donnell (Borodin, Martin, Parr-Davies); 
                Black Diamonds Band (Pryor); CWS (Manchester) 
                Band/Alex Mortimer (Siebert); Deutschmeister 
                Kapelle/Julius Herrmann (Komzak, Wagnes); 
                Fodens Motor Works Band (Belton); Grand 
                Massed Bands/James Oliver (Alford, Sousa); 
                Grenadier Guards Band/Major F J Harris 
                (Binge, Tarver, Texidor); Irish Guards 
                Band (Bergeim); William Lang (Cornet 
                Solo) Black Dyke Mills Band/Arthur O 
                Pearce (Davis); New Era Symphonic Band/Michael 
                John (Farnon); The RAF Central Band/Squadron 
                Leader A E Sims (Beechfield-Carver, 
                Dam Busters, Sims, Strachey) 
                
              
  
              
EMI has its GROC – 
                Great Recordings of the Century - and 
                Guild has its GALM, its miscellaneous 
                compilation albums devoted to that amorphous 
                sub-genre known as the Golden Age of 
                Light Music. This one is a continuation 
                of its Bandstand in the Park sub-series 
                with its evocative LNER poster art from 
                1930; Bridlington by Henry George 
                Gawthorn (1879-1941), all dappled sunlight 
                on the promenade, blazers and knee length 
                skirts, a military band visible in the 
                bandstand; turquoise parasols twirling 
                in the light breeze. A land where the 
                Great Crash never intruded. 
              
 
              
Despite the specificity 
                of the cover artwork the dates of recordings 
                range between 1929 and 1955. The disc 
                opens with the last of them, a number 
                that will swell the chests of patriotic 
                Englishmen everywhere; the Eric Coates 
                theme from The Dam Busters, a 
                tune so good even Adrian Boult loved 
                it. That’s followed by a sparkling and 
                virtuosic example of cornet playing 
                from William Lang and the Black Dyke 
                Mills conducted by Arthur O. Pearce. 
                Robert Farnon is heard in cheeky form 
                in Smiles ‘n’ Chuckles whereas 
                there’s a famous old novelty staple 
                in the line-up as well – The Whistler 
                and his Dog. This is played by the 
                Black Diamonds Band on a 1929 Zonophone 
                but it was made famous of course by 
                Arthur Pryor of Sousa’s band. 
              
 
              
Easthope Martin’s evergreen 
                Evensong is played smoothly by 
                the elite BBC Wireless Military Band 
                conducted by B. Walton O’Donnell in 
                1932 whilst the aviation branch 
                of the fighting forces is represented 
                by the Central Band of the RAF. They 
                essay the wholly appropriate The 
                Jolly Airman from 1956 – confident, 
                breezy, post-War optimistic and full 
                of swing. I think it was Terry Jones 
                of Monty Python (and Chaucerian Studies) 
                fame who did the dirty on Harry Parr-Davies’s 
                Sing As We Go - which 
                is again a BBC Wireless/O’Donnell recording 
                - and appropriated its melody for one 
                of his naughty songs. No such fate befell 
                – or has befallen – the confident swagger 
                of Vivian Dunn’s Cockleshell Heroes. 
                His Marines School of Music orchestra 
                is one of the many and varied such bands 
                on this disc. Another is the Band of 
                the Royal Netherlands Navy directed 
                by Captain G. Nieuwland – and a stirring 
                show they make of Tony Lowry’s Golden 
                Spurs. The ‘March King’ – Kenneth 
                Alford – is represented by The Great 
                Little Army which is a typically 
                winning and spruce march. The final 
                track represents two sides of a 1934 
                Columbia 78; The Prince Igor Ballet 
                Dances in this arrangement by Dan Godfrey 
                and once more in the capable embouchures 
                of the men of the BBC Military Wireless 
                Band under O’Donnell. 
              
 
              
Charismatic military 
                blowing has been intelligently harnessed 
                in the interest of a varied programme. 
                If some of the earlier sides are too 
                treble starved for my tastes then the 
                later ones are better. As ever, top 
                notch notes. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf 
                
              
see also review 
                by Bob Briggs