
Here is a
schedule of the Bands' upcoming events. These have the new Google Maps,
which let you pan and zoom. You can print each
of the maps by holding down the Control Key and press p.
| Friday, August 22, 7:00 PM |
Red Caboose Park, Bellevue - be there
at 6:30 PM  |
Photo
Gallery
 |
Prime Timers' concert at the Gordon
Jewish Community Center - 2007 |
 |
Hillsboro Presbyterian Church - Mental
Health Awareness Week 2007 |
 |
Concert at Centennial Park Bandshell
featuring Music City Legend Drum Corps |
 |
Concert at Fairview Baptist Church,
July 1, 2007 |
 |
Goodlettsville Elementary School Kindergarten Graduation and Circus
Show |
 |
Concert at Hillwood High School |
 |
Christmas Concert at Fairview Baptist
Church |
 |
Christmas Concert at the Tennessee
School for the Blind |
 |
Holocaust Memorial Concert at Gordon
Jewish Community Center |
 |
Concert at Vietnam Wall Experience |
 |
Concert at Fairview Baptist Church
2006 |
 |
Memorial Weekend Events 2006 |
 |
Concert with Vanderbilt Concert Band
with the NCCB at Glencliff High School, April 18 |
 |
Spring Fling at Fairview High School |
 |
Fall Fest 2003 |
 |
Homeland Security Banquet held at the
Opryland Hotel by the U. S. Coast Guard Auxiliary, August 30 2003 |
 |
Concert in the Park, June 29, 2003,
Centennial Park |
 |
Sousa Returns to the Shrine, September
29, 2002, Al Menah Temple |
 |
Christmas Festival with the Glencliff
High School Strings |
 |
Concert at Gordon Jewish Community
Center |
From
the Archives:
 |
The Community
Band with the Hamilton Road United Methodist Church and Donelson Heights
United Methodist Church performed a concert at the Donelson
Church. The event recorded and produced a CD to raise funds for
the Mountain Top Ministry which helps the poverty stricken in the Appalachians
of Tennessee. |
 |
The Community
Band performed here at the Cheekwood Mansion in 1982. |
 |
The Community
Band shown here for a group shot at East Nashville High School
Gymnasium, 1979. |
The
Battle of the Bands…Stones River 1862
by
Henry
Matthew Ward
It
was December 30, 1862 just outside Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
Eighty thousand Confederate and Union soldiers were camped on the banks
of the Stones River. The two
encampments were close enough that they could hear each other.
Then the Union Army band struck up
The Battlecry of Freedom, a popular war song of the Northern troops.
Not
to be intimidated, the Confederate band hastily assembled their instruments and
responded with Dixie.
The Yankee band followed with Yankee
Doodle and perhaps Battle Hymn of the
Republic. The Southern
band answered with The Yellow Rose of
Texas and other southern songs of the era.
Back and forth the bands battled to play just a little faster or higher
or louder than their counterpart. Then
a remarkable thing happened…
One
of the bands started playing a song that had been published recently and had
quickly gained popularity in both the North and the South because it reflected
the sentiments of both in a period when its words were of special significance.
The
other band, by coincidence had the very same arrangement and quickly joined in. Soon, thousands of men in both camps were singing along.
How poignant the scene must have been.
Rarely do opposing forces of this magnitude share a common language,
customs, and songs. But, on the eve
of one of the bloodiest battles of our Civil War, mortal enemies sang in unison
and with, no doubt, many a tear shed…Home, Sweet Home.
Ironically
and sadly, the next day, New Year’s Eve 1862, the Battle of Stones River began
in earnest. Over a four day period ending January 3, 1863, 10,266 Confederate
and 13,259 Union soldiers lay dead, wounded, or missing in action.
In all, 23,525 casualties…most of whom would never see Home, Sweet Home
again.
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