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Anchormen's music is back in Marsden; Marsden will be alive with the sounds of jazz this weekend and, as VAL JAVIN reports, one particular ensemble takes with them a real sense of history.


Byline: VAL 1. VAL - Value-oriented Algorithmic Language. J.B. Dennis, MIT 1979. Single assignment language, designed for MIT dataflow machine. Based on CLU, has iteration and error handling, lacking in recursion and I/O. "A Value- Oriented Algorithmic Language", W.B.  JAVIN

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It's a big weekend for music fans with the start on Friday of the 17th Marsden Jazz Festival Noun 1. jazz festival - a festival that features performances by jazz artists
festival, fete - an organized series of acts and performances (usually in one place); "a drama festival"
.

Few of the many festival performers will be playing with more pzazz and quiet pride than Elland-based The Anchormen Ensemble.

It's the fourth year that the brass and rhythm of The Anchormen Ensemble will be heard in the Colne Valley The Colne Valley is a steep sided valley on the east flank of the Pennine Hills in the English county of West Yorkshire. It takes its name from the River Colne which rises above the town of Marsden and flows eastward along the floor of the valley. . The musicians are thrilled to be playing in the centre of Marsden at noon on Sunday.

"We did one gig on the back of a truck and last year we were in a marquee up at Stand edge. They were turning people away," said Kevin Riley This article or section needs copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone and/or spelling.
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, who has been involved in banding since he was 11, a mere 23 years ago.

He's typical of the profile of what seems to make an Anchorman, as is fellow musician Robin Barraclough, who admits to 34 years in banding, with no loss of appetite loss of appetite Medtalk Anorexia, see there  for a sound that will go down a storm in Marsden this weekend.

But The Anchormen Ensemble that pays tribute to the music of Stan Kenton Stanley Newcomb Kenton (December 15, 1911 – August 25, 1979) (pianist) led a highly innovative, influential, and often controversial American jazz orchestra. In later years he was widely active as an educator.  and the big band sound of Buddy Rich is only part of a much wider Anchormen organisation.

The larger grouping has its roots in a long-established musical past but is working hard to interest a new generation of young musicians.

And it seems to be working.

"The Anchormen have been going for a lot of years in Elland. It was traditionally a marching band with links to the Boys' Brigade and as things developed, they went into a drum and bugle bugle, brass wind musical instrument consisting of a conical tube coiled once upon itself, capable of producing five or six harmonics. It is usually in G or B flat.  corps," said Robin.

The Anchormen are thought to be one of the oldest corps in the country, tracing their roots back to 1904, when the Boys' Brigade arrived in Elland.

Within a year the company was enrolled and in uniform. Soon afterwards a drum and bugle band was parading through Elland in church parades and other events.

The band grew under the captaincy of Harold Savage and by 1932 had its own headquarters, the Harold Savage Hall which today is the base for The Anchormen.

The organisation includes not just the adult jazz ensemble but a junior section which sees youngsters learning music and movement skills.

It's a signal that The Anchormen have adapted with the times. In the Sixties and Seventies they were at the forefront of the marching band scene, appearing on TV, representing England overseas and winning the national Boys' Brigade Championship year after year.

As the Eighties approached so did the influence of American drum corps style.

And The Anchormen went with the new trend, including girls in the new-look corps and expanding their skills to compete in what is known as Winter guard.

Robin says: "We have a drum line and we have a Winter guard, which consists mainly of girls. But boys are very welcome and the age group is between seven and 25.

"They use flags and imitation rifles and perform a show to a piece of music."

"It's competitive certainly but it's also great fun and gets youngsters involved in what is a real community.

"It's about doing things as an organisation. We want people to come down and learn brass instruments, but for the youngsters the Winter guard offers more dance opportunities to modern rather than traditional music."

"It shows the fun element and that, with a lot of hard work, becomes a company and a community," he added.

The youngsters rehearse on Tuesday nights between 7 and 9pm and during the competitive season do some Sunday work, too. There are place for new members if anyone wants to join in.

The hall at Elland offers space for the drum corps to rehearse its music and its marching, for the Winter guard to go through its show-style paces, plus a band room where The Anchormen Ensemble can rehearse its big band sound.

For just as the junior sections of the organisation have adapted to changing times so too have the adult musicians whose skills will be on display in Marsden.

"We've stepped up a gear in our music too. There's still an appetite for the music of Stan Kenton and from the best swing bands," said Robin The 20-plus piece band was formed nine years ago and combines brass players with a rhythm section. To the baritone and mellophone mel·lo·phone  
n.
A brass wind instrument, similar to the French horn, often used in military or marching bands.



[mello(w) + -phone.]
 instruments (both Robin and Kevin play baritone) add trumpets, trombones, plus percussion, bass, guitar and piano.

Rachel Rothery is the band's vocalist and Frank Wade, driving force behind the band, does all its musical arrangements.

Expect tunes such as Bird land, Gospel John, Aquarius, Pegasus and Hey Jude and echoes of both Kenton and of Maynard Ferguson.

And as you listen to The Anchormen Ensemble applaud an organisation that is doing its best to introduce a new generation to the community of banding, but with a very different style.

'It's a sound that will go down a storm in Marsden this weekend'

CAPTION(S):

YOUNG BLOOD: The youngsters of the Elland-based Anchormen, working hard to interest a new generation; MARSDEN HERE WE COME: The Elland-based The Anchormen will play at this weekend's jazz festival; SENSE OF TIMING: The Elland-based Anchormen pictured in 1965, traditionally a marching band with links to the Boys' Brigade; EARLY DAYS: The Anchormen pictured here in 1911
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Publication:Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England)
Date:Oct 9, 2008
Words:881
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