Scales & Theory
Marching Band Life
Composers
Instruments
Band History
100

This is the distance between two notes, such as from C to D

Interval

100

This term refers to the precise physical position a marcher must maintain during a hold or set

A dot

100

Deaf composer

Ludwig van Beethoven

100

This brass instrument uses a slide instead of valves to change pitch

Trombone

100

This military group founded in 1798 is the oldest professional musical ensemble in the United States

United States Marine Band

200

Scale pattern for a major scale

WWHWWWH

200

This technique involves rolling the foot heel-to-toe to create smooth, silent marching

Roll Stepping

200

This composer, known as the “March King,” helped popularize American band music in the late 1800s

John Phillip Sousa

200

This woodwind instrument uses a double reed and has a low, haunting sound

Bassoon

200

John Philip Sousa led this military band before starting his own civilian concert band

United States Marine Band

300

This key signature has one sharp

G Major

300

This term refers to the precise angle at which a marcher’s instrument should be held while performing

Horn Angle

300

This English composer is known for The Planets suite, including the famous “Mars” movement

Gustav Holst

300

The marimba, xylophone, and vibraphone are all part of this percussion subgroup

Mallet Percussion

300

Modern high school and college marching bands evolved from this type of ensemble used to keep troops in formation

Military Bands

400

This is the term for a key that shares the same key signature but has a different tonic

Relative Key

400

This formation technique, often used during parades or field shows, requires marchers to form a straight line while maintaining perfect alignment both vertically and horizontally

Cover down / Dressing the line

400

This Austrian composer, known for his operas such as The Magic Flute, also composed a famous set of piano sonatas and symphonies, and was a child prodigy

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

400

Small mouthpiece, very close intervals, key of F

French Horn

400

This Ivy League school claims to have the oldest college marching band in the U.S., founded in 1919

Harvard University

500

This term describes the set of pitches used in music that divides the octave into 12 equal parts

Equal Temperament 

500

This term refers to the precise, synchronized movement where all members of the band step at the same time, with the same foot, while maintaining uniformity in both spacing and timing

Mark Time

500

This composer of Lincolnshire Posy was also known for collecting and arranging English folk songs, and for sometimes performing barefoot

Percy Grainger

500

This instrument is a keyboard percussion instrument with metal bars and is often mistaken for a xylophone

Glockenspiel

500

This 20th-century event caused many school bands in the United States to shift their focus from orchestral instruments to wind and percussion, laying the groundwork for the modern concert band

World ar II