Schreger's bands - significado y definición. Qué es Schreger's bands
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Qué (quién) es Schreger's bands - definición

MUSICAL ENSEMBLES MAINTAINED BY US UNIFORMED SERVICES
Service band; Service bands; U.S. military bands; U.s. army bands
  • The 144th Illinois National Guard Band during the 2011 Chicago Memorial Day Parade
  • The mounted band of the [[2nd U.S. Cavalry]] leads the parade at the 1902 encampment of the [[Grand Army of the Republic]].
  • The [[2nd Marine Aircraft Wing Band]] marches down New York's Fifth Avenue during the 2010 Columbus Day Parade. In 2007 the band was deployed to Iraq to provide security at a tactical air control center.
  • Taps]]" at [[Arlington National Cemetery]].
  • Drummers of the Fightin' Texas Aggie Band pictured in 2007
  • A U.S. Army band leads the entrance of American troops into [[Verdun, France]] in 1944.
  • Band for the 10th [[Veteran Reserve Corps]] during the [[American Civil War]]
  • The regimental band of the 114th Pennsylvania Infantry in [[zouave]] uniform, pictured in 1864
  • John Philip Sousa, pictured here in the 1880s as commander of the U.S. Marine Band, is credited as America's greatest composer of martial music.
  • For more than 100 years, American martial music was based around the fife.
  • A Coast Guard Pipe Band member pictured in 2015 at Air Station North Bend in [[Oregon]]
  • Civil War-era (1861 – 1865) wooden snare drum. The device on the front of the shell is a Federal eagle below a sunburst motif.
  • Early American military music was centered around the fife, with brass instruments only slowly adopted.
  • The regalia of the [[U.S. Army Europe]] Band, showing (left to right) the baldric, mace, and drum wrap
  • The West Point Band, a premier ensemble, passes in review.
  • A drum-major of the "President's Own" U.S. Marine Band pictured in 2011
  • An early iteration of the U.S. Marine Band's bearskin helmet, shown in the 1859 uniform regulations
  • The Naval Academy Pipes and Drums was established in 1996.

Geneva bands         
  • [[Jean-Baptiste de La Salle]], a Roman Catholic priest, wearing preaching bands
  • stole]], with preaching bands attached to his [[clerical collar]]
FORMAL NECKWEAR CONSISTING OF TWO OBLONG PIECES OF CLOTH TIED AT THE NECK, WORN WITH SOME FORMS OF CLERICAL, JUDICIAL, AND ACADEMIC DRESS
Preaching bands; Bands (neck); Band (neckwear); Preaching tabs; Falling band collar; Barrister's bands; Barrister bands; Geneva bands
¦ plural noun two white cloth strips attached to the collar of some Protestants' clerical dress.
Origin
from Geneva in Switzerland, where orig. worn by Calvinists.
List of Dischord Records bands         
WIKIMEDIA LIST ARTICLE
List of dischord records bands
The following is a list of bands, past and present, who have had recordings released on the Dischord Records label:
Eriochilus cucullatus         
  • flowers with index finger for scale
  • [[Thomas Chalmers]] with parson's bands
SPECIES OF PLANT
Leafless parson's bands
Eriochilus cucullatus, commonly known as parson's bands, or leafless parson's bands, is a plant in the orchid family Orchidaceae and is endemic to Australia. It is a common and widespread, slender ground orchid with a single leaf and up to five small white to pale pink flowers.

Wikipedia

United States military bands

United States military bands include musical ensembles maintained by the United States Army, United States Marine Corps, United States Navy, United States Air Force, and United States Coast Guard. More broadly, they can also include musical ensembles of other federal and state uniformed services, including the Public Health Service and NOAA Corps, the state defense forces, and the senior military colleges.

During the colonial period, most British army units posted in the area that would become the United States had bands attached. The first recorded instance of a local American military band was in 1653 in the New Hampshire militia. The oldest extant United States military band is the United States Marine Corps Band, formed in 1798 and known by the moniker "The President's Own". The U.S. armed forces field eleven ensembles and more than 100 smaller, active-duty and reserve bands.

Bands provide martial music during official events including state arrivals, military funerals, ship commissioning, and change of command and promotion ceremonies; they conduct public performances in support of military public relations and recruitment activities such as street parades and concerts; and they provide popular music groups to entertain deployed military personnel. Most bands of the U.S. armed forces reconfigure into combat units during wartime during which they have non-musical responsibilities, including guarding prisoners of war and defending command centers.

Unlike Canada, the United Kingdom, and some other nations, the United States federal armed forces do not maintain any "voluntary bands", or bands composed of unpaid civilian musicians who dress in military uniforms. All U.S. military bands are composed of regularly enlisted or commissioned military personnel. One exception to this is the United States Coast Guard Pipe Band, which is drawn from the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary.