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Stars and Stripes Forever is a patriotic American marching song. It is the magnum opus of composer John Philip Sousa. By act of Congress, it is the National March of the United States of America.
In his autobiography, Marching Along, Sousa told how he composed it on Christmas Day 1896. He had just learned of the recent death of David Blakely, then manager of the Sousa Band. Sousa was on a ferry in Europe at the time, and he composed the march in his head. He committed the notes to paper on arrival in America. Although he would conduct performances of it at virtually every concert until his death, only one recording, made in 1909, survives today.
Stars and Stripes Forever follows the standard march form (IAABBCDCDC). However, this particular march carries what modern conductors call an uplifting musicality to it. The introduction is simple, and yet it immediately hooks the audience and brings them to the first strain; two upbeat phrases followed by a sudden five-eightnote statement carried by the low brass. The second strain carries a more mellow and proud phrasing, which leads right into probably the widest-known trio section (i.e., third section, C) in the world. Sousa put lyrics to its trio, but they are not known by many. In fact, the trio was so popular, it became a model for other various lyrics including:
Stars and Stripes Forever features in the majority of U.S. musical performances. It is often spontaneously played immediately following the last scheduled piece on a program. Audiences often clap along to the beat. Many bands tend to adopt the Sousa Band arrangement of having piccolo players in front, and play the famous obbligato in the first repeat of the trio. In the grandioso, the low brass will join the piccolo players and play out their counter-melody.