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Pomp and Circumstance Marches
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====Description==== The march has an opening section consisting mainly of two-bar rhythmic phrases which are repeated in various forms, and a lyrical ''Trio'' constructed like the famous "Land of Hope and Glory" trio of March No. 1. The first eight bars of the march is played by the full orchestra with the melody played by the violas<ref>One might expect the tune from the violins, with the violas playing a lower part</ref> and upper woodwind. Both harps play from the beginning, while the cellos, double basses and timpani contribute a simple bass figure. The bass clarinet, contrabassoon, trombones and tuba are held "in reserve" for the repeat, when the first violins join the violas with the tune. There are subdued fanfares from the brass interrupted by little flourishes from the strings before the opening march is repeated. There is pause, then a little section which starts forcefully but quietens, leading into the ''Trio''. The ''Trio'' follows the pattern of March No. 1, with the melody (in the [[subdominant]] key of C) played by clarinet, horn and violins. The violins start the ''Trio'' tune on the lowest note they can play, an open G-string, which gives a recognisable "twang" to this one note, and they are directed to play the passage ''sul G'' on the same string, for the sake of the tone-colour, and the accompaniment is from the harps, low strings and bassoons. The grand tune is repeated, as we expect, by the full orchestra; the opening march section returns; the grand tune is repeated once more, in the "home" key of G major; and the last word is had by a re-statement of the opening rhythmic patterns. The march prepares the audience for its end as surely as a train pulling into a station, with the violins, violas, and cellos ending on their resonant open G.
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