History The rise of brass bands in nineteenth-century Britain owed much to industrialisation, armed conflict, and improvements to instrument designs. Village and church ensembles had existed in the eighteenth century, while military bands, which featured a mix of woodwind, brass, and percussion instruments, proliferated during the
Napoleonic Wars. The
British Army began experimenting with all-brass bands from the late 1810s; the first civilian brass bands, featuring instruments such as keyed bugles, trumpets and trombones, emerged by the end of the 1820s. These early brass ensembles were often organised by former regimental musicians: the Waterloo veteran James Sanderson led a 'military brass band' in Leamington Spa and Warwick in 1829. Wind and brass bands enjoyed the support of industrial employers who sponsored bands to promote discipline, community spirit, and temperance among their workers. The advent of
Adolphe Sax's valved brass designs, which were easier to play and produced a more accurate, consistent sound, also helped fuel the growth of the brass band movement from the 1840s. Arguably brass bands were an expression of the local solidarity and aspirations of newly formed or rapidly growing communities. This was seen, for instance, in the creation of large-scale brass band competitions by the late 1850s. Brass bands reached their peak in the 1890s, when there were around 5,000 brass bands in the country. Today, there are 1,200 brass bands in Britain with around 30,000 players. Many British bands were originally either works bands or sponsored by various industrial concerns. This was particularly evident in coal mining areas, for example, bands such as the
Grimethorpe Colliery Band and
Carlton Main Frickley Colliery Band in Yorkshire. Bands sponsored by factories include The
Black Dyke Mills Band,
Yorkshire Imperial Band (originally the Yorkshire Copperworks Band),
Foden's sponsored by the truck manufacturer,
Fairey sponsored by the aircraft manufacturer, and
Leyland Band sponsored by the vehicle manufacturer. One of the reasons for this was to keep the workers from organizing in radical groups. With the decline of these industries several bands have dissolved and others now draw their membership from other industries and other parts of the community. The
Brighouse and Rastrick Band, is unique in having operated continually at the highest level without sponsorship, drawing its income from regular concerts, public donations and sales of recordings and merchandise. The leading bands in Wales include the
Cory Band,
Tredegar Town Band and Tongwynlais Temperance Band The leading bands in Scotland are
The Cooperation Band (formally Co-operative Funeralcare), Whitburn Band and the Kirkintilloch Band. All these bands compete at the highest level in the banding movement. In Northern Ireland the Brass Band League currently has 26 members. There are also many non-contesting or 'community' brass bands in the UK providing entertainment for audiences and enjoyment for musicians of all ages.
Contesting in the United Kingdom British banding is highly competitive, with bands organized into five sections much like a football league –
Championship section,
1st section,
2nd section,
3rd section and
4th section. Competitions are held throughout the year at local, regional, and national levels, and at the end of each year there are promotions and relegations. At a national level the main contest is the
National Brass Band Championship, and this determines a band's section. For this, the UK is split into 8 regions: London and Southern Counties, Midlands, North of England, North West, Scotland, Wales, West of England, and Yorkshire. Each year in Spring the bands compete in a regional contest for their section, and the top two or three in each section go on to the "National Finals" in Autumn. As of 2025, the finals for Sections 1 to 4 are held at The Centaur at
Cheltenham Racecourse, and the finals for the Championship Section at the
Royal Albert Hall in London (as featured in the film
Brassed Off). The bands are awarded points for their result (1st gets 1 point, 9th gets 9 points), and this is added to the previous two years to give a three-year total. Two or three bands with the best total are promoted, and two or three bands are relegated. There are also separate contests for university brass bands, including the annual UniBrass contest, founded at
Lancaster University in 2010 and hosted in 2025 by the
University of Cardiff. The Cambridge and Oxford University brass bands also compete against each other in annual
'varsity' contests. The National Youth Band Brass Championships held annually has a Youth Champs' non-competitive section offering the opportunity for young people new to brass to take part and contribute a performance without the pressure of competition. ==The Salvation Army==