


James Stephenson
Fanfare for Democracy
Duration: 3'
Instrumentation: Orchestra
Fanfare for Democracy, James M. Stephenson (2020) 3'
for orchestra
The orchestral version was commissioned by an orchestra from each of the 50 states, plus Washington D.C.. and debuted by the Boston Pops on their annual televised July 4 broadcast, 2021, with Keith Lockhart conducting.
During a walk on an unusually warm Saturday, after the presidential election of 2020, I felt a huge sense of relief in the air surrounding an affirmation of our democratic process. Everyone was outside and there was palpable electricity.
I began to hear a fanfare in my head and I couldn’t shake it. I wrote it down later that afternoon in an attempt to capture the spirit of hope espoused in millions of Americans. Out of respect for our country’s musical history, there are subtle hints to our National Anthem (bass line at measure 17), and to Copland’s most well-known “Fanfare to the Common Man” (penultimate measure in percussion).
A few days later I sent it to Jason Fettig, the director at “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band. Much to my delight and surprise, he responded that he would program it for use during the Prelude Concert at the 59th Inaugural Ceremony to be held at the US Capitol, to honor President Joe Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris.
I was absolutely thrilled beyond words that this fanfare, written out of pure inspiration in response to a moment in history, was premiered at one of our country’s most important moments in history.
Jim Stephenson – Music composed on November 7, 2020
Instrumentation: 2222 – 4331 – perc – hp – strings
Shipping & Returns
Physical copies ship in 2-3 business days.
Digital copies delivered to customer email upon checkout.
Returns accepted for physical copies within 30 days of delivery.
Returns are not accepted for digital products.
About the Work
Duration: 3'
Instrumentation: Orchestra
Commissioned by: The orchestral version was commissioned by an orchestra from each of the 50 states, plus Washington D.C.. and debuted by the Boston Pops on their annual televised July 4 broadcast, 2021, with Keith Lockhart conducting.