In Rigoletto the banda (stage band) and in La Traviata the orchestra open their respective first acts with the main musical ideas …—Martin Chusid, Verdi's Middle Period, 1997
: a Mexican band traditionally featuring brass instruments, tambora, and often woodwinds and singers
He told me that the banda had visited the United States already in 1948 to play in Los Angeles on the Fourth of July, American Independence Day.—Helena Simonett, Banda, 2001
called alsotambora
2
: music played by a banda
While regional Mexican music incorporates other traditional styles, banda is unique in its energizing percussive power and commanding horns.—Billboard, 15 Nov. 2003
called alsotambora
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
borrowed from Swahili
Noun (2)
borrowed from Italian, "troop, band, band of musicians," borrowed from Middle French bande and Old Occitan bandaband entry 3
Noun (3)
borrowed from Spanish, "group, troop, band of musicians," in part borrowed from French bandeband entry 3, in part continuing earlier banda "flock, herd," perhaps of pre-Latin origin
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