0
Young Tuxedo Brass Band
Young Tuxedo Brass Band
American brass band
1
Rebirth Brass Band
Rebirth Brass Band
American brass band
2
Olympia Brass Band
Olympia Brass Band
musical group
3
Trombone Shorty
Trombone Shorty
American trombone player
4
Mama Digdown's Brass Band
Mama Digdown's Brass Band
musical artist
5
Daniel Herskedal
Daniel Herskedal
Norwegian musician
6
Youngblood Brass Band
Youngblood Brass Band
band
7
Clark Gayton
Clark Gayton
American musician
8
Hazmat Modine
Hazmat Modine
American world jazz blues band based in New York City
9
Stanton Moore
Stanton Moore
Jazz-Musician
10
brass quintet
brass quintet
five-piece musical ensemble composed of brass instruments
11
The Toasters
The Toasters
American ska band
12
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
American musical group; New Orleans, Louisiana, brass band
13
Steve Turre
Steve Turre
American jazz trombonist
14
Galactic
Galactic
band
To Be Continued Brass Band
American brass band from Louisiana

To Be Continued Brass Band

Intro
American brass band from Louisiana
Music

To Be Continued Brass Band, or TBC Brass Band, the subject of a documentary titled From the Mouthpiece on Back, is a jazz band formed in 2002 by young men who grew up in the 7th and 9th Wards in New Orleans, Louisiana. They sought to avoid the life that befell many of their friends and classmates involving drugs and violence by creating a jazz and brass band. The band started at Carver and Kennedy Senior High School in New Orleans where the band's eventual ex leader and former tuba player, Jason Slack, borrowed instruments from Carver's band director. Some of the instruments were taped together. For example, the tuba was taped with duct tape to patch a hole in the horn. The band received permission from Carver's principal to play a set on the school grounds. The school's reaction simply was "wow," and the TBC Brass Band was on its way.

TBC started with no manager and no guaranteed gigs so the band played on the streets of New Orleans, establishing a presence on the corner of the legendary Bourbon and Canal Streets in the French Quarter. The band quickly became popular, and hordes of fans spontaneously surrounded the band and danced around the band's regular street corner. As explanation for the band members' support and love for another, the band's trumpet player succinctly states "We sometimes say, we're all we got. Well, we're all we got."

In addition, TBC continued the time-honored New Orleans tradition of leading "second line" parades at funerals of members of their community. Second line is a unique New Orleans parade where a jazz band accompanies the family of the deceased at the grave site with somber tunes. But once outside the cemetery, as the procession hits the streets, the band erupts into celebratory life-affirming music as the bereaved dance in celebration of the life of the deceased.