Work louder, please.
Dear Word Detective: I find myself and others using the expression “to beat the band” to indicate something is being done well, thoroughly, or furiously. Where does the phrase originate? — Pat Edgar.
Good question. That’s one of those “I can’t believe that I’ve been saying (or seeing or hearing) that expression my whole life and never stopped to wonder what it really meant” questions. While that’s not a revelation on a par with “My Prius hates me,” it’s a little embarrassing for someone in my position. I’m supposed to at least notice such things and, optimally, to figure them out before I’m asked.
The first thing that popped into my mind on considering “beat the band” was the “Stump the Band” routine that Johnny Carson made a staple of his tenure on the Tonight Show on NBC. I was never a big fan of Carson (though he now seems a veritable Noel Coward compared to his successors), but somehow I managed to catch this bit at least a hundred times. Johnny would ask an audience member to name an obscure song, and if the band couldn’t play it (or even if they could), the contestant would win dinner for two at someplace no one had ever heard of.
Unfortunately, none of that has anything to do with “beat the band” meaning, as you say, to exceed or excel in doing something, especially in a energetic or forceful manner (“You certainly are working to beat the band just now,” P.G. Wodehouse, 1920). “Beat the band” first appeared in print, as far as we know, in the late 19th century. Interestingly, another “band” phrase, “when the band begins to play,” was current at the same time, meaning “when things get serious,” or what we might today call “crunch time” (“It’s send for Bucky quick when the band begins to play,” 1910). I think it’s significant that both of these phrases arose at a time when recording technology was in its infancy and music was almost always heard live, whether in a music hall or at a concert in the park.
I had always assumed that “beat the band” definitely had something to do with “band” in the musical sense, but I notice that Michael Quinion, at his World Wide Words website (www.worldwidewords.org), points out that the eminent etymologist Eric Partridge had a different theory. In his Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English (1961), Partridge suggested that “beat the band” was developed from the older phrase “to beat Banagher,” Banagher being a famously corrupt village in Ireland. Something outrageously corrupt or unfair was said “to beat [be worse than] Banagher,” meaning to surpass the accepted standard.
But while Banagher does exist and apparently at one time had that reputation, the likely origin of “beat the band” is simpler, and simply musical. To “beat the band” means literally to drown out the sound of a brass band with whatever you are doing, and thus, metaphorically, to excel or surpass the standard to such a degree that all eyes turn toward you (“I was on the box-seat driving, you know, — lickety-split, to beat the band,” 1897).
Incidentally, the use of “to beat” to mean “to surpass, excel” is simply a modern use of “to beat” in its older military sense meaning “to defeat or vanquish.” The use of “beat” in other phrases equivalent in meaning to “beat the band” (“to beat anything,” “to beat all,” etc.) dates back to the early19th century (“Well!’ I says, ‘if this don’t beat everything!’,” Charles Dickens, 1863).
I found a 1854 use of the phrase “to beat the band” in The Yale Literary Magazine
http://books.google.com/books?id=b1ZOAAAAYAAJ&q=%22to+beat+the+band%22&dq=%22to+beat+the+band%22&hl=en&ei=DTMWTdf6K4us8Abm_JnsBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCUQ6AEwAA
This reference appears to be from 1954, not 1854.
I have heard an addition to the phrase “to beat Banagher” – in Ireland – “Well that beat Banagher, and Banagher beat the devil”
Incidentally the town of Banagher which is supposedly the origin of the phrase is in County Offaly in the Irish midlands. There is another Banagher in County Derry in the north of the country
Saw it in the Great Gatsby. After Myrtle found out that Wilson had borrowed a suit for their wedding she claimed to have “lay down and cried to beat the band all afternoon”.
Interesting and well researched. Now, however, I am curious about the origins of “likety split!”
Are you sure it’s not “to beat” in a chronological sense? i.e. “to beat the band” means that you are working furiously so as to complete your task before the band starts playing?
I always think of “beating the band” as doing something with great vigor and frequency as a conductor beating time to establish tempo for the band.
I think the expression has been around a long time since I’m 68 years old and have heard it all my life. Usually as “it’s raining to beat the band” or “it’s snowing to beat the band”.
If people once thought of a band as something real special–only heard when something unusual comes–a parade,say… Well… then the phrase could mean that whatever one does is better than that special band.
And further: the bandstand would be where that special
band does its thing. In days before radio and tv, we’re probably talking about something quite exciting.
“Beating the band” would mean greater than that great band.
I prefer “it is raining harder than a cow pissing on a flat rock”
In his memoir about the early days of music publishing, “They all sang”, Edward Marks describes singers before the days of microphones who literally had to “beat the band” in order to be heard over the music. The most successful of these iron lung fellows could do over 20 “song plugs” a night at varied establishments including concert saloons and early silent films.