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Coda Connections

 

Columbia Band Fans' Newsletter
Fall 2006

CONTENTS
News & Calendar - Fall 2006
Feature - CD Review
Behind the Baton - Kid "Space" & the Holidays
Fun Stuff - A few words from...
Official CCB Positions - People in Charge
Contact Information

Greetings!

Many thanks to those who provided feedback from the summer edition of Coda Connections. As my main goal is to improve communication between the band and it's audience, please do speak up if you have a suggestion, concern, or comment regarding this publication. You can even submit your own writing if you'd like! Thanks and enjoy!

- Len Morse, Editor

News & Calendar
   
Fall News
Recap of last quarter:
Aside from intermittent drizzle at Lake Elkhorn, concert conditions were good. The shows at Lurman Amphitheatre and the Columbia Lakefront went especially well.
What's coming up?
Our next performance is the annual "Young People's Concert", for those whose age is approaching double-digits.

Fall Calendar - Concert Band
October:
  Sunday, 10/15, 3:00P.M., Marriotts Ridge High School, Marriottsville
  Sunday, 12/17, 3:00P.M., River Hill High School, Clarksville

Fall Calendar - Jazz Band
Nothing 'till next January

Feature
by Len Morse (Percussion)   CD Review Musical notes on staff
"A Splash of Pops"
The Boston Pops Orchestra
Keith Lockhart, Conductor
Recorded May 1999

Columbia, MD - The Boston Pops can do no wrong. This CD presents, in only 12 tracks, a vast array of American patriotic music that easily calls up excitement, reverence, and pride. My only qualm with the sung tunes is that, as with most choruses backed by a large instrumental ensemble, the words become unintelligible when the orchestra grows loud. Otherwise, the singing is very enjoyable.

The CD opens with The Star-Spangled Banner, appropriately enough, then moves on to Liberty Fanfare, by one of America's most prominent composers, John Williams. Doodletown Fifers (with real fifes!) paints a musical picture of why we celebrate our freedom, as tunes of the civil war are heard.

Invoking 60s nostalgia, Paul Simon's America (the orchestral arrangement) may bring a tear to those old enough to remember that time. One of the featured pieces on the CD is With Voices Raised, which combines the sung and the spoken word, both imparting historical, thought-provoking quotes on the ages-old fight for equality. Yet another upbeat blast from the nation's past occurs when Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy hits your ears. This rousing version of the Andrew Sisters' hit, featuring a wailing trumpet solo, will undoubtedly increase your heartbeat and get your feet tapping.

America the Beautiful is sung with the utmost feeling by the Tanglewood Festival Chorus and soloist Denyce Graves. However, her warbling vibrato is somewhat distracting, invoking images of a Viennese opera singer taking cues from Mozart. If it's a purely classical piece you're searching for, the Pops pulls out all the stops for Tchaikovsky's well-known 1812 Overture. Not only do they perform with great precision and gusto, but one can not help thrill at the cannons' blasts, brilliantly symbolizing the fireworks that we Americans are so fond of.

And what patriotic CD would be complete without at least a couple of marches? E. E. Bagley's National Emblem and J. P. Sousa's The Stars and Stripes Forever (with its perfect piccolo solo) provide the expected, yet still exciting parade-like feeling.

The CD cover design catches your attention with action photos, creating the light-hearted atmosphere for your eye that the music creates for your ear. Some tunes were not touched on in this review, but they are played just as flawlessly as those mentioned, and even if you don't think you'll like every musical style represented in this CD, buy it anyway. There's a reason that this group is world-renowned.

Behind the Baton
by Mike Blackman (Director)   Kid "Space" & The Holidays Conductor
What a great Summer concert season the CCB has had! It's always nice to play the "home town gig" at the Columbia Lakefront, and what a treat it was to return to the Lurman Woodland Amphitheatre in Catonsville - a gorgeous outdoor venue with a very enthusiastic audience. As always, the band did a marvelous job preparing these extended concert programs - no small feat considering that we only rehearse one night each week! A concert with eighteen selections is extremely taxing, both mentally and physically, and I sometimes feel like I have the easiest job; my hat truly goes off to all of the members of this ensemble. I am also very pleased with the variety of music that we learned and presented - from a transcription of Gabrielli's 1597 "Canzona" and some 'pop' medleys to the beautiful "Hometown" (written for our colleagues in the Bel Air Band) and some "Silent Movie Music". As always, we performed some contemporary wind band music as well, including another work by Brian Balmages, with whom we share a special relationship that I truly treasure. Another piece that I enjoyed performing (several times) was "The Takoka Galop," which got faster and faster until finally "maxing out" at 1 minute, 32 seconds!

The Fall/Winter season is always hectic for us, as we prepare for our Children's Concert and formal Winter Concert at the same time. We're going with a "space" theme for the kiddies this year, and the December program will feature some more great works, including a very clever arrangement of "In Dulci Jubilo," and Fank Ticheli's "Cajun Folk Songs". We'll also be revisiting the work of a very talented young composer, Eric Whitacre, with his haunting "Lux Aurumque" - what interesting sounds he pulls from the wind band! We'll be closing the program with Leroy Anderson's holiday favorite, "Christmas Festival", which is always fun to play and hear. As we look ahead to the Spring of 2007, we'll be using the extended rehearsal period to return to some more difficult repertoire, perhaps some music by Percy Grainger, David Holsinger and...Paul Simon?

The Columbia Concert Band is a very special group of people who, I believe, play an equally special role in the community. I am honored to be conducting the ensemble, and always enjoy having the "best seat in the band". Please come out to support us and to support FREE live music in our area. As I always say, performing is a lot more fun when there are folks out there listening! Thank you!

Fun Stuff
   
Quarterly Word: "Slava" - Russian word meaning "Glory"; Nickname of Mstislav Rostropovich; Overture written by Leonard Bernstein as an opening piece for Rostropovich's inaugural concert as Music Director of the NSO. The world premier was performed on October 11, 1977 under Rostropovich's baton at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C.

Quarterly Quote: "Opera is when a guy gets stabbed in the back and, instead of bleeding, he sings." -- Ed Gardner

Official CCB Positions
   
Elected Executive Board
Director - Mike Blackman
President - Jodi Shochet
Vice President - Len Morse
Secretary - Suzanne Hassell
Treasurer - Beth Jubinski
Publicity Chair - Riley McDonald
Fundraising Chair - Jenn Ambrosiano
Equipment Manager - Scott Lipcon
Members-at-Large - Jeanette Donald, Tanya Hoegh-Allan

Appointees and Volunteers
Librarian - Marilyn Kelsey
Curator - Fred Shermer
Historian - Melinda Frisch
Uniforms - Bill DeVuono
Webmaster - Suzanne Hassell
Columbia Jazz Band Director - Pete Barenbregge

 

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