Monday, September 9, 2013

A Musical Saturday Evening

This past Saturday evening, I had the pleasure of leading a group of 12 Warrior Marching Band members in the briefest of performances for the DHS Class of 1963 at their 50th reunion. This is the first graduating class from DHS; they started as freshmen at HPHS, opened DHS as sophomores in 1960, and began many traditions that continue today. They chose our school mascot and colors, and they named the yearbook and school paper.

We entered their party room at the Embassy Suites to drum clicks--we were the special surprise they had been told about. We then played the Fight Song (about 40 seconds), I shared greetings from the current students and staff of DHS (about 15 seconds), and we finished with "Go Big Red" (about 20 seconds). Shortest. Gig. Ever.

We were well received, and some of the women did an impromptu cheer from the early 60s. It was a lot of fun, and I think we were an exciting addition to their festivities.

Then, I headed off to a friend's house for his annual backyard music fest. Sounds quaint, but it was really quite impressive. Here is the line-up:

  • a singer-songwriter performing a solo set accompanying himself on guitar and piano (not simultaneously!)
  • a vibraphone/violin jazz duo that sounded like it was straight out of the ECM studios in the 1970s
  • three tenors singing folk and pop music with guitars and basses
  • a world-renowned opera singer who has debuted several important operas over the past several decades
  • a country-rock band performing originals and covers
  • a band with the three tenors, 5 female backup singers, piano, mandolin, piccolo, guitar, dobro, bass, drums, and a horn line of sax/trumpet/trombone
I was in the last group on alto sax. We played R&B type tunes and some classic Americana. The highlight was a cover of U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For." We began with two percussionists, one on Afro-Peruvian cajon (a wooden box you sit on and play with your hands), and one on Indian tabla drums (the look a little like bongos but can play different pitches--you may have heard them on Beatles tunes). They are both master drummers, and their rhythmic interplay was incredible. After they traded improvised licks back and forth, the band snuck in and played the song up to its climax before fading out to the cajon and tabla again. When they finished perfectly together on the same beat (without really having planned it out ahead of time), it was one of the most musical moments I've experienced in a long time.

So you see, kids, this is why you need to keep playing your instruments into adulthood! Maybe you'll have a friend who is ambitious enough to stage his own mini-Ravinia. Then you can take part and have that transcendent experience of sharing music with good friends. That's why we do what we do, isn't it?

Sunday, September 1, 2013

A Pop Music Playlist for September

Happy September! Here's a Spotify playlist of songs with September in the title. Quite a variety--enjoy!

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

New repertoire lists have been posted...

Want to know what you'll be playing in SB, WE, or JB? The rep lists have been updated, and you can access them here: Their are links to the recordings, but be sure to check out the Spotify playlist as well. The interface is easier to deal with, and you can follow the playlist as it changes throughout the year.

First rehearsals on August 22--that's two weeks!

Monday, July 29, 2013

Percussion Safety Tips

Today I was putting together a new set of marching multi-toms, or quads, if you prefer, and I came across the following safety warnings:
Be Careful Using Sticks and Wire Brushes
Sticks and wire brushes are intended for playing the drums and should never be used to hit or to be thrown at people. Doing so can be extremely dangerous.

Broken Sticks
Fragments and splinters from broken drumsticks can fly into the air and cause injury to the player and/or to those nearby.

So kids, now we know to be careful with those sticks. My favorite warning, however, is the following:
Earthquake Preventions
A strong vibration such as an earthquake can cause your drums and hardware to shift and tip over. Stay well clear of falling objects to avoid injury.
Consider yourselves warned...

Monday, July 22, 2013

"Meteorology is an Inexact Science," or "How I Heard Four Minutes of a Concert at Ravinia"

It sounded like a great idea. The Ravinia Festival was presenting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in a concert of a number of shorter works, including two with a violin soloist and three opera overtures. Two of the pieces, Bernstein's Overture to Candide and Debussy's Prelude a l'apres-midi d'une faune, are personal favorites. Since college and high school students get free admission to the lawn with their student IDs, it was going to be a cheap night of culture for our family. My wife typed "Ravinia" into weather.com and saw "0% chance of rain." I listened to the audio forecast on the Ravinia website, and the meteorologist mentioned "possible scattered showers." So, we picked up some sub sandwiches and headed off to Ravinia.

When we arrived, we staked out our place on the lawn and settled down to hear Candide, which is a wonderful, rollicking work full of fanfares, soaring melodies, and cross rhythms. Then the Debussy work began with a very quiet unaccompanied flute solo, and the rain started. Our umbrellas were at home, but we did have a blanket and a plastic ground cover. My sons and I took refuge under the plastic, which of course amplified the sound of the rain and drowned out all of the delicate harmonies and orchestral nuances of the work. The thunder didn't help much, either. I don't really remember anything about the two violin pieces because the rain wouldn't abate, and occasionally large pools of accumulated drops would rush off the edge of our plastic shelter and end up on us.

At intermission, I gave up. The rain became torrential as we packed up our chairs and table, leaving us looking like drowned rats. We walked back to the Park'n'Ride bus and headed home. By the time we got to our car in the Metra lot, the rain had mostly let up (of course). Later we found out that they let everyone into the pavilion for the second half (of course). If we had done that though, it would have been hard to enjoy the music while soaking wet, so oh well.

When we got home, I made my family sit down in the living room and listen to the Debussy. Seeing as how I use this piece in music theory class and have a wonderful handout with my insightful analysis of the work, I made them read it while listening to the music and watching the score on my son's iPad. Yes, we are an entire family of music geeks. But in the end, we had our Debussy!

I'm hoping to hear the concert on July 31 when wind soloists from the CSO perform two works by Mozart in the Martin Theater: his Serenade in C Minor, K. 388 (an arrangement of which was performed by the WE sax quintet this past spring), and the monumental "Gran Partita" serenade (a movement of which the non-orchestra WE members will play this coming year). Again, I'll be on the lawn, and again, I'll be at the mercy of the elements. Hopefully, it will be a beautiful star-lit night!

Monday, July 15, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Best rock song ever...

For a rock song to be considered the best rock song ever, at least in my book, it requires the following items:
  • It must be guitar-driven. Synth rock and EDM need not apply.
  • It has to have a memorable hook, something catchy and engaging without being trite.
  • It must have a sense of chaos and danger. Rock was never about safe music.
  • There must be a bit of snarl to it, in both attitude and voice.
  • It cannot be pretentious (and there's a whole lot of pretentious rock out there).
Now there are plenty of great songs that don't satisfy these requirements. That doesn't mean they aren't exemplary in their own rights; they just can't qualify for my list of "Greatest Rock Songs of All Time." And that's okay--Steely Dan will never make the list, but I still love their music. Ditto Paul Simon.

So what's on my list? Well, for years it was just one song. I've since added a couple of runners-up, but I should probably lengthen that list. These include "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana, and "Twist and Shout" by The Beatles. But the song I believe to be the Greatest Rock Song of All Time is "My Generation" by the Who. Here's why:

  • Guitar-driven? Check! Pete Townshend's windmilling guitar propels the track.
  • Memorable hook? Check! The background vocals "talkin' 'bout my generation" and Roger Daltrey's stuttered leads.
  • Chaos and danger? Check! Keith Moon's on-the-verge-of-falling-apart drumming that sounds sloppy as all get out but never loses a beat.
  • Snarl? Check! It's the classic "us vs. them" mentality, with Roger singing Pete's famous and now ironic line "hope I die before I get old."
  • Pretentious? Not in the least!
Add to that a wicked bass solo by John Entwistle, a surprising modulation, and a live show that typically wound up with total destruction. Greatest. Rock. Song. Ever.

Friday, July 12, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Morning run playist...

Today, instead of one track, I'm sharing 16! This was the random playlist my iPod generated for me on my morning run. I've excerpted it to be under three minutes, so you can enjoy it without spending the hour plus that I was out on this beautiful day. Here are the artists:
  • The Beatles
  • War
  • Prince
  • The Sugarcubes
  • Dave Matthews Band
  • R.E.M.
  • The Rolling Stones
  • Esperanza Spalding
  • Paul Simon
  • Steely Dan
  • R.E.M. (again)
  • Los Lobos
  • Led Zeppelin
  • Yes
  • Parliament
  • Sting
Check it out:

Link

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Gustav Holst and one of the greatest works ever written for band...

In the early years of 20th century, very few important composers wrote music for bands. Fortunately for us, Gustav Holst was one of them. His two landmark works, First Suite in E-flat and Second Suite in F, have become cornerstones of wind repertoire. This coming year, we will be studying his life and music, and I'm sure that both Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band will spend some time with these wonderful pieces. There may even be time to dip into his orchestral suite The Planets, which explores the mythological beings of Mars, Venus, Mercury, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.

As an ironic aside, noted Holst scholar Colin Matthews composed an eighth movement, Pluto, in 2000. As Holst wrote his original work over a decade before Pluto was discovered, it always felt "incomplete" to later audiences. I wonder how Dr. Matthews felt when, six years later, Pluto was demoted!

In any event, here is the Intermezzo movement from the First Suite in E-flat, as performed by the United States Marine Band.

Monday, July 8, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines...

Welcome back to "3 Minutes of Awesome," my summer series on incredible music that you can enjoy in only three minutes or so, bite-sized bits of wonderful sounds from classical, jazz, pop, and world music.

Today, I'm highlighting the first true giant of jazz, Louis Armstrong. Before he became a movie star and a retro-performer, he was on the cutting edge. Here some of the reasons he is considered a groundbreaking musician:

  • He was one of the first soloists to improvise in a manner that went beyond mere embellishment of a pre-existing melody.
  • He popularized the trumpet when his peers were all playing the mellower and quieter cornet.
  • He may have invented (but definitely popularized) scat singing.
  • His sense of the swing rhythmic style was much freer and smoother than the "ricky-tick" beat of other musicians.
  • He played with a bigger sound and a higher range than other trumpeters.
If you want to hear the true Louis Armstrong, check out his Hot Fives and Hot Sevens, which were recorded in the late 1920s. These are much more interesting, in my opinion, than his later work. One of my favorite recordings, however, is this duet with pianist Earl "Fatha" Hines, on "Weather Bird." Check out this insightful commentary while you listen.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Why marching band has meant a lot to me over the years...

Last weekend, my family and I went to a reunion with some of our closest friends from the Northwestern University Marching Band. It's been almost 30 years since any of us marched in "NUMB," but our friendships, which were forged on the practice field and in the rehearsal hall, have lasted over the years. Among us, we had four piccolo players, three sax players, and a euphonium player. Two were drum majors, and a bunch of us were on the band staff. All told, with our kids and non-marching spouses, we had 17 people in a rented log-cabin house near Smoky Mountain National Park in Tennessee.

Today, we work in law, pharmaceuticals, music education, and parenting, with kids from 12 to 23. Most of our children have continued the musical tradition by playing in bands and orchestras from middle school into college. They enjoyed (I think), listening to us rehash old tales and swapping "what's he doing now?" stories.

There's something about the time spent together in marching band that truly binds people together socially. It's a lot like being on a team, except it's coed. Right now, I'm making plans for the 2013 season of the Warrior Marching Band, and it's possible we are going to break last year's record numbers. I'm starting to get excited about watching another wonderful group of students come together to form a family of musicians--one that just might create friendships that last for decades.

Friday, June 28, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Little Richard is the man...

This may be one of my all-time favorite recordings ever. I'm not sure when it was done, but it's not the original single released by Little Richard. It sounds like something from the 60s, but I'm not an expert on his discography. I love the drummer and the horns on this one.

In any event, Little Richard rocks the piano as well as anybody, and he outdoes the Beatles on his "woo" effects. His outrageous stage persona and unbridled raw energy make him one of my five "Founding Fathers of Rock" (along with Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, and Jerry Lee Lewis).

Ask one of my music theory students about my patented Little Richard impersonation...

I'll be on hiatus for the holiday week ahead. See you with more "3 Minutes of Awesome" on July 8. Happy Birthday, USA!

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Back to Brazil...

Every year in Concert Band, we study the music of Latin America. We begin with mariachi and norteno from Mexico, move on to son and samba from Cuba/Puerto Rico, and finish with samba music from Brazil. This year, the band was particularly taken with the Brazilian band Timbalada, and many of the students were downloading their music to listen to on their own. I was very excited to see that I had turned them on to one of my favorite musical cultures, right up there with Mali and India.

I went looking for some similar bands and found Monobloco. This is how they describe themselves:

Monobloco's eclectic repertoire goes from traditional carnival marchinhas by João Roberto Kelly to sambas by Cartola and Clara Nunes; from xotes by Alceu Valença to forrós by Luiz Gonzaga; from the Brazilian funk of MC Leonardo to pop songs by Paralamas do Sucesso, Raul Seixas and Tim Maia. Among the hits performed during the shows are Taj Mahal, Fio Maravilha, País Tropical and Santa Clara Clareou (all by Jorge Benjor), Rap do Real (by Pedro Luís and Rodrigo Maranhão) and São Gonça (by Farofa Carioca). This unexpected mixture is also seen in the array of instruments - electric and bass guitars are added to traditional samba school instruments such as cavaco, repique, tamborim, shaker, surdo and agogô.
When you check out the video, watch for some of these instruments, like the tiny tamborim (frame drum), the caixa (snare drum), the large surdo (bass drum), and various agogo bells. You'll even hear the apinto, which is the whistle used to signal a new section of the tune for a large percussion bateria marching in a samba parade.

Enjoy!

Here's the whole album on Spotify:

Monday, June 24, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Neoclassic Stravinsky

Igor Stravinsky is best known for his epic ballet, The Rite of Spring, which was so revolutionary that it caused a riot at its premiere, 100 years ago this spring. And while I love his ballets and his large orchestra music, I'm most fond of his neoclassic chamber works, like his Octet and the piece I'm featuring today, The Soldier's Tale, or as it's more commonly known, L'Histoire du soldat.

Stravinsky wrote L'Histoire in 1918 for a small chamber ensemble with narrator. It tells the story of a Russian soldier who makes a deal with the devil over his violin. It's pretty complicated, but it involves typical themes of love, loss, and greed. The piece, however, is quite often played without the narration as a separate suite. This is how I first encountered it. Since the work involves a great deal of mixed meter, it makes a challenging test piece for directors. In our advanced conducting course at Northwestern, we had to direct it while our professor, Mr. Paynter, sat in the back and graded us. And as if that wasn't enough to make us nervous, he gave the performers little slips of paper with mistakes they were to play on purpose to see if we could hear the errors.

Here's an Israeli ensemble performing the "Royal March" movement.

Here's the full work, as played by members of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra conducted by Neeme Jarvi.

Friday, June 21, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! A little ska for your Friday...

Ska is a Jamaican music style that first came to light in the early to mid 1960s. It was based on a number of other styles, including American R&B and jump blues, Jamaican mento, and Caribbean calypso. It is characterized by a skittering, offbeat rhythm in the guitar that gives it an up-tempo, propulsive beat, as well as a sax/trumpet/trombone horn line to provide color. Important performers were Desmond Dekker, Toots and the Maytals, The Skatalites, and a young Bob Marley. Eventually, the beat slowed down (due to a particularly hot summer in 1966), and reggae was born.

In the late 70s/early 80s, there was a ska revival in the UK, led by bands like The English Beat and The Specials. I first encountered the style when my brother and I ("The Brame Brothers") were asked to add trumpet and sax to a rock band made up of some of our friends. The leader and guitarist was way into music that became the soundtrack of the 80s for me: Talking Heads, REM, English Beat, etc. It was very cool being in a rock band--we played a battle of the bands and a street fair in Glenview. I have some very embarrassing pictures that will not see the light of day...

Here is a great tune by the English Beat that will give you a good idea of the ska revival sound, "Twist and Crawl."

If you want to delve further, check out this Spotify playlist:

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Dr. John and his New Orleans Voodoo Funk...

Here's a tune that I loved when it came out in 1973--I would have heard it on AM radio here in Chicago: "The Big 89, Music Radio WLS." Dr. John, aka Mac Rebennack, is a New Orleans native and musical legend, combining the rhythm and blues piano styles of artists like Professor Longhair with late 60s psychedelic rock. Mix in some good ol' New Orleans voodoo culture and you have one spicy musical gumbo.

This song is his only top 20 hit in a long line of varied recordings dating back to 1968. Last year he came out with another critically acclaimed album, Locked Down, that is also worth checking out. The video I have posted here is a real trip--someone actually recorded the 45 rpm single spinning on a turntable!

Spotify link:

Monday, June 17, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! A great brass fanfare...

We start the new week with one of the truly great brass fanfares, right up there with Copland's Fanfare for the Common Man, the Fanfare pour précéder La Péri by French composer Paul Dukas (1865-1935). He's probably best known for his tone poem, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, because it was used in Disney's Fantasia when Mickey Mouse donned the wizard's hat and quickly found himself overrun by sentient broomsticks.

La Peri is a short ballet written in 1912 that was not staged until the 1930s in London. The fanfare is performed much more often; in fact, the DHS Wind Ensemble has played a band transcription of the work from time to time. It is full of Dukas' modern, yet tonal, harmonies that make his music sound so sparkling and appealing. Here is the world-famous University of Illinois Wind Symphony, directed by Robert Rumbelow, performing the work live in 2012:

As always, I'll share a Spotify link as well. The performing ensemble is the Orchestre National de Lille, a French orchestra from the north of the country, near the border with Belgium.

Friday, June 14, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! Classic 90s Grunge...

In 1993 I was just getting out of my serious rock phase. Up until then, I was an avid reader of Rolling Stone, a constant listener to WXRT (back when it was more cutting edge), and a self-proclaimed student of rock history and criticism. I was into a lot of noisy, angry music like Pearl Jam, Living Colour, Jane's Addiction, and Sonic Youth. Then, we had our first kid, and I wasn't finding a lot that spoke to me as I settled comfortably into my Suburban Dad phase. I got back into jazz in a more focused manner as well as teaching my brand new baby all of the important Beatles songs. It just seemed more appropriate than "Been Caught Stealing." Nowadays I only keep up with rock in a tangential manner, listening to NPR's Sound Opinions podcasts to hear what's considered hip today. But back in 1993, I was still an angry young man...

One of the coolest albums from that year was Last Splash, by a band out of Dayton, Ohio called The Breeders. Led by twin sisters Kim and Kelley Deal, it was a great example of what was considered alternative at the time--quirky, post-punk, grungy music with attitude. Every band had their own sound; there was nothing homogenous about 80s-early 90s alternative. This is before it became a record company/radio station format.

The whole album is a lot of fun. Staying with the "3 Minutes of Awesome!" theme, I chose "I Just Want to Get Along" for its danceable beat, chiming guitars, and thick distortion. The muffled, sarcastic vocals fit perfectly: "If you're so special, why aren't you dead?"

I highly recommend checking out the entire album on Spotify. The highlight is the hit single "Cannonball" - one listen and I'm back in 1993, my fifth year at DHS when we had two bands and a mandatory marching band, all crammed into M106 with a practice room for an office. Good times...

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome! A Frenchman remembers Brazil...

One of my favorite musicians is Darius Milhaud (1892-1974), a Jewish composer from the Provence region of France. He is best-known for his use of avant garde harmonies, jazz rhythms and melodies, and folk music from his native land as well as other cultures. He spent time traveling in Brazil in the late 1910s, and the popular music of the cafes and dance halls left a strong impression on him, so much so that he wrote Saudades do Brasil, or Memories of Brazil, a suite of dances for piano.

I'm not sure how I first encountered this work, but I know it was in high school. I have always been captivated by the bitonality (left hand in one key and right hand in another), which creates some delightfully "crunchy" harmonies. In Milhaud's music, however, it always seems natural, as if we are in the middle of the street in Rio hearing sounds coming from two different night clubs.

In college, I arranged four of the twelve movements for band, with somewhat mixed results. I was fortunate enough to have them performed by the North Shore Concert Band at Pick-Staiger Concert Hall at Northwestern University. Some day I'll dust them off and see if they are worth looking at with a band at DHS.

Here is piano player Michael Kozlovsky's rendition of the first movement, "Sorocaba." You can follow along with the sheet music in the video.

Here is version on Spotify that I like even more:

I highly recommend listening to the entire suite, but that's way more than just three minutes of awesome!

Monday, June 10, 2013

3 Minutes of Awesome!

I'm starting a new series for the summer months called "3 Minutes of Awesome!" I've found that as I surf the web I run into all kinds of music to check out, but I'm either too impatient or too short on time to listen to an extended track. So, I decided that I would share some of my favorite recordings that run three minutes or less. You'll hear classical, jazz, rock, and world music throughout the summer, with new posts on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday (I hope...). Enjoy the series!

"Night in Tunisia," Charlie Parker

We'll start with this classic jazz tune that Dizzy Gillespie wrote sometime around 1945. Its chord progression with a D-6 to Eb7 vamp implies various scales, including dorian and phrygian modes. This gives it an exotic flavor that is vaguely Arabic, at least to his mid-20th century, American audience. The DHS Jazz Band performed a version this spring that incorporated a traditional Tunisian tune, transcribed by our oud-playing bassist, giving the number a more authentic sound. My personal favorite recording of "Night in Tunisia" (and there are dozens out there) is by alto saxophonist Charlie "Bird" Parker. It features Miles Davis on trumpet, Lucky Thompson on tenor, Dodo Marmarosa on piano, Arvin Garrison on guitar, Vic McMillan on bass, and Roy Porter on drums. The rhythm section is not the most famous, but Bird's solo break and improvisation are quite amazing. Enjoy!

Check it out on Spotify:

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Spring Band Concert and 25 Years

Now that the dust has settled and the final concert of the year is in the books, I can sit back and enjoy what was truly a great night for the entire DHS band program. First, I must say that I was deeply honored and humbled by the special alumni/student ensemble that gathered to celebrate my 25 years here at Deerfield. Thanks to my colleague Ron Velleuer and senior trumpeter Mitchell Steindler, we had a band of about 50 or 60 made up of students from all three current bands along with graduates going back to the class of 1999. There were a couple of band directors, a teacher, college students, and others who performed Copland's Fanfare for the Common Man, conducted by Herr Velleuer. Then he spoke and said many nice things before turning the baton over to me. I got to conduct two of my favorite band works: a transcription of an old Russian chorale, "Salvation is Created," by Pavel Chesnokov, and a classic Sousa march, "King Cotton." What a joy it was to have all my "kids" back on stage, playing together.

The rest of the concert was successful as well. I was so proud of the Concert Band; they played very well, avoiding the frosh mistakes that tend to plague the typical CB. I received many compliments on their behalf, especially on the fine flute playing. Symphonic Band took on a program of epic proportions, tackling a pair of grade 4 works and making a lot of great music. Wind Ensemble also had their work cut out for them, with the 11-minute Sketches on a Tudor Psalm, a grade 5 piece that really challenged everybody's counting and expressive skills. It was the first time I had ever conducted it, and I enjoyed the experience immensely. I spent a lot of time practicing and studying it, and it was quite rewarding.

The final group of the evening was the Jazz Band. Highlighting the set was our own take on "A Night in Tunisia." Since we have a bassist who is precociously well-versed in playing Arabic music on the oud (an Arabic lute), I asked him to find a traditional Tunisian melody to teach us. He transcribed a malouf and played it along with flute, accompanied by drums, tenor, bass, and darbukka (an Arabic hand drum). We did an accelerando and segued directly into the well-known Dizzy Gillespie bass line. Then the horns came in for a mini-big band arrangement of the bebop classic. Of course, we had to end with a crowd-pleasing, sustained scream chord at the end to make sure the audience got their money's worth.

And then, at 9:27, three minutes shy of two hours, it was over. Another year of great music and memories is coming to an end. We still have a couple of less formal jazz performances to do, and the Warrior Marching Band will once again be part of the Memorial Day ceremonies here in town. The annual awards dinner is Monday night, so I still have a ton on my plate, but after such a memorable evening, things feel like they are lightening up and drawing to a close. It's hard to believe that it's been a quarter of a century since my first one-day band camp in the fall of 1988, back when the entire program numbered 45 students. I can't think of any other place I would rather be, and I am grateful to have had this opportunity. I look forward to several more years of teaching and conducting my beloved Warrior band students!

Thursday, April 25, 2013

A New Way to Notate Music

Those of us who read traditional Western musical notation are used to symbols that date back to the 1300s or so:

There have been other systems proposed, like shaped note symbols that were used in American hymnals in the 1800s:

Now, there's a brand new notational system that is supposed to make things much easier to learn. Watch the video and decide for yourself:

Pretty interesting, eh? Learn more here.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

My Musical Weekend

This weekend I got to see one of my musical heroes, Kenny Garrett, play at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago. Garrett is a post-bop alto saxophonist who has played with Miles Davis, the Duke Ellington Orchestra, and Art Blakey. He has a very successful solo career, most recently releasing Seeds from the Underground, which features tributes to many of his mentors (including his high school band director!)

I got to the Showcase nice and early. It's a wonderful place to hear jazz--most everybody there is a serious jazz fan, and it's much more a listening room than nightclub. The band took the stage and immediately began blowing furiously. The standard pattern of attack was for Garrett to play a fairly simple, catchy tune over jazz harmonies that sound like a cross between McCoy Tyner and pop tunes. Then he would go into his solo that built from short phrases into longer, angular bebop lines and finished with frenzied wails and screams. He cut a striking figure in his black suit and trademark skull cap, bobbing up and down in time with his playing, giving hand signals to his band to control the intensity level. He also had an excellent percussionist who played everything from a variety of shakers and tambourines to a pair of congas and the wind chimes.

Now my band students will immediately tell you that I hate wind chimes. I usually refer to them as "the devil's plaything" because someone in the percussion section always bumps into them at the wrong time, and then you are stuck listening to their annoying tinkling for what seems like forever. Band composers use them way too much, in my opinion. Anyway, Garrett's percussionist, Rudy Bird, was a master at choosing just the right instrument to play just the right sound at just the right time. He gave me a new appreciation for the chimes. I stayed for two sets. Garrett played a good amount of soprano sax as well and sounded great on a ballad later in the evening. The rest of the band was strong, too. The drummer, McClenty Hunter Jr., played furiously and non-stop. It was easily the loudest acoustic jazz performance I'd ever heard--like sitting through an intense thunderstorm from the safety of a screened-in porch. The music was certainly not for the timid, but if you like your jazz a little more avant garde, then I recommend you check him out.

Then Sunday morning, I had the pleasure of hearing a bell choir from Augustana College play in our church. Bell choirs are not often heard outside of Protestant church services, but they are a fascinating ensemble. Each musician has two or more handbells to play, each one a different pitch of the chromatic scale. The bells range in size from tiny, fist-sized bells to giant ones bigger than a foot around. When you play in a bell choir, you look at a full score and only play when your notes come up. It's very challenging to be able to pick your individual notes out and play them in perfect time in the middle of the group. As band musicians, we're used to playing long lines of music--this is like performance by pointillism. The group from Augustana did a wonderful job, filling our sanctuary with their lovely ringing.

This reminded me that every summer I say I'm going to the Chicago Botanic Gardens to hear one of their carillon concerts. A carillon is a bell tower, and every Monday night they bring in a professional ringer to perform their favorite selections on their 48-bell carillon. This year, for sure.


Thursday, April 11, 2013

New Repertoire Lists Posted...

I just finished updating our current repertoire lists on the DHS Band website. You can go to the page for your ensemble to hear recordings of our pieces and read about the composers. There is also a link to the Spotify playlist that has professional recordings of a number of the pieces, as well as related pieces. All students should take advantage of these great resources! Happy browsing!

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Some Ellington and Bernstein...

The Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band just finished a mini-unit on Duke Ellington as part of our African-American music theme for the year (we've already studied Scott Joplin and William Grant Still). We learned about his career and why he was so important, listened to a few recordings, and then played short arrangements of "Sophisticated Lady" and "It Don't Mean a Thing." To wrap things up, here is a video of the Duke Ellington Orchestra in action. Note the great jazz vocals, reminding us that this was the pop music of the day. The violin solo is a bit of an anomaly; trumpeter Ray Nance doubled on fiddle, and Duke liked to feature him from time to time.

We're also studying the music of Leonard Bernstein this spring. SB is performing "America" from West Side Story, and WE is playing "Slava!" Here's a scary video of the latter, as performed by a Japanese middle school band. Note that they are playing from memory!

Here's the production number "America" as performed by Rita Moreno and the original movie cast. Ms. Moreno is famous for winning the Tony, Emmy, Grammy, and Oscar awards, one of the few artists to have won all four. She has had a very successful career on Broadway, in movies, and on television, including a stint in the cast of Sesame Street.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Happy Jazz Appreciation Month!

Every April is "Jazz Appreciation Month," as proclaimed by the Smithsonian Institute. We here in the DHS jazz program hope you take some time over the next few weeks to enjoy to this quintessentially American art form. It's a busy month for us with Jazz Night on Wednesday, April 24 as well as auditions for next year's groups. We'll also try to take part in International Jazz Day on April 30, when musicians all over the world will join to "celebrate jazz, learn about its roots and highlight its important role as a form of communication that transcends differences." More to come...

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Are you ready for spring?

Well, I'm afraid that spring break is over, but now we get to make the final push towards our two major spring performances, Jazz Night and the Spring Band Concert. I've spent my break doing a lot of arranging for the bands. Here's a quick recap:
  • "Blue Rondo a la Turk" by Dave Brubeck - full jazz band arrangement of the original quartet version
  • "Radio Song" by Esperanza Spalding - full arrangement for the Choraliers and our Jazz Band
  • solo guidelines for "Four" by Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson to help the Jazz Band practice improvising
  • "It Don't Mean a Thing" and "Sophisticated Lady" by Duke Ellington - very short band arrangements for SB and WE - we'll be studying this great American composer this week
Add to this some JB quiz grading, MT test grading, and assigning parts for new CB and WE music, and it's been a full week! I'm ready for the spring--are you? Just look at the list of great topics we'll be exploring over the next two months in our classes: Leonard Bernstein, Duke Ellington, and the Blues (SB/WE); Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Latin American music (CB); ethnomusicology and American pop music (MT); and some to-be-determined surprises (JB). It promises to be exciting and rewarding. Are you ready to dig in? I hope so!

Here's something to whet your appetite. Imagine how this will sound at Jazz Night as performed by the Choraliers and JB:

Saturday, February 23, 2013

DHS Jazz Band Wins Big at Jazz Fest!

The Deerfield High School Jazz Band competed in the annual Jazz in the Meadows festival at Rolling Meadows High School on February 23. This prestigious event draws middle and high school jazz ensembles from five states, coming together for a day of performances, clinics, and competition. The DHS band was in the Small School Combo division and tied for first place with a combo from Webster Groves HS, a school outside of St. Louis, MO, with a score of 91.67 out of 100. Senior saxophonist Joey Rosin was named an outstanding soloist, and he drew praise for composing one of the band's selections, "Verlaine." The band also played their own arrangements of hard bop classic "This I Dig of You" and the gospel jazz number "Greens at the Chicken Shack."

The Jazz Band will next perform at a concert on March 20 at 7:30 p.m. in the DHS Auditorium. They will be playing the music of Duke Ellington, sharing the bill with the Concert Band, Symphonic Band, and Wind Ensemble. On April 24, they will join the Choraliers for their annual Jazz Night concert.

Congratulations to all of the members of the DHS Jazz Band!

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Band Trip, Day Five

Our last day in Arizona began in Flagstaff, and it was cold! We headed south, dropping in elevation, and the cactus started appearing again as we descended into the Phoenix area. Our one stop for the day was Arizona State University, where we visited the Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium, the last major architectural design by Frank Lloyd Wright. This stunning building also houses the music department, so we trundled up to the third floor for our clinic with Eric Melley, one of the ASU band directors and a doctoral student. His dissertation is on ragtime music for band, so it was great to have him work with us on our music, especially Scott Joplin's "The Entertainer." We did a lot of effective things with phrasing and interpretation. At the same time, the orchestra was across the hall working with Dr. Timothy Russell on their music. As always, our college visit was a highlight.

After a fast food lunch at the student union, we basked in the Arizona sun for a few final minutes and left for the airport. Once we got our last two students off of standby and onto the plane, we took off for Milwaukee. We landed in rain and sleet--not very welcoming after all the great weather in Phoenix! Tired and sorry to have the trip in the past, everyone agreed that it was a grand success. The juniors are already pushing to take a small, Midwestern, bus trip next year. That's a distinct possibility!

Monday, February 18, 2013

Band Trip, Day Four

Now it’s Sunday, our last full day in Arizona. We left pre-dawn and started traveling north. We stopped at Montezuma Castle National Monument, which is a cave dwelling that was in use during the Middle Ages. It was amazing to see how people lived, clinging to the side of a sheer limestone cliff at the top of a creek valley. Our guide was very informative and shared a lot of the history and culture with us.

From there, we followed a chaperone’s suggestion and detoured through Sedona. The red rock mountains were spectacular! Our driver pointed out “Snoopy Rock,” so named because it looks like Charlie Brown’s beagles lying atop his doghouse. The community itself looked like a fascinating place to shop for high end art and expensive time shares. As we continued north, we climbed a couple thousand feet on switchbacks with a precipitous drop-off over the side, not ten feet away from the bus. There was a change in the flora, shifting from desert cactus to highland scrub and pines. There was snow in the fields and on the mountain peaks. Especially beautiful was Mt. Humphrey, the highest point in the state.

Then, for the "grand" finale, we went to the Grand Canyon. I was really unprepared for the sheer majesty of it--I guess that's why they call it one of the Seven Wonders of the World. The students had a great time taking a ton of pictures of each other in every possible combination. I wondered aloud whether they were actually taking it all in--it's hard to appreciate it through a viewfiender. When I was a kid (I know, I know, back in the Dark Ages...), we didn't take many pictures because film and developing were expensive. When we visited a national monument, we looked at it, read the signs, and really experienced it. Now, it's all about the photo op. I hope our students took some time to quietly enjoy it and imagine what it took to create it.

So now we're at our new hotel in Flagstaff, and the kids are checked into their rooms. Tomorrow we head back towards Phoenix for our clinics at ASU, and then we go to the airport for our trip back to DHS. More to come...

Band Trip, Day Three

Writing to you on the way to the Canyon, driving through Sedona and lots of red rock. Yesterday was another set of great experiences. We began with the 5th Biennial Band Trip Fun Run. About a dozen of us completed various legs of a 4.5 mile run along the Grand Canal Trail in Phoenix. We even had three chaperones with us! The sun was coming up as we passed a residential area and woke up a rooster. It was so nice running outside in February in shorts!

Our day continued with a trip to the Desert Botanic Garden. It was fascinating to see such a diversity of cactus types. It was absolutely beautiful. Our guide told us all about the various ecosystems and many of the ways Natives used the plants for housing and household goods.

Next stop was Old Town Scottsdale. There was a farmer’s market in full swing, lots of fun places to eat, and plenty of Western shopping. Lots of students bought cowboy hats and checked out the jewelry; others sat on the grass in a city park. It was a great, laid-back time.

Our afternoon was spent at the Heard Museum of Native American Culture and Art. My group had a young Navajo woman as our docent. She took us through the exhibits, talking about the Katsina dolls and her own personal experience as a member of a family of weavers. It was all very interesting and beautiful. I bought a Navajo flute in the gift shop—I love having new wind instruments to play. Scattered about my home office are three or four recorders, a bamboo flute, and a xaphoon. Now I have a new addition!

After a Mexican buffet at Aunt Chilada’s, it was off to the Mesa Arts Center, a huge complex of theatres and galleries, where the Chamber Orchestra performed on the patio under the lights. It was a great example of (somewhat) spontaneous public art. People walking by or coming to the concert stopped and listened. I even saw a couple dancing. The students performed Grieg’s Holberg Suite, the first movement of Erik Ewazen’s Sinfonia for Strings, and “Tico Tico,” an old Brazilian choro tune with Mr. V playing the shaker and samba whistle. They did a wonderful job, even amidst the traffic sounds.

Then came the major cultural event of the trip, a concert by the BBC Concert Orchestra, led by Maestro Keith Lockhart. They were on the last night of a North American tour, featuring all English music. They opened with Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes, by Benjamin Britten. This is an opera that I teach in music theory class, so it was a great joy to hear some of the instrumental music and remember where the various themes appeared in the opera. A number of theory students were in the audience, so they got to revisit the piece as well.

The next piece was Edward Elgar’s Cello Concerto. This is one of the cornerstones in the cello repertoire, and the soloist, Sophie Shao, did not disappoint. She played the work with a ton of passion and emotion, drawing all of the sorrow out of this work that Elgar composed in his later years, after WWI and the death of his wife. They followed this with a piece I had never heard before by a composer I had never heard of. George Butterworth (no relation to the anthropomorphic maple syrup bottle) was a friend of Vaughan Williams and Holst, and like them, he was a folk song collector. His work, The Banks of Green Willow, is a delightful setting of this tune, with “Green Bushes” thrown in for good measure.

The final work was Elgar’s Enigma Variations, probably his most famous work. It’s a set of 14 short movements, all based on a theme that is never explicitly stated, and each dedicated to one of his good friends. The orchestration is beautiful, and the melodies quite stirring. The ninth movement, “Nimrod,” has been arranged for concert band. We’ll have to take that out and sight read it when we get back to DHS.

By the time we got back to the hotel, we were exhausted but full of culture, from biology to history to music. I saw a lot of tired, happy faces at the end of the night. Until I told them we were getting up before 6:00 a.m. on Sunday…

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Band Trip, Day Two

A great first day in Phoenix! We started off with a trip to the Phoenix Zoo, which is a very nice zoo with lots of natural habitats. Highlights included an incredibly large tortoise being fed and a field of graceful giraffes. Several students took a ride on a camel.

Then we stopped by Subway and picked up a ton of sandwiches to bring to our new friends at Dobson High School (another DHS!). They were very gracious hosts, allowing us to interrupt their schedule to play for them and listen to their band and orchestra. Their director, Mr. Goglia, was actually subbing in during that period, as the other directors were at a convention. He introduced us, and away we went, performing our march, chorale prelude, and overture. I was so pleased with how well the band played. Our soloists were really on top of their game!

Then the Dobson band played for us, performing a rhythmic piece by James Swearingen as well as a piece that our juniors did as freshmen, Symphonic Variations on Dona Nobis Pacem. Even though they were missing a number of key players, they sounded very good. They had a nice, refined sound and seemed to very much enjoy performing. Afterwards, we all gathered together outside for a group picture. Before we left, we gave them some choice "swag" from our DHS--awesome t-shirts and pens with the Warriors logo.

From DHS West, we traveled to the Musical Instrument Museum (MIM). This is a world-renowned institution, and it is what first sparked my interest in planning a trip to Phoenix a few years ago. We had two hours to explore, but we could have used four or more. The MIM is organized geographically by continent. Within each room, there is a display for the many different countries. For example, the India exhibit has sitars, vinas, tablas, mrdingams, and more. Everyone gets headphones that pick up the sounds playing at each country. You can watch a video of Ravi Shankar and hear him play. Some of my favorites were a full-sized Indonesian gamelan ensemble, a double-belled euphonium, and all the great African percussion.

Our last stop for the night was the Rawhide Western Town, where we performed at a very nice outdoor stage in front of the sunset. The band led off the concert, followed by the symphony orchestra. They played the finale from Brahms' Symphony No. 1, "On the Trail" from The Grand Canyon Suite, and music from Lord of the Rings. It was great getting to listen to each other (a built-in audience), and our crowd was supplemented by several DHS family members and friends.

Then we had a barbecue dinner, followed by country line dancing. I was very impressed by how many students joined in! We had a great time doing the Electric Slide. Afterwards, Mr. Velleuer and I found ourselves arrested and put into the paddywagon by the local sheriff, as arranged by our kids. Mr. V was charged with freeloading, and I was busted for being "too dern bossy." Somehow, we beat the rap and were released.

All in all, a full and memorable day. Tomorrow we have a lot of sightseeing to do before the chamber orchestra plays at the Mesa Art Center in the evening as a prelude to a concert by the BBC Concert Orchestra. More to come...

Friday, February 15, 2013

Band Trip, Day One

Our first day is in the books. We left chilly Deerfield around noon and drove our caravan of school buses to Milwaukee's Mitchell Airport. From there it was a 3-hour flight to Phoenix where we were met with a lovely, mild breeze, palm trees, and a cactus. We are in a nice hotel and have already had a pizza party and tried out the outdoor pool. Imagine that--swimming outside in February, and it wasn't even a "polar plunge"!

Tomorrow we get to perform for the first time. Here's our set list:

  • The Chimes of Liberty, Goldman
  • Chorale Prelude: Be Thou My Vision, Stamp
  • Emperata Overture, Smith
  • The Entertainer, Joplin/Reed
More to follow...

Friday, February 1, 2013

Test Posting for Band Trip Social Media

Watch this space for posts from our upcoming trip to Arizona. Follow us on Twitter (@deerfieldband) and Facebook (Deerfield (IL) High School Band).

Only 13 days until we leave--current temperature in Phoenix is 68. Current temperature in Deerfield: 14. I'll take that trade!

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Jazz Band Heads to Peoria!

The DHS Jazz Band will be presenting a clinic session at the Illinois Music Education Conference in Peoria on Thursday, January 24 from 3:30-4:15. Our topic is "Seven Steps to the Blues: Beyond the Blues Scale." We'll be demonstrating how we learn to play the blues in a systematic method. Hopefully, we'll get a nice crowd of band directors who are interested in improvisation. We'll report back this weekend on how it went!

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Friday Morning Run

My Friday morning, pre-dawn run, featured an excellent and varied playlist courtesy of the "shuffle songs" setting on my iPod:
  • "Mean Old Frisco Blues" by Muddy Waters--One of the truly great voices in American music, and one of my all-time favorite musicians, even if he was a White Sox fan.
  • "Englishman in New York" by Sting--Best decision he ever made was to bring jazz saxophonist Branford Marsalis into his band. Great soprano solo!
  • "Housequake" by Prince--From the album Sign o' the Times, his last album that I really like. "The kickdrum is the fault!"
  • "Good Time, Bad Times" by Led Zeppelin--From one of the finest debut albums ever.
  • "Every Picture Tells a Story" by Rod Stewart--Back when he was still hip, singing the musical travelogue of a young vagabond.
  • "Wicked Game" by Chris Isaak--Never knew that the tuning peg on a guitar could be so expressive.
  • "A Girl Like You" by The Smithereens--Bringing that early 60s Kinks-style garage rock into the late 80s.
  • "Sleepyhouse" by Blind Melon--Alternative meets Indian classical music.
  • "White Wedding, Pt. 1" by Billy Idol--A bit of a guilty pleasure here, but nice vocal stylings.
  • "Cinnamon Girl" by Neil Young--"Ten silver saxes, a bass with a bow, the drummer relaxes and waits between shows for his Cinnamon Girl." The most economical guitar solo of all time.
  • "Stay Up Late" by The Talking Heads--David Byrne discovers the joys of fatherhood.
  • "Loves Me Like a Rock" by Paul Simon--Always reminds me of my mom driving us around town as kids. Love you too, Mom!
  • "Electric PowWow Drum" by A Tribe Called Red--Canadian First Nation deejays combine tribal chants and dubstep. Dig it!

Thursday, January 10, 2013

New Repertoire Lists

I just finished updating our current repertoire lists on the DHS Band website. You can go to the page for your ensemble and click on the repertoire link to hear recordings of our pieces and read about the composers. There is also a link to the Spotify playlist that has professional recordings of a number of the pieces, as well as related pieces. All students should take advantage of these great resources! Happy browsing!

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Happy 2013!

Happy New Year from the DHS Band Family! What will 2013 bring? Why, a trip to Arizona, of course! Six weeks from tomorrow we leave with our orchestra friends for a trip to Phoenix and the Grand Canyon. More to come in future updates!

2013 will mark the 200th anniversary of the birth of those two giants of Romantic Era opera, Richard Wagner and Giuseppe Verdi. It would also be the 100th birthday of Benjamin Britten and Morton Gould, two giants of 20th century music. Their birth year of 1913 was the year when Stravinsky's ballet The Rite of Spring premiered in Paris and caused a riot.

Fifty years ago, in 1963, The Beatles had their first #1 in the UK, "Please Please Me." Charles Mingus released his epic album, The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady, and future rockers James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich of Metallica were born.

How will you make 2013 a memorable year in music?