Friday, December 07, 2007

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Humboldt Symphony, Chorale and University Singers

The world premiere of “Fallen Heroes” by HSU professor emeritus Dr. Jim Stanard is performed by the Humboldt Symphony and choir comprised of the Humboldt Chorale and University Singers in their winter concert on Friday, December 7 and Sunday December 9 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID. An HSU Department of Music production; Paul Cummings conducting the Humboldt Symphony, the Humboldt Chorale directed by Carol Ryder, and the University Singers directed by Harley Muilenburg.
World Premiere of Humboldt Composer’s “Fallen Heroes”

The world premiere of Fallen Heroes, a work for orchestra and chorus composed by HSU professor emeritus Dr. Jim Stanard, will highlight the combined winter performances of the Humboldt Symphony, Humboldt Chorale and the University Singers.

There will be two performances—on Friday, December 7 and Sunday, December 9, both in Fulkerson Recital Hall beginning at 8 PM.

“Dr. Stanard taught vocal music at HSU for many years prior to his retirement in 2006,” said Humboldt Symphony conductor Paul Cummings. “He has used poetry from the Civil War as the text, in creating a memorial to fallen soldiers.”

“The work is composed for full orchestra with mixed choir,” he noted, “ and there will be over 150 performers on stage for this piece.”

The chorus is comprised of the Humboldt Chorale, directed by Carol Ryder, and the University Singers, directed by Harley Muilenburg.

Before Fallen Heroes caps the evening, the Humboldt Symphony orchestra will play the Hungarian March by Hector Berlioz, Concerto Grosso Opus 6 #4 by Arcangelo Corelli and Finlandia by Jean Sibelius.

The Hungarian March is one of the better known pieces by Berlioz, and was so popular when first performed in 1846 that he included it in his opera, The Damnation of Faust. Corelli’s Concerto Grosso, written late in his career, is considered to be among the finest examples of the baroque style.

Findlandia is also one of the best known compositions of Sibelius, a symphonic poem written as a patriotic statement in favor of Finnish independence from Russia in 1900. It contains the “Findlandia Hymn” which was adopted for the tune of a Christian hymn, and has been heard on movie soundtracks.

The combined concert by the Humboldt Symphony, Humboldt Chorale and University Singers will be performed at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on Friday, December 7 and Sunday, December 9. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.

Thursday, December 06, 2007

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AM Jazz Band (Dec. 6) and Jazz Orchestra (Dec. 8)

The AM Jazz Band performs classics by Dizzy Gillespie and others on Thursday, December 6 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. The HSU Jazz Orchestra plays selections from Marcus Shelby’s Port Chicago Suite commemorating a landmark in Civil Rights history, as well as tunes by Count Basie, Miles Davis, Charles Mingus and others on Saturday, December 8 at 8 PM, also in the Fulkerson Recital Hall. Tickets for each show are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID. HSU Department of Music productions, Dan Aldag directing.
Historical Suite and Classics by Jazz Orchestra and AM Jazz Band

The HSU Jazz Orchestra will perform three movements from Marcus Shelby’s Port Chicago Suite, which commemorates a landmark in Civil Rights history with a northern California connection, to climax its concert at HSU on Saturday, December 8.

According to Oakland-based composer Shelby, Port Chicago was the northern California naval base where an explosion in 1944 killed more than 320 men, mostly African American sailors, in the single worst disaster on U.S. soil during World War II. The Navy was racially segregated then, and only blacks were assigned to load ammunition on ships, under unsafe conditions. A protest by hundreds of African American sailors led to the largest mutiny trial in Navy history and a public outcry, ultimately resulting in an integrated U.S. Navy.

The performance of this work is a prelude to an appearance by the composer in March, said HSU Jazz Orchestra director Dan Aldag. “Marcus Shelby is bringing his jazz orchestra to perform his newest work, a jazz oratorio called ’Harriet Tubman: Bound for the Promised Land.’ It will be the keynote event for the HSU diversity conference, which will now be called the Social Justice Summit.”

In addition to the Shelby work, the Jazz Orchestra will perform another piece with a Civil Rights connection: the Charles Mingus composition, “Fables of Faubus,” a caustic “tribute” to Orval Faubus, the Arkansas governor who attempted to stop African American students from desegregating the Little Rock Central High School in 1957.

The program also includes the Count Basie arrangement of “Meetin’ Time,” a classic Miles Davis tune (“Milestones”) with a new arrangement by Mike Tamaro, a Latin Jazz number (Cubauza"), a piece by the Seattle-based avant-garde composer, Wayne Horvitz, a Duke Ellington Orchestra tune, and the blues and hip-hop influenced “Blue Opening” by Ike Sturm.

A couple of nights before the Jazz Orchestra performs, the AM Jazz Band performs classics in the Big Band style, including “Summertime” by George Gershwin, “Salt Peanuts” by Dizzy Gillespie, “My Funny Valentine” by Rodgers and Hart, “Jeannine” by Duke Pearson, and “Cold Duck Time” by Eddie Harris. The band also performs “Drivin,” an original by band member Adrian Re.

The AM Jazz Band performs on Thursday, December 6, and the Jazz Orchestra concert is on Saturday, December 8. Both concerts begin at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus. Tickets to each are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door.

Sunday, December 02, 2007


HSU Madrigal Singers: Fall 2007
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Madrigal Singers/MRT

Madrigals and Mad Torch Songs by the HSU Madrigal Singers and the Mad Transit Singers in their holiday concert on Sunday, December 2 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID. Produced by HSU Department of Music, Harley Muilenburg directing.

Mad River Transit Fall 2007
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Toasts and Torch Songs for Madrigal and MRT Holiday Concert

The HSU Madrigal Singers perform their traditional holiday menu of Renaissance solos, duets and ensemble madrigals on Sunday, December 2 in the Fulkerson Recital Hall. In the second half of the program, the Mad Transit Singers will vocalize up-tempo jazz and swing, as well as lighting up the night with some torch songs.

This year’s Madrigal menu begins with toasts from Thomas Arne (“Which is the Properest Day To Drink?”) and Erasmus Widmann (“Good Health, All Gathered Here!”) With the command to “Sing Ye Muses,” and “Fanfare for Christmas Day,” soloists and various combinations of singers perform works by Henry Purcell, John Dowland, Thomas Morley, Thomas Campion and others, as well as traditional songs from Elizabethan times. Two Madrigal Royalty, Clinton Rebik and Sarah Benzinger, preside over the festivities.

Mad River Transit takes over with songs by Miles Davis and Roger Treece before breaking into a series of solos, duets, trios and quartets. These include Robin DiCello and Melody Walker singing torch song ballads by Harold Arlen, and Rodgers and Hart. The evening ends with a trio rendition of “Late Night Blues.”

The MRT singers are accompanied by Darius Brotman on piano, Robert Amirkhan on bass and Jonathan Kipp on drums.

The holiday concert of the HSU Madrigal Singers and the Mad Transit Singers is on Sunday, December 2 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.

Media: North Coast Journal, Arcata Eye
Madrigal Singers: Fall 2007

Sarah Benzinger, Tiffany Guenter,Claire Bent, Katherine Kinley, Lauren Hay, Michele Enenstein, Hailey Kopf, Jemimah Lodes, Katie Mills, Joanne Rand, Brandy Rose, Emily Skold, Cindy Uhrhammer, Rebecca Ross, Jerilyn Phippeny Gashi, Kaia Renouf, Lizzie Poock, Kelly Whitacker, Carrie O’Niell, Gabriel Holman, Richard Alvarez, Jonathan Walton, Joseph Morf, Ryan Knight, Ian Radloff, Clint Rebik, Nicholas Tringale.
The Program: Madrigals

Madrigals to be performed:
Which is the Properest Day To Drink? Thomas Arne
Good Health, All Gathered Here! Erasmus Widmann
Sing Ye Muses John Blow
Mairi’s Wedding arr. Bob Chilcott
Barbara Allen arr. King Singers
Fanfare For Christmas Day Martin Shaw
Change Then For Lo William Holbrone

Duets and Solos to be sung:
Dreams and Imaginations by Robert Jones
Katherine & Emily

Let Us Wander Henry Purcell
Kaia & Brandy

What Can We Poor Females Do? Henry Purcell
Rebekah &Jemimah

Come Away Sweet love Thomas Greaves
Sarah & Claire

Since Robin Hood Thomas Weelkes
JoAnne Rand, Emily Skold

What If a Day Time of Elizabeth
Joseph Morf and Ian Radloff

Now What is Love Robert Jones
Ian, Ryan & Jerilyn

It Was a Lover and His Lass Thomas Morley
Kelly Whitcker, Lizzy Poock

Two Daughters of This Aged Stream Henry Purcell
Jerilyn & Claire

Sweet Nymph Thomas Morley
Sarah Benzinger & Nick Tringale

You Gentlemen of England Time of Elizabeth I
Tiffany Guenter and Madrigal Lords

Solos to be Sung:

A Secret Love or Two Thomas Campion
Cindy Uhrhammer

O Come O Come My Dearest Thomas Arne
Katherine

Willow Song Time of Shakespeare
Sarah

Have You Seen But a White Lily Grow? Time of Shakespeare
Emily Skold

I Live Not Where I Love Time of Elisabeth
Claire

The Silver Swan Orlando Gibbons
Jemimah Lodes

Come Again John Dowland
Jerilyn
Mad River Transit Singers: Fall 2007

Soprano: Jessica Malone, Melody Walker, Rosalie Venza.
Middle: Traci Alvarez, Jamie Banister, Calista LaBolle.
Alto: Robin DiCello, Melissa Modifer, Korrie Williams.

Tenor: Bernie Steinberg, Jonathan Walton.
Middle: Bryan Osper
Baritone/Bass: Kyle Blase, Joshua Boronkay, Alex Saslow.

Rhythm Section: Darius Brotman, Piano; Robert Amirkhan, Bass; ­­­­­­Johathan Kipp, Drums.
MRT Singers: The Program

Roger’s Idea by Roger Treece
Male: Jon Walton Female: Rosalie Venza
Improv: 1. Jon Walton 2. Korrie Williams 3. Bernie Steinberg

Boblicity by Miles Davis Arr. Clinton Day
Improv: 1. Bryan Osper 2. Joshua Boronkay 3. Jessica 4. Bernie

Joy by Todd Buffa
Improv: 1. Melody Walker Darius Brotman, Piano

Some Other Time by Cahn & Styne
Jessica Malone & Kyle Blase

Words by Anders Edenroth
Melody, Bryan, Robin, Traci

It Was Written in the Stars by Leo Robin & Harold Arlen (1948)
Robin DiCello

Joy Spring by Clifford Brown
Improv: 1. Kyle & Bernie Darius Brotman, Piano

It Never Entered My Mind by Rodgers & Hart
Melody Walker

Late Night Blues by Doug Beach & Mike Tomaro
Improv: 1. Robin 2. Calista 3. Bernie

Saturday, December 01, 2007

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Calypso Band and Percussion Ensemble

New Samba music from Brazil and high-energy dance music from the Caribbean highlight the holiday concert of the HSU Percussion Ensemble and Calypso Band on Saturday, December 1 at 8 PM in the Van Duzer Theatre on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. First 50 HSU students free with ID. Produced by HSU Department of Music, Eugene Novotney directing.
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Sounds of Trinidad and Brazil in Calypso Band/Percussion Ensemble Fall Concert


A new suite of Samba music gathered in Brazil will be among the musical works played by the HSU Percussion Ensemble in its upcoming performance with the Calypso Band on Saturday, December 1 at the Van Duzer Theatre.

Dr. Eugene Novotney, director of the Percussion Ensemble, made four separate trips to Brazil to collect this music, most recently last year. He was accompanied at various times by a total of two other faculty members, three alumni and 11 students. Four of the students, all current music majors (Jesse Franzen, John Evans, Bryan Osper and Melody Walk) and one faculty member (Howard Kaufman) will be among the performers of the Samba suite for this concert.

Novotney, the group’s founder and leader, transcribed the music they collected. “We will present it to the Humboldt audience in its classic form,” he said, “using all indigenous instruments from Brazil.”

The featured classical work of the Percussion Ensemble’s half of the program is Paschal Dances by award-winning composer David Gillingham. The piece is scored for piano and an ensemble of a dozen percussionists playing a variety of instruments. “The composition is haunting and beautiful,” Novotney said, “ and at other times, highly rhythmic and brutal.”

The second half of the show features the festive dance music of the Humboldt State Calypso Band, this time emphasizing Panorama compositions: the high-energy dance music of the Caribbean Carnival in Trinidad and Tobago.

“The Humboldt State Calypso Band prides itself in maintaining an accurate and authentic connection to the roots of the steel band movement and the innovative musicians of Trinidad, the island on which this unique percussion phenomenon was born,” Navotney said.

In addition to its regular performances at Humboldt State and throughout Northern California, the band’s tours have included stops in Eugene, Oregon and Seattle, Washington, as well as the California cities of San Francisco, Santa Cruz, San Jose, Santa Rosa, Sacramento, Stockton, Fresno, Oakland, Long Beach and Los Angeles.

The fall concert of the HSU Percussion Ensemble and Calypso Band is on Saturday, December 1 at 8 PM in the Van Duzer Theatre on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. First 50 HSU students free with ID.

Media: North Coast Journal, Arcata Eye.

Friday, November 30, 2007

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Symphonic Band

Song and Dance: HSU Symphonic Band plays Leonard Bernstein, Wagner and the premiere of “Krump” on Friday, November 30 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID. Produced by HSU Department of Music, Paul Cummings directing.
Songs, Dances and Krumping with the Symphonic Band

“If music had to be classified into only two categories,” said HSU Symphonic Band director Paul Cummings, “song and dance may be the best choices.”

The Symphonic Band concert on Friday, November 30 features outstanding works in each category, including a premiere. And they’re not just krumping around.

Krump is a work commissioned by the Symphonic Band as a member of a consortium of 10 university bands, and it will be performed at HSU for the first time. Composed by Scott McAllister of Baylor University, "Krump" refers to a popular dance form known as clown-dancing or “krumping,” that emanates from south central Los Angeles.

Cummings describes McAllister’s approach as drawing on “popular styles and genres, while using traditional media such as concert band and orchestra. Krump exemplifies this proclivity for borrowed style. Just as dancers at a krumping competition display their solo dancing skills for an audience, several instrumentalists in the Symphonic Band will play solos in the Hip-Hop musical style associated with krump dancing.”

Krump isn’t the only dance on the card. Earlier in the evening, the band plays two others: the Candide Overture by Leonard Bernstein, and The Solitary Dancer by Warren Benson.

Cummings confesses that he believes Bernstein was at his best when composing for the stage. “Though not as famous as the music from West Side Story,” Cummings said, “Candide is one of his crowning achievements.”

Based on the novel by Voltaire, the Broadway musical Candide had a powerhouse pedigree: besides music by Bernstein, the book was by playwright Lillian Hellman, lyrics by poet Richard Wilbur (and additional lyrics by Dorothy Parker), directed by the legendary Tyrone Guthrie. Though it’s first Broadway run in 1956-57 wasn’t very successful, its revival in 1974 ran for two years, and a second Broadway revival in 1997 topped 100 performances.

The overture to Candide, Cummings said, “is one of Bernstein’s most frequently performed works by both bands and orchestras. It is also one of Bernstein's most difficult works,” mostly for its tremendous speed. “ Don't get too close to the clarinets,” Cummings warned. “There are sparks shooting off of their keys!”

Warren Benson’s The Solitary Dancer is a dance of a different kind. An attempt to combine a fast tempo and soft volume level, it sweeps along at a swift pace but is, as Cummings described it, “quite understated and subtle. Rarely are more than ten instruments playing at once, and rarely do they enter or stop en masse.” By featuring wind and percussion solos, Cummings said, Benson emphasizes “the solo dance he depicts.”

The “song” aspect of the program is represented first by another selection from Leonard Bernstein’s score for Candide: Make our Garden Grow. “As thrilling as the overture is, this piece is equally compelling in its serenity,” Cummings said. Beginning with the solo for English horns that opens the piece, “it expresses Candide's resolve to find meaning in life through cultivation of the earth.”

Elsa’s Procession to the Cathedral by Richard Wagner, Cummings said, “presents a melody of great depth while employing instrumentation that is best described as a wall of sound.” Fans of brass instruments are apt to be pleased by this song, Cummings suggested. “For brass, “Elsa’s Procession” is about as good as it gets.”

“Song and Dance,” a program by the HSU Symphonic Band is presented on Friday, November 30 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.

Media: Arcata Eye, Eureka Times Standard Northern Lights.
The Program

Candide Overture - Leonard Bernstein

Make our Garden Grow - Leonard Bernstein
from Candide Suite

The Solitary Dancer - Warren Benson

Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral - Richard Wagner

Krump - Scott McAllister

Saturday, November 10, 2007

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Mozart and More :Cindy Moyer and Ching-Ming Cheng

Violinist Cindy Moyer and pianist Ching-Ming Cheng play sonatas by Mozart, Brahms and Copland in their Faculty Artist Series concert on Saturday, November 10 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $8 general, $3 students and seniors from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door.
Pianist Debuts in HSU Faculty Concert

Sonatas by Mozart, Brahms and Aaron Copland highlight the November 10 concert at HSU by violinist Cindy Moyer and, in her debut appearance in the Faculty Artist Series, pianist Ching-Ming Cheng.

According to HSU Professor of Music Cindy Moyer the Mozart Sonata in A is “one of the last and one of the best he wrote. The first movement is cheerful, while the last is the Mozart equivalent of a rollicking barn dance—especially the piano part, which has many notes!”

That will be the first challenge for pianist Ching-Ming Cheng. Born in Taiwan, she has just completed her doctorate at the University of Miami, and is now teaching piano at HSU.

The next challenge is the Sonata for violin and piano that Aaron Copland wrote in 1943, in memory of a friend who had recently been killed in World War II. “The first two movements have that wide-open-spaces American sound that we associate with Copland,” Moyer said, “but the final movement is more aggressive and jaunty.”

Next on the program, the Brahms Sonata #1 in G Major is “my favorite of the three he wrote,” Moyer said. “ It’s lyrical, intense, passionate—everything that’s great about Brahms!”

Completing the evening is Danse Espangole, a transcription of a dance from the opera La Vida Breve by 20th century composer Manuel De Falla. “It’s very Spanish in style—a fun, flashy piece,” Moyer said, and added, “Although the arrangement is for just violin and piano, the audience will have no problem imagining the castanets!”

This Faculty Artist Series concert by violinist Cindy Moyer and pianist Ching-Ming Cheng play sonatas by Mozart, Brahms and Copland, beginning at 8 pm on Saturday, November 10 in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $8 general, $3 students and seniors from HSU Ticket Office 826-3928) or at the door.

The Program

Mozart Sonata in A, K. 526
Copland: Sonata
Brahms: Sonata No. 1 in G Major
De Falla: Danse Espangole from La Vida Breve

Media: Arcata Eye, Eureka Times Standard Northern Lights

Saturday, November 03, 2007

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Urinetown: The Musical

Hip, hilarious, wicked, satirical, delirious… Postmodern parody, political subversion, an anti-musical musical--just some of the descriptions that have been applied to URINETOWN: THE MUSICAL, presented by HSU in the Van Duzer Theatre on the Humboldt State University campus in Arcata on October 25, 26, 27 and November 1, 2 and 3 at 7:30PM, plus a matinee on October 28 at 2PM. General admission tickets are $15/$10, seniors and all students $10/$8, from the HSU Ticket Office (826-3928). A co-production of HSU Department of Music and HSU Department of Theatre, Film & Dance: Rae Robison, stage director; Elisabeth Harrington, musical director.

For much more information, including photos, go to UrinetownHSU.

Media Previews: HSU Lumberjack, Eureka Times-Standard, Eureka Reporter, Arcata Eye, North Coast Journal. Reviews in Times-Standard and Eureka Reporter.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

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Jazz Combos

HSU student Jazz Combos perform classic and original jazz on Sunday, October 28 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Produced by HSU Department of Music, Dan Aldag directing. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.
Three Combos, Three Styles of Jazz

Every semester produces three jazz combos, composed of the best student players, each named after the day of the week they rehearse. But the three that will perform on Sunday, October 28 at the Fulkerson Recital Hall also each have a characteristic style.

The Monday Combo “is the most mainstream,” says Dan Aldag, HSU Music assistant professor who directs the combos. “They’re playing jazz standards such as Errol Garner’s ‘Misty,’ ‘Barbara’ by Horace Silver, and ‘Triste’ by Antonio Carlos Jobim. They will also play an original blues tune by the group’s guitarist, Ali Chaudhary.

The Wednesday Combo “is taking soul and funk tunes like Stevie Wonder’s ‘Boogie On, Reggae Woman’ and Bill Withers’ ‘Use Me,’ and adapting them to the jazz idiom,” Aldag said, “ in the same way that earlier generations of jazz musicians played the pop songs of their time.”

Friday’s Combo “is the most tapped into the leading edge of current jazz. They are performing Steve Swallow's ‘Bend Over Backward’, an original by theirpianist Joel Bettencourt and a contemporary arrangement of John Coltrane's ’Impressions.’"

All three Jazz Combos perform on October 27, beginning at 8pm, at Fulkerson Hall on the HSU campus. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.

The players in the Monday Combo are Clay Carey (tenor sax), Ali Chaudhary (guitar), Maia Wiitala (bass) and Gabriel Ben-Shalom (drums.) Wednesday Combo is Brian Jones (alto sax and vocals), Trevor Wendel (guitar), Cullen Miller (bass) and Chris Kaller (drums.)The Friday Combo is Sky Miller (tenor sax), Joel Bettencourt (piano), Bobby Amirkhan (bass) andMike Munroe (drums.)

Saturday, October 27, 2007

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Humboldt Bay Brass Band

In its only local appearance this year, the Humboldt Bay Brass Band performs works by Rossini, Vaughan Williams and local composers, including the lost “Redwood Highway March” from the 1930s, on Saturday, October 27 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID. Produced by HSU Department of Music, Gil Cline directing.
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Humboldt Bay Brass Band Brings Back the Lost “Redwood Highway March” in October 27 Concert

In its only local appearance this year, the Humboldt Bay Brass Band will revive a lost work by a local composer from several generations ago. Its title is “The Redwood Highway March.”

“Several weeks ago, the Humboldt County Historical Society received a box of music from someone in Seattle, who found twenty band compositions in storage in an apartment building,” explains band director and HSU Music professor Gil Cline. Titles which included words such as “Eureka” and “Big Lagoon” prompted the Seattle resident to send the music to Humboldt County historians.

“It turned out to be the work of Professor Frank Flowers, who was the Eureka High School band director in the 1920s and 30s,” said Cline. Flowers was also a cornet soloist as well as a composer. The twenty works, Cline believes, “were likely part of the repertory of the Redwood Empire Concert Band, which for many years played weekend concerts at the bandstand in Eureka’s Sequoia Park.”

Gil Cline examined the musical find, and with the Humboldt Historical Society’s blessings, scheduled the revival of one piece, called “The Redwood Highway March.”

This will be a highlight of the Humboldt Bay Band’s fall concert on Saturday, October 27 at the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Because the band will be “on academic break” until the fall of 2008, this will be its only local concert this year. HBBB, a true all-brass band in the British style, is composed of some of the best brass players from North Coast communities as far away as Brookings, Oregon, as well as students.

Besides the Flowers revival, this year’s program features an energetic overture by Rossini, “English Folk Songs” by British composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, and two recent works by local composer, Treblig Enilc.

The last remaining copies of the Band’s CD, “Pageantry of Brass” will be on sale at the concert, the final time it will be offered.

The musicians of the Humboldt Bay Brass Band are: Cornets - Chris Cox, Tristan Kadish, William Zoller, Jennifer Sisk, Clara Navarro, Joyce Carter, John Ferriera, Gary Ross;E flat Tenors - Matt Morgan, Leon Hamilton, Anwyn Halliday; Trombones - Bodie Pfost, Melissa Gussin, Toshi Noguchi; Baritones – Phil Sams, Dick LaForge; Euphonium - George Ritscher, Matt Sullivan; E flat Tubas - Gregg Moore, Joe Eckert; B flat Tubas - Jerry Carter, Damien Adams, Elizabeth Cruz; Percussion – Jessica Bishop, Grace Kerr, and Julia Chase.

Media: KIEM-TV news, Arcata Eye, Eureka Times-Standard, Eureka Reporter.
The Program

La Gazza Ladra (overture) by Gioacchino Rossini
John Peel-- traditional. Arranged by Fred Mortimer.
English Folk Songs by R. Vaughan Williams. Arranged by Frank Wright Montreal Citadel by J.N. Audoire
The Pied Pipers by Treblig Enilc
633 Squadron by Ron Goodwin. Arranged by F. BryceFour.
Dot Flourish by Gil Cline

- interval -

The Cossack by William Rimmer
Clok Tok by Gil Cline
Amazing Grace Arranged by William Hines
Toldedo (trombone trio) by T. L. Sharpe
The Redwood Highway by Frank Flowers
Dodge City by Jeff Smallman

Sunday, October 21, 2007

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Jay Crone

Trombonist and former HSU faculty member Jay Crone performs works by David Ott, Alec Wilder, Robert Suderburg and Eric Ewazen in concert with pianist Tracy Cowden in the HSU Music Guest Artist series on Sunday, October 21 at 8PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $8 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door.
Jay Crone Returns to HSU

Trombonist and former HSU faculty member Jay Crone performs in the HSU Music Guest Artist series on Sunday, October 21 at 8PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata.

Jay Crone taught at HSU for the 1992-93 and 1993-4 academic years. “I know there are people in town who remember Jay,” said current HSU Music faculty member Dan Aldag. These days, Crone is head of the Music Department at Virginia Tech, where he has taught trombone, euphonium and tuba for the past 14 years. He returns home to California for three concert dates, including Sunday, October 21 at HSU. He will be accompanied by pianist Tracy Cowden, who also teaches at Virginia Tech. She performs and lectures widely on the subject of collaborative piano.

This HSU Guest Artist Series concert features four works that straddle lines between classical, jazz and other genres. Alec Wilder's Sonata for Trombone and Piano was written for John Swallow, a founding member of the New York Brass Quintet. Swallow recorded it as the entire first side of his solo trombone album in the 1950s, “the first such trombone recording of its kind,” Crone notes.

Another Sonata for Trombone and Piano is by David Ott, who Crone calls “one of America's most sought-after and critically acclaimed symphonic composers.” Palmetto Suite, a 2004 work for alto trombone by Eric Ewazen, was inspired by coastal South Carolina and includes blues rhythms and other iconic sounds of Americana. Robert Suderburg’s Chamber Music III is more jazz-oriented, inspired by memories of the composer’s jazz trombonist father.

Tickets for the Jay Crone concert are $8 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door.
The Program and Performer's Notes

Palmetto Suite (2004) by Eric Ewazen (b. 1954)
I. Wild Dunes
II. Lowcountry Sweetgrass
III. Isle of Palms

Sonata for Trombone and Piano (1986) by David Ott (b. 1947)
I. Allegro
II. Quarter note =76
III. Andante cantabile
IV. Driving, relentless

INTERMISSION

Sonata for Trombone and Piano by Alec Wilder (1907-1980)
I. Moderato
II. Andante cantabile
III. Allegro guisto
IV. Allegro comodo
V. Grandioso

Chamber Music III (1972) by Robert Suderburg (b. 1936)
I. cry, man
II. it’s been a long, long time
III. brother Devil


Notes

Eric Ewazen offers the following about Palmetto Suite:

"Palmetto Suite is gratefully dedicated to my friend Ronald Barron (Principal Trombone, Boston Symphony) whom I have known for several years. He has recorded, conducted and performed various pieces of mine-so it was with great enthusiasm that I accepted his commission for a new piece for alto trombone-the first work I have written expressly for this instrument.

The alto trombone, with its wonderfully rich colors is an instrument that composers can write for with great expressivity. This piece was inspired by a visit I made to the coastal region of Charleston, South Carolina in the spring of 2004. A long time friend of mine, Ann Stephens, was holding a celebration for her mother's 80th birthday and she gathered together friends who were living throughout the United States to come to this very special area. We were all amazed by the beauty, gracefulness, and charm of the Lowcountry of South Carolina, with its dramatic seashore, its historical architecture and its spectacular flora. Palmetto Suite is a description of this very beautiful part of the country. One windy night, walking along the coast's sand dunes, I walked right up to the ocean, and was so taken with inexorable pounding of the waves. It was energetic, almost rhythmic, and somewhat exhilarating.

The first movement, "Wild Dunes" describes this wonderful scene. The second movement, "Lowcountry Sweetgrass" is influenced by the centuries-old African-American art form of the woven sweeetgrass baskets that one sees throughout the islands near Charleston. They are sold outside at these very picturesque markets- and the fragrant smell of the sweet grass-gentle, aromatic- becomes almost intoxicating. This movement has the sound of an old time blues harmony and rhythm to convey this image of traditional Americana. The final movement, "The Isle of Palms," depicts the large, graceful, and impressive Palmetto trees, standing majestically with the clear blue sky as a backdrop. The music is full and rich-describing the sensation one feels when one sees such impressive trees. A final reflection of the nearby coastal waves brings the piece to a close."

David Ott is one of America's most sought-after and critically acclaimed symphonic composers. He earned graduate degrees from the University of Indiana and the University of Kentucky, and has served on the faculties of Houghton College, Pfeiffer College, and DePauw University. In 1991 he was named Composer-in-Residence of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, a position he held until 1997. His catalog includes four symphonies, fifteen concerti, numerous overtures, fanfares and ceremonial music, film scores, and a host of chamber pieces.

David Manson, instructor of trombone at Indiana State University during the 1980’s, commissioned David Ott’s Sonata for Trombone and Piano. The piano is an equal partner to the trombone in Ott’s sonata. The four movements range in style from agitated to melancholy, while the second movement employs the use of sympathetic vibrations inside the piano.

Alec Wilder, a Rochester, New York native, studied briefly at the Eastman School of Music, but was largely self-taught as a composer. His primary residence during his adulthood was the Algonquin Hotel in New York City, though he traveled extensively during his lifetime. Aside from his many compositions for obscure instruments such as the euphonium and marimba, Wilder is primarily remembered for his contributions to American popular song. The following excerpts from Alec Wilder-An Introduction to the Man and His Music, published by Margun Music, perhaps best describe Alec Wilder's music:

"Alec Wilder's music is a unique blend of American musical traditions-among them, jazz and the American popular song-the basic 'classical' European forms and techniques. As such it fiercely resists all labeling. Although it often pained Alec that his music was not more widely accepted by either jazz or classical performers, undeterred he wrote a great deal of music of remarkable originality in many forms: sonatas, suites, concertos, operas, ballets, art songs, woodwind quintets, brass quintets, jazz suites- and hundreds of popular songs…"

"Wilder, at his best, represents a fascinating amalgam of three quite different composer-archetypes, here all rolled into one: Gershwin, Poulenc, Villa-Lobos. In its baldest outlines, Wilder's oeuvre is unusually diverse and characteristically American, a synthesis of the brilliant song writer (Gershwin); the not-too-intellectual, traditional and determinedly conservative composer of easily accessible American-style Gebrauchsmusik, making use of popular and jazz elements as a matter of course (Poulenc); and a sometimes uncritical, too-casual writer who writes too much too easily-like Shakespeare's old bromide about loving too well but not wisely. (Villa-Lobos)….

"…What those who knew him well respected in Alec Wilder was his absolute independence and incorruptible aesthetic integrity as an artist. For years Alec wrote music of taste and quality with that personal melodic touch that was all his own, unaffected by musical fashion or fads, and never accepting any form of remuneration…It was almost a mission in Alec's life to assuage the thirst for good music for the so-called underdog instruments: bass, tuba, euphonium horn, marimba, etc. Alec was truly the musician's friend-an American original."

Alec Wilder's Sonata for Trombone and Piano was written for John Swallow, a founding member of the New York Brass Quintet, longtime faculty member of the Yale School of Music, and an important figure in the contemporary music scene of New York City for many years. This work made up the entire first side of Swallow's solo trombone long play recording from the 1950's, the first such trombone recording of its kind.

Night Set for Trombone and Piano was commissioned by the trombonist Stuart Dempster and premiered by Dempster and Robert Suderburg in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1972. The work is dedicated to the composer's jazz-trombonist father with the following note:

"Being the son of a jazz and club trombonist, one recalls a childhood filled with the coming and going of all types of musicians at all varieties of hour. Most of all, however, it guaranteed that the instrument itself and the way R.A. Suderburg played it would produce sound and sight images never to be forgotten. Thus, when commissioned by Stuart Dempster for a Night Set for trombone, the musical occasion was offered to let out those hot-licks and sliding-styles which were the jazz trombonist's stock and trade during the thirties and forties as he wandered from indoor dance hall to outdoor bandstand and from club date to stage show. Hopefully, nurtured by Dempster's unique performance art, these styles and scenes can live again in NIGHT SET, fusing memory with bit-of-the-devil and sweetness with satire. Thus the work is dedicated to my father who-along with Stuart Dempster-should take a bow, at least for those portions of the work which may please or amuse."


Performer biographies

Jay Crone, associate professor of music, is in his fourteenth year as professor of low brass at Virginia Tech. Originally from California, Crone received degrees from the University of Southern California, the Yale School of Music, and California State University at Fresno. In addition to his duties as professor of trombone, euphonium and tuba, Crone was the assistant director of Virginia Tech's marching band, the Marching Virginians for ten years. Currently, Mr. Crone is the Head of the Department of Music at Virginia Tech.

Mr. Crone has performed on trombone and euphonium with many symphony orchestras and bands throughout the United States, including the Fresno Philharmonic, the Roanoke Symphony Orchestra and Opera Roanoke. During the summers he performs with the orchestras of the Wintergreen Performing Arts Festival and the Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival.

As a trombone and euphonium soloist Crone has appeared with the University of Southern California Symphonic Winds, CSU Fresno Wind Ensemble, the Virginia Wind Symphony, Virginia Tech Symphonic Wind Ensemble, CSU Humboldt Wind Ensemble, Virginia Tech Wind Symphony, and the West Georgia State University Wind Ensemble. Crone also performs with Virginia Tech's Faculty Brass Trio, and is a founding member of the Appalachian Trombone Quartet. In June of 2006 he premiered Dr. James Sochinski’s Fantasie-Variations on a Dowland Ayre for trombone and band with the CSU Fresno Alumni Wind Ensemble during their tour of England under the direction of Dr. Lawrence Sutherland.

A unique aspect of Mr. Crone's musical career has been his dual role as both trombonist and pianist. He has been a collaborative pianist in voice and instrumental recitals throughout the United States, most recently performing Eric Ewazen’s Palmetto Suite for Alto Trombone and Piano with Ronald Barron of the Boston Symphony. Before coming to Virginia Tech Crone was a visiting assistant professor of music at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California.

Tracy Cowden joined the music department faculty at Virginia Tech as Assistant Professor of Piano and Vocal Coach in 2004. She received the D.M.A. and M.M. degrees in Piano Accompanying and Chamber Music from the Eastman School of Music, and a B.M. degree in Piano Performance from Western Michigan University.

As a collaborative pianist, Tracy has performed with the Cavani Quartet, the Audubon Quartet, and the Marble Cliff Chamber Players, and in recitals with principal musicians from the Montreal, Vancouver, Boston, and Columbus symphony orchestras. She has been featured as a concerto soloist with the Central Ohio Symphony Orchestra, the Chamber Orchestra of Southwest Virginia, the Ohio Wesleyan University Chamber Orchestra, and the Virginia Tech Symphonic Wind Ensemble.

Tracy has presented lectures on the art of collaborative piano in Ohio, Michigan, and Virginia, and she was selected to present at the College Music Society National Conference in Québec City and at the Music Teachers National Association National Conferences in Seattle, Washington (2005) and Austin, Texas (2006).

In collaboration with Dr. Nancy Gamso from Ohio Wesleyan University, Tracy released a CD entitled “With Blackwood and Silver,” which features modern duo repertoire for flute with piano and clarinet with piano. She also can be heard with the Eastman Wind Ensemble in its 50th anniversary recording, released in 2002.

Tracy has previously served as a faculty member at Ohio Wesleyan University, and as an adjunct faculty member at Kalamazoo College and Hope College in western Michigan. Her principal teachers have included Jean Barr, Douglas Humpherys, Fernando Laires, Phyllis Rappeport, and Marilyn Sluka.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

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Timothy Smith

Pianist Timothy Smith, a Steinway Concert Artist, performs selections from Liszt, Scriabin and Coray in a Guest Artist Concert on Saturday, October 13 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $10 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door.
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Liszt and Sky Spirit at HSU by Pianist Timothy Smith

Appearing in the HSU Guest Artist Series, pianist Timothy Smith performs pieces included on his latest recording of Franz Liszt, and a work by a contemporary Alaska composer incorporating Native themes, on Saturday, October 13 in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata.

Timothy Smith is Professor of Piano and head of Piano Studies at the University of Alaska Anchorage. As a performer, Smith won the Artists International Competition and made his New York debut in Carnegie Recital Hall. He is currently a Steinway Concert Artist.

Raised in Seattle, Smith was attending the Julliard School of Music at age 10, and made his orchestral debut at 15. He has appeared with many orchestras in the U.S., Canada and in Asia, where he has given more than 50 concerts. He has recently returned from a month-long concert tour of China.

At HSU, Smith will play several pieces by Franz Liszt. Of his Liszt recording, Fanfare Magazine wrote: “…impressive and towering…one of the more gripping accounts of the (Liszt) sonata in recent memory.”

Smith’s program begins with “Silam Inua,” a 1992 work by Alaska composer Craig Coray, based on Native music recorded in Alaska and northern Canada between 1940 and 1960. The title translates as “Sky Spirit,” representing the Inupiat concept of the spirit that governs all things above the earth: the sky, the weather, the universe.

At HSU, Smith will also play “Sonata No 5 in F# major, Op. 53” by early 20th century Russian pianist and composer Alexander Scriabin, and a work by Chinese composer Chen Peixun.

A celebrated teacher, Timothy Smith will also conduct a free piano workshop on Sunday, October 14, from 10 AM until noon, also in Fulkerson Recital Hall.

The Timothy Smith concert will begin at 8PM on Saturday, October 13 in Fulkerson Recital Hall. Tickets are $10 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door.

Media: Arcata Eye.
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Notes on“Silam Inua” by Craig Coray

Silam Inua:
Ceremonial Song
Shaman’s Power Song
Calling the Walrus
Rhythmic Breathing
Hunting for Musk Ox
Women’s Dance Song
Weather Song
Dance Song

Anchorage Composer Craig Coray, a graduate of the University of Alaska, Fairbanks and the State University of New York, Buffalo, has incorporated native Alaskan songs as thematic material in his music since 1973, reflecting the influence of his childhood in bush Alaska.

Silam Inua (“Sky Spirit”), composed in 1992, was funded by a grant from the Alaska State Council on the Arts. The Inupiat title represents the spirit that governs all things above the earth; the sky, weather, and universe. The eight movements evolved from original Eskimo material recorded in Alaska and northern Canada between 1940 and 1960.

Coray describes the work as follows: “In Ceremonial Song (Kotzebue), a free introduction becomes the countermelody to an Eskimo song in a different key. The left hand begins drumming and the music is repeated fortissimo. In Shaman’s Power Song (Hooper Bay) an unusual form of the pentatonic scale is disguised within the large melodic leaps and 7/4 meter. The music gains power through the repetition of a single chord. In Calling the Walrus (Southampton Island) an Eskimo hunter seems to sing as he speaks the language of the walrus.

On the piano, many overtones convey a feeling of space; the “silence that can be heard.” A stalking motive creeps into the lower register. In Rhythmic Breathing (Baker Lake) two girls breathe gustily into a kettle, causing the sound to bounce back. The piano mimics the reverberation; everything in the right hand is repeated upside down by the left hand. Other sounds represent the babble of geese on the tundra.

Hunting for Musk Ox (Chesterfield Inlet) is based on a minor pentatonic scale with one “blue” note. The left hand becomes a drum; true to the original, it’s in a different meter than the melody. Women’s Dance Song (Kobuk Valley) employs vigorous drumming in a metric division of 2 plus 3 – a forceful piano figure emerges. What sounds like an improvisation is actually a four-note Eskimo melody. The drumming and dancing intensify.

In Weather Song (Kotzebue) a single repeated chord hangs in the air like fog; the booming sound on the open strings suggests an unseen power. Somewhere a lone voice floats over the tundra in a prayer to Silam Inua for good weather. Dance Song (Barrow) – A village dance begins tentatively then builds as more singers, drummers, and dancers join in. An undefined celebration is underway; perhaps the people are rejoicing for the return of daylight in spring.”

Friday, October 12, 2007

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Humboldt Symphony

The Humboldt Symphony plays Bach, Elgar, Saint-Saens and Edvard Grieg’s “Symphonic Dances” in honor of his centennial, on Friday, October 12 and Sunday, October 14 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office 826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID. Produced by HSU Department of Music, Paul Cummings conducting.
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Humboldt Symphony Features Grieg’s “Symphonic Dances”

The Humboldt Symphony pays tribute to the centennial year of composer Edvard Grieg with one of his signature compositions, the “Symphonic Dances,” in its fall concert on Friday, October 12, and Sunday, October 14 in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata.

Conducted by HSU assistant professor Paul Cummings, the Symphony will also perform short pieces by Bach, Edward Elgar and Camille Saint-Saens.

The centennial of Grieg’s death in 1907 is being noted by orchestras around the world. The Norwegian composer wrote the “Symphonic Dance” around 1896, based on folk songs and dances of his native country. Several of Grieg’s works synthesized folklore and European concert music. With four “dances” like the four movements of a symphony, together with the unity of the composition, the “Symphonic Dances” is aptly named.

The preceding pieces on the program are “Marche Militaire Francaise,” by Grieg’s contemporary in France, Camille Saint-Saens; “Nimrod,” a section of the “Enigma Variations” by British composer Edward Elgar (also written in Grieg’s lifetime), and the chorale prelude of “Wachet Auf” (“Sleepers, Wake”) by J. S. Bach, as arranged for orchestra by Eugene Ormandy.

The Humboldt Symphony, conducted by Paul Cummings, performs in Fulkerson Recital Hall on Friday, October 12 and Sunday, October 14 at 8PM.Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office 826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.

Media: Arcata Eye, Eureka Times-Standard Northern Lights.

Saturday, October 06, 2007

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HSU Symphonic Band and Jazz Orchestra

Music from Europe to hip-hop is featured in the HSU Symphonic Band and Jazz Orchestra joint concert on Saturday, October 6 at 8 PM in the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.
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From Europe to Hip-Hop: Symphonic Band to Jazz Orchestra

The first half is all Europe,and the second half is jazz, from Count Basie to blues with a hip-hop beat, when the HSU Symphonic Band and Jazz Orchestra present a joint concert on Saturday, October 6 at the Fulkerson Recital Hall on the HSU campus in Arcata.

The HSU Symphonic Band joins the worldwide recognition of Norwegian composer and pianist Edvard Grieg’s centennial with Grieg’s “Funeral Music for Rikard Nordraak.” Also on the program are works by Richard Strauss (“Koenigsmarsch”), Ralph Vaughan Williams (English Folk Song Suite) and Arthur Sullivan, of the famed operatic team of Gilbert and Sullivan (“Pineapple Poll.”)

“This represents an all-European program, which is somewhat unusual for a modern American concert band to do,” said Paul Cummings, director of the Symphonic Band and HSU Assistant Professor of Music. “But we especially wanted to honor the centennial year of Grieg’s death by performing some of this great Norwegian composer’s music.”

The second half of the concert will be performed by the HSU Jazz Orchestra, directed by Assistant Professor of Music Dan Aldag. The program ranges from traditional to contemporary jazz. It begins with a tune from today: “Blues Opening” by New York City jazz bassist Ike Sturn, which Aldag describes as combining “blues harmonies with a hip-hop beat, creating something that is simultaneously old and raw, and new and sleek.” “Prodigal Son Revisited” by Seattle-based composer and electronic musician Wayne Horvitz continues the avant-garde theme.

But tradition is also served, beginning with "Meetin'Time" by legendary alto saxophonist and composer Benny Carter, using the exact arrangement played by the Count Basie Orchestra. The classic Miles Davis “Milestones” is followed by “Fables of Faubus” by jazz great Charles Mingus, which Aldag calls “a caustic and uproarious ‘tribute’ to Orval Faubus,” the Arkansas governor who tried to defy integration in the Civil Rights era. The HSU Symphonic Band and Jazz Orchestra concert begins at 8PM in Fulkerson Recital Hall. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students and seniors, from HSU Ticket Office 826-3928) or at the door. HSU students free with ID.
Director's Notes: Paul Cummings on the Symphonic Band

For the first half of the concert, the Symphonic Band is performing “Koenigsmarsch” by Richard Strauss, “Funeral Music for Rikard Nordraak” by Edvard Grieg, “English Folk Song Suite” by Ralph Vaughan Williams, and “Pineapple Poll” by Arthur Sullivan. This represents an all-European program which is somewhat unusual for amodern American concert band to do. This is the centennial year of Grieg's death (1907), so we are joining the bandwagon, so to speak, of groups performing this great Norwegian composer's music.

The work we’re doing by Edvard Grieg, "Funeral Music for Rikard Nordraak," has an interesting story behind it. Rikard Nordraak, in whose memory the piece was composed, was a close friend of Grieg. Nordraakis remembered today primarily as the composer of the Norwegian national anthem, which he composed when he was only 17 years old.


While visiting Rome, Grieg heard of Nordraak's premature death, and immediately composed the funeral music. It was originally written for piano, but Grieg transcribed it for winds and percussion, since many funeral marches of this era were to be played outdoors. At the interment for Nordraak in Bergen, the town band apparently was not quite up to the task of performing the wind band version of the piece. Instead, an orchestral version was hastily cobbled together by a local composer to suit the Bergen musicians. Ironically, the band setting was played at Grieg's own funeral which occurred three years later.


The English Folk Song Suite is a staple of the wind band repertoire, and Gordon Jacob's transcription for orchestra is also quite popular, thoughthe band version came first. Vaughan Williams employs nine different English folk songs in the suite, mostly drawn from the collections of Cecil Sharpe. What was originally a group of rugged tunes from the English countryside was transformed by Vaughan Williams into a beautifully crafted, elegant artwork. The pristine settings require Mozartean precision from the ensemble, and depict an incredibly wide range of emotion, from lovesick sadness to carefree glee.
Director’s Notes: Dan Aldag on the Jazz Orchestra

The Jazz Orchestra will perform the second half of the concert, playing "Blue Opening," "Milestones," "Meetin' Time," "Prodigal Son Revisited" and"Fables of Faubus."

"Blue Opening," composed by Ike Sturm, combines blues harmonies and inflections with a hip-hop beat, creating something that is simultaneously both old and raw and new and sleek. It was composed by Ike Sturm, a young bassist who is the music director for jazz at St. Peter's Church in Manhattan, the famed "jazz church," where he composes and performsoriginal music for weekly jazz services. "Blue Opening" was arranged for jazz orchestra by Ike Sturm's father Fred, a noted jazz arranger and educator.

"Prodigal Son Revisited" was composed by Wayne Horvitz, a Seattle-based composer, pianist and electronic musician who has performed with many ofthe leading lights of the jazz avant-garde and composed music for everyone from the Kronos Quartet and choreographer Paul Taylor to Gus Van Sandt'sremake of "Psycho."

Besides these two contemporary works, the Jazz Orchestra will play three pieces that, each in their own way, deal with the jazz tradition. "Meetin' Time" is the exact arrangement played by the Count Basie Orchestra on their 1960 album Kansas City Suite. All of the music on that album was composed by the legendary alto saxophonist and composer Benny Carter, and was about some place or event in Kansas City, where the Basie band got its start. "Meetin' Time" evokes the sounds of a church service.

"Milestones" is a classic Miles Davis tune in a brand-new arrangement by Mike Tomaro.

"Fables of Faubus" is Charles Mingus's caustic and uproarious "tribute" to Orval Faubus, the Arkansas governor of the mid-1950s who, in 1957, defied the United States Supreme Court by ordering the Arkansas National Guard to stop African American youngsters from desegregating Central High School in Little Rock. The Jazz Orchestra will perform the arrangement created for the Mingus Big Band, a group formed after Mingus's death by his widow Sue,which is dedicated to keeping Mingus's music alive.

Featured soloists on the concert will include saxophonists Sky Miller and Steve Alton, trombonist Talon Nansel, trumpeters Ari Davie and TristanKadish and pianist Jeff Kroeger.

Saturday, September 29, 2007


Greg Granoff at the organ, with Ari Davie,
Frederick Belanger and Tristan Kadish,
baroque trumpets.
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Organ Dedication Concert

HSU Music Department dedicates its new baroque-style pipe organ with a special free concert on Saturday, September 29 at 8PM, in the Armstrong Rehearsal Hall (Music Complex Room 131) on the HSU campus in Arcata. 826-3531.

Greg Granoff, Tim Carter and Mary Wells
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The Sports Car of Organs Pipes Up at HSU

With the appropriate pomp and circumstance, the Humboldt State University Music Department will dedicate its new baroque-style pipe organ at a special free concert on Saturday, September 29. But just because it’s a period design doesn’t mean it’s not modern.

“This pipe organ is a type called a tracker instrument,” Dr. Gil Cline, Professor of Music and Project Director for this pipe organ explained. “ It has a 17th century design but it gets its air power from a high quality electric motor, rather than the old bellows system. Trackers have the reputation of being sort of like light, powerful sports cars.”

The gift of an anonymous donor, the organ was made by the German firm Bosch. It required many months of repair and miscellaneous work. The inaugural concert features a program designed to show off the organ’s capabilities and will put it through its paces.

The concert begins with a fanfare written by Gil Cline expressly for the Bosch organ, performed by Greg Granoff with Cline’s HSU Trumpet Consort von Humboldt, featuring baroque trumpets.

Terry Yard, Merry Schellinger, Helen Hui and Kristen Anderson, all local organists and members of the American Guild of Organists will continue the program. Violinist will also perform, honoring the traditional pairing of violin and organ, instruments that came of age together in the 17th century.

Organist Doug Moorehead, past Dean of the local American Guild of Organists chapter, will conclude the concert, a fitting honor for the person who began the process that resulted in this organ dedication.

Doug Moorehead

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“Doug has been a keeper of the flame,” Cline said, “and a local proponent of all things ‘pipe organ.’” It was Moorehead’s contact with Cline on behalf of the anonymous donor which provided the impetus to bring the Bosch organ to HSU.

Following in-depth discussions on campus, development officer Mary Wells orchestrated the gift arrangements needed to bring the organ out of storage.The organ was moved to the campus in hundreds of pieces. Then Tim Carter of the Wolverton Company, a Fortuna firm experienced in pipe organs, re-assembled it. Some 112 damaged pipes were also rebuilt by a Pennsylvania firm.

“Pipe organs are as varied as the most beautiful of sailing ships and other maritime craft,” Cline remarked. “Each is suited to a rather narrow range of ideal uses, and is valued for those unique purposes and qualities.”

Tim Carter and members of the
Wolverton Company.
organ
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The Dedication Concert, scheduled to last one hour, will be held at 8PM on Saturday, September 29 in the Armstrong Rehearsal Hall, Room 131 in the Music Complex on the HSU campus. Call 826-3531 for directions and more information.

The HSU Music Department plans to hold annual organ concerts featuring faculty, students and guests. Due to the generosity of the donor, HSU will begin awarding an annual $1000 scholarship to encourage student players.

Media: Arcata Eye, Eureka Reporter.