Monday, November 16, 2009

Windiana in Concert



If you're in the Valparaiso, IN area this Thursday evening (November 19), head over to the Memorial Opera House and catch the Windiana Concert Band. Under the direction of Dr. Jeffrey Doebler, the director of music education and bands at Valparaiso University, Windiana is a professional-level concert band.

Among other pieces, Thursday's program includes:

American Overture for Band, Joseph Willcox Jenkins
Second Norwegian Rhapsody, F. Melius Christiansen
Honest Abe Quickstep, William Camphouse
Mountains in the Mist, Michael Boo
Suite of Old American Dances, Robert Russell Bennett
Video Games Live, arr. Ralph Ford
Fugue on Yankee Doodle, John Philip Sousa
Towering Windows, Michael Boo

Here's the info:
Windiana in Concert
Thursday, November 19
7:30 PM
Memorial Opera House
104 Indiana St.
Valparaiso, IN
(219) 548-9137
Admission: Adults $12; Senior citizens $10, Students $7

This group can really play. Bring your friends and any young musicians you know. Everyone will enjoy this concert.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Model Train and Farm Toy Show

While knocking around on Twitter recently, I discovered a press release for a 2nd annual model train/farm toy show to be held in north central Illinois next weekend. If you're in that part of the state, this sounds like a great show. Here's the entire press release:

The North Central Illinois Model Train Fair and Farm Toy Show will be held at the Bureau County Fairgrounds in Princeton, Ill., on Saturday, Nov. 21.

All types of trains will be on display and for sale including the popular Thomas toy trains, HO Scale trains and the larger American Flyer and Lionel style trains. There will also be several working train layouts for everyone to watch.

In addition farm toys and equipment manuals will also be sold at this show. Antique toys and games will also be sold.

The show runs from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. in the heated exhibit halls at the fairgrounds. Adult admission is $4. Kids 10 and under are admitted free. A concession stand is located in the building with breakfast and lunch items.

The Fairgrounds are located at 811 W. Peru St in Princeton. For information call (815)875-2606 after 5 p.m. or see www.bureaucountyfair.com

If you attend, please take some photos and I'll share them here.

Friday, November 6, 2009

U.S. Open Brass Band Championships

The U.S. Open Brass Band Championships will take place on Saturday, November 7, 2009 at the Norris Cultural Arts Center in St. Charles, Ill.

Brass bands from across the nation (and Canada, too) will compete starting at 9:00 am. Tickets are $25. Click on the link above for the lineup and performance schedule.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Overcome A Bad Rehearsal

One bad rehearsal isn't usually enough to spoil a pending performance, but several in a row can damage the whole experience. How do you prevent things from going south? Here are five suggestions:

1. Don't deny that the first bad rehearsal was bad.
Trying to see the positive, its tempting for musicians to chalk up a poor rehearsal as simply an "off day" and not give it another thought. Sometimes it really is an off day, but sometimes not digging any deeper than that perpetuates what made the rehearsal "off" in the first place.

2. Take a closer look.
Whether we like to admit it or not, outside factors affect our ability to focus on the creative tasks at hand. To find out why the rehearsal went bad, check your personal baggage at the door and take a look at the specific points where your own efforts derailed. You can't control what other people do, so start with yourself.

3. Good rehearsals start with great preparation.
In almost any bad rehearsal, you can trace the spots where you and your fellow musicians didn't have great preparation. Most of the time we arrive with merely good preparation -- we listened to the pieces on the program, spent time dissecting our parts, and practiced -- but great preparation involves a higher level of understanding that provides the confidence to adapt to every unexpected shift in the piece or motion of the conductor's baton. The trick is to be so prepared for your part that you make playing it look easy.

4. Individual, Section, Ensemble
Every performer must understand his/her responsibilities as an individual, as a member of a section, and as a member of the entire ensemble. Musicians who listen to themselves alone will not find many opportunities to play, period. Musicians must listen beyond themselves and find their balance point within their section, and the section must find its balance point within the ensemble. Things go awry in a rehearsal when individuals and sections are unsure of their responsibilities and contributions to the ensemble.

5. Change Something
To prevent one bad rehearsal from becoming a string of poor efforts, individual musicians should change something in their preparation for the next rehearsal. Listen to more recordings from different performers; practice more or alter how you practiced; practice as a section before the next rehearsal; there are myriad possibilities here. The point is not to repeat the same steps that already proved to be ineffective.