Posted by glennled on March 6, 2013

Cole, a junior at Edmonds-Woodway High School, plays with Peter Bond of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra in New York
Yes, the evening concert at the fourth annual NW Trumpet Arts Festival on 3 March at Seattle Pacific University (SPU) featured five highly accomplished, professional trumpeters, headed by Peter Bond of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra in New York and Dr. Brian Chin of SPU and the Tacoma Symphony Orchestra.
But I went to the festival to hear the kids play. The afternoon program consisted of two Master’s Classes and a Student Concert. Peter Bond taught the class on “Practicing Fundamentals,” and Chad McCullough taught the one on “Practicing Jazz Improvisation.” There were almost 50 people at these sessions. Dr. Chin emceed the event, sponsored by the Yamaha Corporation, Kennelly Keys Music, and SPU.
The Student Concert gave six trumpet students the golden opportunity to play, with piano accompaniment, in a non-competitive environment for their peers, the five professional artists, and an appreciative public audience. All the students played very challenging music. They received written feedback from the professional trumpet artists and a classy festival T-shirt. What a special event this is! As it continues to grow, the festival aims to draw at least 100 people.
Please click on any photo to enlarge it.
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Allison, freshman, SPU, Seattle
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Peter Bond, Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, New York
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Aaron & Peter Bond
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Peter Bond emphasizes a point to Cole about practicing fundamentals
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Chad McCullough, jazz trumpeter
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Carter, senior, Shorecrest High School, Shoreline
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John, junior, Roosevelt High School, Seattle
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Brandon, a graduate of Central Washington University, Ellensburg
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Michaela, senior, Meadowdale High School, Lynnwood
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Aaron, junior, Kamiak High School, Mukilteo
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SPU Campus, Main Entrance
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McKinley Hall, E.E. Bach Theater, site of 2013 NW Trumpet Arts Festival
Posted in Festivals & Competitions | Tagged: Brian Chin, Chad McCullough, improvisation, jazz, Kennelly Keys Music, Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, NW Trumpet Arts Festival, Peter Bond, Seattle Pacific University, SPU, Tacoma Symphony Orchestra, trumpet, trumpeters, Yamaha Corporation | 2 Comments »
Posted by glennled on March 5, 2013
What does it mean when you cry in Act I of Puccini’s opera, La Boheme, and not when Mimi dies at the end of Act IV? Well, it must have a little to do with the fact that this is the second time my wife and I have seen La Boheme at the Seattle Opera. And it must have a lot to do with the singers and the music itself—there are a couple of outstandingly beautiful arias and a duet in Act I, sung by the lead soprano (Jennifer Black) and tenor (Michael Fabiano) when we attended on 24 February. And finally, it must have something to do with me, myself, and I.

Two trumpeters lead the parade by Cafe Momus in Act II. Photo by Elise Bakketun.
In Act I, young Mimi and Rodolfo fall in love. Mimi is a seamstress and courtesan, and Rodolfo is a poor poet, living in the same cheap apartment house in Paris. She is ill, but their love is strong. Their future brims with hope and promise. Who does not remember an intense, dreamy, romantic love in one’s youth? A tear sneaks down from the corner of my right eye.
They nearly break up in Act III. and then in the climax of Act IV, Mimi passes away after a long bout with consumption. Rodolfo is the last in the room to realize that she is dead. And out in seat E-2, a pair of dry eyes watch. Whazat? Most people cry in all the right places. Not me, not this time. Surprise.
Love is born—tears. Love is lost—no tears. I’ve seen it before—I know this love will die. But we never let tragic love stories, beautifully told, die. This great opera should always remain one of the world’s most popular. It premiered 117 years ago at Teatro Regio in Turin, northern Italy on 1 February 1896. The opera is “about young people caught in a difficult economic situation in desperate and conflicted love,” writes Speight Jenkins, General Director of the Seattle Opera. “There is no opera that so immediately speaks to everyone’s youth, even to those very young.”
Please click on any photo to enlarge it.
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Mimi (Jennifer Black) and Rodolfo (Michael Fabiano). Photo by Elise Bakketun.
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Musetta (Jennifer Zetlan) and Marcello (Keith Phares). Photo by Elise Bakketun.
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Rodolfo (Michael Fabiano), Colline (Arthur Woodley), Benoit (Tony Dillon), Schaunard (Andrew Garland), and Marcello (Keith Phares). Photo by Elise Bakketun.
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Colline (Arthur Woodley), Schaunard (Andrew Garland), Mimi (Jennifer Black), Rodolfo (Michael Fabiano), Marcello (Keith Phares), and Musetta (Jennifer Zetlan). Photo by Elise Bakketun.
Posted in Professional Concerts | Tagged: arias, duet, Jennifer Black, La Boheme, Michael Fabiano, Puccini, Seattle Opera, Speight Jenkins, trumpeters | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on February 5, 2013

Tahoma National Cemetery, Kent, WA, view of Mt. Rainier
As of now, I have played “Taps” 50 times at various veterans’ memorials and funerals in the Greater Seattle area. The latest veteran so honored was Richard Louis Larson (1927-2013), whose cremated remains were inurned at Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent on 2 February.
A U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, Richard was renown for his life-long, kind service of others. After he heard me sound “Taps” at a Veterans Day ceremony, he told me he had been a bugler aboard the aircraft carrier, USS Shangri-La (CV-38), where he served from 1945-48 while I was a boy in Texas. According to his memorial service program, Richard saw the first jet airplanes launch from and land on a carrier deck. When that ship crossed the equator, he entered King Neptune’s Realm and

USS Shangri-La (CV-38) underway in the Pacific, crew paraded on flight deck, 17 August 1946, almost exactly one year after V-J Day. U.S. Navy photo.
was transformed through an old Navy tradition from a pollywood to a shellback. I later learned from Brian Seguin, a fellow VFW and American Legion member with Richard, that in 1946, he participated in Operations Crossroads, during which atomic bombs were tested at the Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands. In September 2011, Brian escorted Richard on his Honor Flight to Washington, D.C. (see www.honorflight.org). That’s when Brian learned that Richard carried a small Bible, given to him by his parents when he entered the Navy at age ~17.
Richard also was a talented poet and musician. He played cornet, trombone, baritone, and drums in Salvation Army bands. For 35 years, his father had been a chaplain for the Salvation Army men’s service department for alcoholics, helping men rebuild their lives. Richard met Lillian at a Salvation Army camp, and they were married 62 years. Richard often volunteered for the Salvation Army’s Emergency Canteens. And he loved to attend Salvation Army band concerts (see my blog post of 3 June 2012).
He had many more laudable qualities and accomplishments than I have mentioned here—he was special, a man of deep Christian faith and practice, a servant of others. It is blessing to me to sound “Taps” for such men.
Please click on either photo to enlarge it.
Posted in Ceremonies & Celebrations | Tagged: American Legion, band, bugler, concerts, cornet, Navy, Salvation Army, Shangri-La, Tahoma National Cemetery, Taps, veterans, VFW | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on February 4, 2013
Trumpeters! Want to become your best? Want a quick study on playing the trumpet? Feel like you’re stuck on something and just not getting any better at it, no matter what? Want to hear how advanced, professional trumpeters do things and what they’ve learned through their years of experience? Want to ask them a question about something?
Here’s your chance on Sunday, 3 March—attend the Trumpet Arts Festival being held at Seattle Pacific University (SPU) in Queen Anne. Please see http://trumpetarts.com/NW_Trumpet_Arts_Festival/Welcome.html.
The following trumpeters are featured this year: Peter Bond, Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, NYC; Anthony Di Lorenzo, soloist; Chad McCullough, jazz soloist; Judson Scott, University of Puget Sound; and Brian Chin, SPU. To learn more about them, please see http://trumpetarts.com/NW_Trumpet_Arts_Festival/Artists.html.
It’s a full program:
- At 2 p.m., the Masterclass: “Practicing Fundamentals”
- At 3:30 p.m., the Masterclass: “Practicing Improvisation”
- At 4:30 p.m., Student Concert open to the public
- At 7:00 p.m., Artists’ Concert open to the public
- At 9:00 p.m., After-hours Jazz Jam at Thai Fusion, 15 Nickerson St
If you like, you can bring your horn and piano music and play for the Artists. They will give you written comments on your performance. This is supportive, professional, expert feedback, not a contest. Bring your own pianist/accompanist, or rehearse for a half hour and perform with the pianist furnished by the Festival. An extra $40 fee covers the cost. For details, please see http://trumpetarts.com/NW_Trumpet_Arts_Festival/Students.html.
The location is the E.E. Bach Theater, SPU, 3307 Third Avenue West, Seattle. The cost is $25 tuition for the day and $10 for the evening concert only. Come learn more about yourself and your horn and hear some great music!
Posted in Festivals & Competitions | Tagged: Anthony Di Lorenzo, arts, Bach Theater, Brian Chin, Chad McCullough, concert, festival, horn, jam, jazz, Judson Scott, Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, Peter Bond, piano, Seattle Pacific University, SPU, Thai Fusion, trumpet, trumpeters, University of Puget Sound | 2 Comments »
Posted by glennled on January 22, 2013
On Sunday, 13 January, it was time for my wife and me (opera novices) to be re-introduced to Gioachino Antonio Rossini, the
composer whose nickname was “The Italian Mozart.” We were both familiar with The Barber of Seville, but it was so long ago, we can hardly be sure of when, where and what. So off we drove to McCaw Hall not knowing what to expect to see and hear at the Seattle Opera’s matinee performance of Cinderella (La Cenerentola)—almost 200 years after it premiered at Teatro Valle, Rome, 25 January 1817.

Prince Ramiro wins Cinderella in Seattle Opera’s “La Cenerentola,” with sets and costumes designed by Joan Guillén – Photo © Elise Bakketun
It turns out that Rossini’s Cinderella is a romantic comedy of the bel canto (“Beautiful Singing”) kind. The story was altered by librettist Jacopo Ferretti both in characters and in plot, but yes, in the end, the prince does get the lovely, virtuous Cinderella as his bride. This takes two acts stretched over three hours (including a half-hour intermission). During the pursuit, there are lots of laughs and some extraordinary singing.
The basic premise of the opera, writes Spreight Jenkins, General Director of the Seattle Opera, is that the prince wants to marry someone who loves him for himself, not his position, power or wealth. That romantic ideal still plays well in 2013 in Western society, does it not? Cinderella, called Angelina in this opera, is a forward-looking person who also will marry only for love but wants respect, too. She is not a male-dominated person, and she is not ambitious to become a princess. She stands up for herself, knows what she wants, and wins it fair and square on her terms—her man must be willing to make an effort to win her. This idea of feminity is still modern and plays well in 2013 in America and elsewhere, does it not? Jenkins writes in Encore, “There’s a lot of humor, but we see in Angelina a far more recognizable and believable young woman than many created in the nineteenth century. She is generous when she wins, and altogether she is a really charming person who might fit very well into the twenty-first century.”
Here’s what the bel canto style meant when it was dominant from the 18th century until about 1840, according to the experts at Wikipedia:
- an impeccable legato production throughout the singer’s (seamless) range
- the use of a light tone in the higher registers
- an agile, flexible technique capable of dispatching ornate embellishments
- the ability to execute fast, accurate divisions
- the avoidance of aspirates and eschewing a loose vibrato
- a pleasing, well-focused timbre
- a clean attack
- limpid diction
- graceful phrasing rooted in a complete mastery of breath control

Alidoro (Arthur Woodleyj), tutor to Prince Ramiro, has other plans for Cinderella – Photo by Alan Alabastro.
The music was written to show off the exceptional quality of the singers’ voices. I especially enjoyed the various ensembles. The precision of the attacks, phrasing, and breath control were remarkable and often, as intended, funny! I imagine it would be quite challenging and possibly exhausting to sing for so long in that style. Among the voices I enjoyed the most were those of Angelina (Cinderella), mezzo-soprano; Alidoro, bass; Dandini, baritone; and Don Magnifico, bass.

Courtesy of Seattle Symphony & Opera Players’ Organization
I enjoyed listening to the orchestra, too, hearing and watching how the music from the pit matched the action on stage. It’s great fun to play trumpet in the orchestra of a musical or an opera. I did both long ago on the college level—but now I’m just a happy spectator. I wonder if any of my trumpet students will ever have that wonderful experience. I hope so. That would please me, as did this . 😉 Please click on any photo to enlarge it:
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Daniela Pini (Cenerentola) – Photo © Elise Bakketun
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Father and daughters plot for one to wed the prince – Dana Pundt (Clorinda), Patrick Carfizzi (Don Magnifico), Sarah Larsen (Tisbe), and Daniela Pini (Cenerentola) – Photo © Alan Alabastro
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The real valet, Dandini (Brett Polegato), pretending to be the prince, invites Tisbe (Sarah Larsen), Don Magnifico (Patrick Carfizzi), and Clorinda (Dana Pundt) to his ball. – Photo by Alan Alabastro
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Gioachino Rossini, painted c. 1815 by Vincenzo Camuccini
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Portrait of Gioachino Rossini in 1820, International Museum and Library of Music, Bologna, Italy
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Photograph of Gioachino Rossini (Ransom Humanities Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin), USA
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Gioachino Rossini, photographed by Félix Nadar, 1858
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Gioachino Rossini, photographed by Étienne Carjat, 1865
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Portrait of Gioachino Rossini by Francesco Hayez, 1870
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, Italy
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Rossini’s now-empty tomb at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France
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Rossini’s final resting place, in the Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence, Italy
Posted in Professional Concerts | Tagged: bel canto, Cinderella, composer, ensembles, Ferritti, La Cenerentola, librettist, McCall Hall, music, opera, orchestra, Rossini, Seattle Opera, Seattle Symphony & Opera Players' Organization, Spreight Jenkins, The Barber of Seville, trumpet | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on January 17, 2013
Lately, I’ve been listening again to Dire Straits, a British rock band led by Mark Knopfler. Their biggest selling album, Brothers in Arms, has sold over 30 million copies, and their worldwide album sales exceed 120 million. The band’s career spanned a combined total of 15 years (1977-1988, 1991-1995). Their most popular songs include “Sultans of Swing,” “Money for Nothing,” “Walk of Life,” “Brothers in Arms,” “Lady Writer,” “Romeo and Juliet,” “Tunnel of Love,” “Private Investigations,” “So Far Away,” and “Your Latest Trick.”
In the “Sultans of Swing” song, a crowd of young boys in the honky tonk, “dressed in their best brown baggies and their platform soles,” are drunk as they listen to a band called the Sultans of Swing. Two lines, sung with dripping disdain, catch my ear: “They don’t give a damn about any trumpet playing band, It ain’t what they call rock and roll…”
Well, now, wait just a minute! You can’t dismiss all us horns. Those boys obviously don’t know their jazz music history and don’t even care about learning it either. No, even though the Sultans of Swing may play some swing music on their rock and roll instruments (guitars, keyboards, synthesizer, and percussion), that’s not the swing music of the great Swing Band Era, ~1936-1944. And all those big bands did feature trumpeters—and some great ones, too!
Want to hear some swing trumpeters from a time long gone by? Try these, for seven of the best:
Yeah, that was then, way back when I was a boy. Today, I also love the “Sultans of Swing” by Dire Straits even though they trash us trumpeters. But someday, they, too, will be bye-gones, like brown baggies and platform shoes. 😉
Please click on any image to enlarge it.
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Louis Armstrong
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Ziggy Elman
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Harry “Sweets” Edison
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Bobby Hackett
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Oran “Hot Lips” Page
Posted in Selected Trumpet Music | Tagged: band, big, Bobby Hackett, Dire Straits, Harry Edison, Harry James, horns, instruments, Louis Armstrong, Mark Knopfler, music, Oran Page, rock and roll, Roy Eldridge, Sultans of Swing, swing, trumpet, trumpeters, Ziggy Elman | 4 Comments »
Posted by glennled on January 12, 2013

Glenn Ledbetter plays “Mele Kalikimaka” on his Super Olds Cornet (1954)
Our family tradition on Christmas Eve includes singing Christmas carols after dinner and before opening gifts. My wife plays piano as we sing, and a few years ago, we added a couple of trumpet solos to the program. This year, I played “Mele Kalikimaka” because on all our minds was the recent loss of my wife’s mother, Ruth, who died peacefully on 12 October. This was our first Christmas without her.
To Ruth, Hawaii was paradise. She and her husband, Mac, first went to Waikiki to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary. They always returned annually until he passed away, and then she continued to go back. In all, she vacationed there for 39 straight years! She was a bright spirit, and we miss her so much.
“Mele Kalikimaka” means “Merry Christmas,” and Robert Alex Anderson wrote the song in 1949. Bing Crosby and The Andrews Sisters recorded the song in 1950 on Decca 27228 (78 rpm)/9-27228 (45 rmp). To hear their recording, please see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJhYrC8Rq8w.
For my second trumpet solo, I played “Angels We Have Heard on High,” a traditional French carol.
Posted in Musical Events at Home | Tagged: Andrews Sisters, Angels We Have Heard on High, Bing Crosby, carols, cornet, Mele Kalikimaka, Robert Alex Anderson, Super Olds, trumpet | 9 Comments »
Posted by glennled on January 9, 2013

Courtesy of Wreaths Across America (WAA)
Last month on 15 December 2012, Wreaths Across America (WAA) sponsored and coordinated the placement of 420,000 remembrance wreaths by almost 200,000 volunteers on the headstones of our nation’s fallen military in 825 locations in America and abroad. At Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, more than 20,000 volunteers laid 110,662 wreaths. This was the 21st annual wreath-laying event.

Courtesy of WAA
In 1992 in Harrington, Maine, as the Christmas holiday season drew to a close, the Worcester Wreath Company found itself with a surplus of fresh, evergreen wreaths. The owner, Morrill Worcester, made arrangements to have the wreaths placed in one of Arlington cemetery’s older sections where fewer visitors were coming each year. A local trucking company transported the wreaths to Virginia, and American Legion, VFW, and other volunteers decorated each wreath with the traditional, hand-tied red bows and laid them on the headstones. There was also a special ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

VFW Post 1040 Honor Guard, WAA ceremony, Veterans Memorial Cemetery, Evergreen-Washelli, Seattle, 12-15-’12. Photo by Nathan W. Bradshaw, PA3, USCG.
That started the annual pilgrimage to and event at Arlington National Cemetery which continues today. Others across the nation wanted to participate in their own national, state, and local cemeteries, and so in 2007, WAA was created. The mission of this non-profit organization, now based in Columbia Falls, Maine, is to “Remember, Honor, Teach.”

Lt, U.S. Coast Guard. Photo by Nathan Bradshaw, PA3, USCG
In the state of Washington, 18 cemeteries are affiliated with WAA. The four largest are the Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent (23,000+ graves; 15,500 veteran graves and 13,000 veteran columbarium niches); Evergreen-Washelli-Veterans Memorial Cemetery in north Seattle (5,000+ veteran graves); Mountain View Cemetery in Walla Walla (37,000 graves; 2,500 veteran graves); and Washington State Veterans Cemetery in Medical Lake (550 veteran graves).
At Veterans Memorial Cemetery at Washelli, this was the 3rd annual wreath laying ceremony sponsored by the Navy Wives Club #277. King5-TV again covered the event in a superb report. Please see http://www.king5.com/video/yahoo-video/200-wreaths-cemetery-183725091.html. You’ll see the VFW Post 1040 Honor Guard fire three perfect rifle volleys, hear the post piper play some of “Amazing Grace,” and hear me play “Taps” in the background as the reporter tells the story. For a description of the previous year’s event, please see my post of 16 December 2011.
Please click on any photo to enlarge it. Here are links to the websites of other organizations mentioned in this post:
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Navy representative places flag on wreath. Photo by Nathan Bradshaw, PA3, USCG
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Glenn Ledbetter, VFW Post 1040 Bugler, sounds “Taps.” Photo by Nathan Bradshaw, PA3, USCG.
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Color Guard retires the colors. Photo by Nathan Bradshaw, PA3, USCG
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Color Guard, Honor Guard, organizers and volunteers, WAA, beneath WWI Doughboy Statue, Veterans Memorial Cemetery, Seattle, 12-15-’12. Photo by Nathan Bradshaw, PA3, USCG
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Courtesy of WAA
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Washington State Veterans Cemetery, Medical Lake, WA. Photo courtesy of WAA.
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National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific (aka “Punchbowl”), Honolulu, HI. Photo courtesy of WAA.
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Valley Forge, PA. Photo courtesy of WAA.
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Wreaths laid at Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, VA. Photo courtesy of WAA
Posted in Ceremonies & Celebrations | Tagged: Amazing Grace, Arlington National Cemetery, Evergreen Washelli, Navy Wives Club #277, piper, Taps, Veterans Memorial Cemetery, VFW Post 1040, Worcester Wreath Company, Wreaths Across America | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on December 24, 2012

Symphonic Band, Hamilton International Middle School, Seattle
“The music program at Hamilton is thriving,” said Daniel Rowe, Music Director of Bands, “and we’re making beautiful music!” The standing-room only audience responded in loud applause as the Symphonic Band from Hamilton International Middle School (HIMS) prepared to play the concluding, ever-popular piece, “Sleigh Ride,” by Leroy Anderson. The two-hour Winter All Bands Concert was held on 13 December in Lincoln High School Auditorium in Wallingford in Seattle.

Concert Finale: Leroy Anderson’s “Sleigh Ride”
The total membership of the four bands at Hamilton is 295 student musicians: the Beginning Band has 58 members, Cadet (86), Concert (75) and Symphonic (76). That’s almost one-third of the entire student body of about 1,000. The growth that’s underway is exceptional. Mr. Rowe recalled that the Concert Band had 31 members only three years ago. Some 600 students are involved in the bands, orchestras, jazz ensembles, and choir. The music program is supported by the non-profit organization, The Friends of Music at Hamilton International (FOMAHI)—see www.fomahi.org, which coordinated arrangements for this concert. This year, Hamilton musicians will perform in almost 40 concerts. Before Mr. Rowe came to Hamilton, he taught in the highly successful music program at Eckstein Middle School (see my post of 14 December 2011).

Six trumpeters in the Cadet Band, HIMS
I went to hear one of my trumpet students, a 6th grader, perform in the Cadet Band. On top of that, I got an unexpected surprise—my very first cornet student also performed in the Symphonic Band (see my post of 14 August 2009). He’s now an 7th grader, and he switched to tuba last year. Both these students had made the Seattle Public Schools’ All-City Honors Elementary Band (see my posts of 10 April 2011 and 2 April 2012). It was a thrill to me to see and hear them both perform on the same stage on the same night! Both come from great families, and it was fun to see the relatives there, too.
Each band had its highlights, and I’ll mention only a few. The Cadet Band featured its 15 trumpeters in “Trumpets of Symphony Hall” by Don Brubaker. Among the four pieces played by the Concert Band, “The Hunger Games,” arranged by Jay Bocook, was very impressive. The clarinet soloist, Sadie Morriss, accompanied by the Symphonic Band, drew a standing ovation for her performance of “Viktor’s Tale” by John Williams. And the Symphonic Band demonstrated its high skill level by performing the superb “My Neighbor Totoro” by Joe Hisaishi, arranged by Yo Goto.
Please click on any photo to enlarge it.
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Beginning Band, HIMS
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Student Guest Conductor, “March Miniature”
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Cadet Band, HIMS
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Five trumpeters, Cadet Band, HIMS
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More trumpets, Cadet Band, HIMS
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Cadet Band trumpeters rise to play “Trumpets of Symphony Hall” by Don Brubaker
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15 trumpeters (standing), Cadet Band, HIMS
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Daniel Rowe, Director (L), and Alicia Edgar, President, FOMAHI Board of Directors (R)
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Two of 9 trumpeters in the Concert Band, HIMS
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Daniel Rowe conducts Symphoic Band, HIMS
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Clarinet soloist, Symphonic Band, HIMS
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Symphonic Band and clarinet soloist conclude “Viktor’s Tale” by John Williams
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Five of 11 trumpeters in the Symphonic Band, HIMS
Posted in School Concerts | Tagged: All-City Honors Elementary, band, beginning, cadet, concert, Daniel Rowe, Don Brubaker, FOMHI, Friends of Music at Hamilton International, Hamilton International Middle School, HIMS, Jay Bocook, Joe Hisaishi, John Williams, Leroy Anderson, My Neighbor Totoro, Sleigh Ride, symphonic, trumpet, trumpeters, Trumpets of Symphony Hall | 4 Comments »
Posted by glennled on December 20, 2012
Please click on any of the 32 photos to enlarge it.
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7th-Grade Band, SJH
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Six trumpets, four trombones, one baritone
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Two French Horns
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8th-9th Grade Band, SJH, entertains orchestra (upper right), 7th grade band (middle right), and full-house audience
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The Brassy side of the band
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The Woodwinds side
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Trumpets (lead on left)
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More trumpets…
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And more trumpets…
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And even more trumpets…
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Hit it!
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Who’s playing? Saxes, tuba, baritones and French horns
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Muted trumpets
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Front and center
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Full orchestra
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Advanced orchestra
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Mr. Shawn McGinn, SJH Director of Instrumental Music
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Jazz 1 Band, SJH
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The Four trumpets
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Trumpet solo 1 (lead)
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Trumpet solo 2
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Trumpet solo 3
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Trumpet solo 4
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Alto sax solo
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Tenor sax solo
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Baritone sax solo
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Piano solo
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Mr. Shawn McGinn conducts
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Jazz 2 Band
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Four trumpets
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The Four Trumpeters
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Dawn Mark, SJH Principal, congratulates Shawn McGinn on the concert and the music program
Posted in School Concerts, Skyview Junior High | Tagged: band, concert, Dawn Mark, instrumental, jazz, music, muted, orchestra, Shawn McGinn, Skyview Jr. High, solo, trumpet, trumpeters | 6 Comments »