Glenn’s Trumpet Notes

News & Tips for Trumpet & Cornet Students

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Posts Tagged ‘baritone’

Annual “Sousa Bash” at Kenyon Hall in West Seattle

Posted by glennled on December 6, 2024

Audience heads for the concession stand (right background) during Intermission. Liz Dreisbach, band creator and director, stands in foreground.

On Sunday, 3 November (three days before John Philip Sousa’s 170th birthday), the Ballard Sedentary Sousa Band (BSSB) performed again in his honor at Kenyon Hall in West Seattle. As usual at this annual event, informally called the “Sousa Bash,” the hall was full of Sousa fans. Revered as “The March King,” Sousa composed 136 marches between 1873 and 1932, when he died.

The band performed 13 pieces, including a “Happy Birthday” song written especially for Sousa by Gary Pedersen. Nine of the marches were written by Sousa, and two others were by Henry Fillmore and Alex F. Lithgow. Sousa wrote the march, “El Captain,” in 1895 for an operetta of the same name. So, Ms. Dreisbach passed out the lyrics, written by Charles Klein, and the band and audience sang them together. One line is particularly fun to sing up-tempo—“Behold El Capitan–Gaze on his misanthropic stare, Notice his penetrating glare.”

Everyone recognizes Sousa’s “Semper Fidelis,” “Washington Post” and “Stars and Stripes Forever,” which the band performed. But the band also played his “King Cotton,” “Fairest of the Fair,” “The Belle of Chicago,” “The Thunderer,” and “Black Horse Troop.”

As I did last year, I played with the baritone section, using my Austin Custom Brass (ACB) flugelhorn (please see my post of 9 November 2023, using the Archives column on the left). For fun, each band member wears his/her own unique uniform.

For more information about the “Sousa Bash” and Kenyon Hall, see my post of 11 November 2023. Please click on any photo to enlarge it. I invite you to “Like” and “Comment” on this post by clicking on the links below.

Posted in Community Bands, John Philip Sousa | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Ballard Sedentary Sousa Band Performs Its Umpteenth Annual Concert in West Seattle, Celebrating Sousa’s 169th Birthday!

Posted by glennled on November 11, 2023

Who is not a Sousa fan? I certainly am, so I joined the Ballard Sedentary Sousa Band in order to perform at the umpteenth annual concert celebrating the 169th birthday of John Philip Sousa, America’s foremost composer of military marches. He was a Marine and conducted “The President’s Own” Marine Band from 1880-1892. He wrote more than 130 marches and operettas. I play my flugelhorn among the baritone section of the band. Why “sedentary?” Because this band does not march!

A sold-out crowd of 80 came to little Kenyon Hall (see http://www.kenyonhall.org) in West Seattle on 5 November to enjoy 1.5 hours filled with 13 Marches. The crowd was quite engaged and even boisterous at times. After the band played “El Capitan,” the band director, Liz Dreisbach, passed out some lyrics from Sousa’s operetta of the same name, and they sang as if they were a choir in the cast. They ate Sousa’s birthday cake during the intermission. And with noisemakers, they became percussionists, on signals from the band’s Sedentary Majorette, Edith Farrar, when the band played “Nobles of the Mystic Shrine.”

Sousa (1854-1932) was born in Washington, D.C. and is buried there, too, at the Congressional Cemetery along the west bank of the Anacostia River, a tributary of the Potomac River. Annually, on 6 November, the Marine Band performs “Semper Fidelis” and “Stars and Stripes Forever” (our national march) at his gravesite. You can witness this year’s ceremony here: https://www.dvidshub.net/webcast/33126. If you have trouble with the feed from this link, try the Chrome browser.

Kenyon Hall is operated by a non-profit organization and presents live vaudeville, musical, and theatrical performances and arts-based education. It is home of the 1929 mighty Wurlitzer theatre pipe organ and is West Seattle’s lighthearted entertainment palace. The building is 110 years old and has recently undergone some important interior remodeling. New siding is also planned.

Please click on the photos to enlarge them.

Posted in Community Bands | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Beginning Brass Teacher at Skyview Jr. High School in Bothell—My Sixth Year!

Posted by glennled on October 4, 2016

quartetLucky me! Under the guidance of Charlie Fix, Band and Orchestra Director, I get to teach beginning brass again to 5th and 6th graders in the two elementary bands that practice and perform at Skyview Jr. High School in Bothell. Classes for 2nd-year band members began on 12 September and for 1st-year band members, today, 4 October.

This year, I have about 35 trumpet students, 10 trombones, and one French Horn. Some years, I have baritone players, too. This is my sixth year as a para-professional teacher in the Northshore School District.

In addition, I give private lessons to other students in the North Seattle-to-Edmonds and Eastside areas.

Posted in Skyview Junior High | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Teacher’s Satisfaction—One Trumpeter Promoted, Another Switches to Trombone

Posted by glennled on April 12, 2012

One of my private trumpet students just got promoted by the band director at Skyline Jr. High in Bothell to 2nd-year (6th grade) elementary band. She’s a 6th grader who just started band this year, so she’s been playing among 5th-graders in the 1st-year band. She’s advanced far enough on the fast track that she now belongs among her own age group. I recommended the promotion to the band director, and he accepted it.

Another 1st-year band trumpeter has been struggling with her tone (airy) and articulation (splatters). This week, I told her that because of her embouchure, I thought she might produce a better tone with sharper slotting on an instrument with a bigger mouthpiece. I asked her to try playing a trombone for me, and she was willing. So in a small practice room, she blew on a school-owned trombone—and out came some big, fat solid tones over a wide range. I called in the band director, and we were all so excited. Given a choice of baritone or trombone, she chose trombone.

And again, I experienced the teacher’s thrill—I helped two students get a taste of success.

Posted in Student Competitions, Honors & Awards | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »