Glenn’s Trumpet Notes

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Posts Tagged ‘Getzen Field Trumpet’

“Taps” Twice at Seahawks Game Brings My Lifetime’s “15 Minutes of Fame”

Posted by glennled on November 14, 2025

Glenn Ledbetter, VFW Post 1040 Bugler, sounds “Taps,” as shown on Lumen Field’s Jumbotron by Seattle Seahawks, 11-09-2025. Photo by Monica McNeal
Glenn Ledbetter during sound check in the morning. Photo by Seahawks

When the bugler faded-away the last of the 24 notes in “Taps” and lowered his bugle, the football crowd roared, the same way they do after hearing “The Star-Spangled Banner” before kickoff. It was the first step in the “Salute to Service” halftime ceremony on 9 November, two days before Veterans Day and 50 years after the end of the Vietnam War. Glenn Ledbetter, 85, is a Navy veteran of that war. Wearing his VFW Post 1040 Honor Guard uniform and sitting on the seat of his walker, he was aware that, to those watching, he symbolized the wounded warrior, although his infirmity was simply a damaged nerve in his lower back in old age. He was proud he had served and proud to represent the other soldiers and sailors who wore their nation’s uniforms and fought that war.

Here he was on the 50-yard line of Lumen Field during the game between the Seattle Seahawks and Arizona Cardinals—a dream come true! And only a year and a half ago, he had sounded “Taps” at a baseball game at T-Mobile Stadium between the Seattle Mariners and the Houston Astros—the first such dream to come true! The Seahawks dream grew out of the Mariners dream.

It all started with a referral to the Mariners event-planning staff by Monica McNeal, a Gold Star Mother. They wanted a bugler for the ceremony they were planning for Memorial Day in 2024. She recommended Glenn after hearing him sound “Echo Taps” at the dedication ceremony for the new Gold Star Mothers Families Memorial Monument in Veterans Park in downtown Lynnwood on 24 September 2023. Monica also contacted the Seahawks in 2024—if they were planning a program at a Seahawks game around Veterans Day, she recommended Glenn to sound “Taps”—but it did not happen.

So, three huge dominoes fell in succession—in 2023, 2024, 2025. Then, last July, Glenn sent an email to the Seahawks, volunteering to sound “Taps” at the game on 9 November, two days before Veterans Day. They agreed to consider it. In early October, he wrote again and was told it was unlikely. Then, on 30 October, he got an email from the Seahawks: “Sorry for the late ask but any chance you’re available to play Taps for us during our Salute to Service halftime ceremony next Sunday (11/9)?” He immediately replied, “Yes, I’m thrilled to accept your invitation!” The next day, Halloween, the Seahawks sent another invitation: could he play “Taps” pre-game in the Ticketmaster Tailgate area at 11:45? Yes, of course. And he dropped practically everything else.

Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War (1975)

Here is Glenn’s timeline on game day:

  • 6:00 a.m.          Alarm says, “Wake up, Get up.”
  • 7:00                     Depart for Lumen Field. Park in NE parking lot.
  • 8:30                     Pass through security at NE entrance, meet Escort.
  • 9:00                     Sound check on the 50-yard line in stadium.
  • 9:20                     Sound check in the Ticketmaster Tailgate room.
  • 9:40                     Wait in private “Green Room.”
  • 11:45                   Sound “Taps” at Ticketmaster Tailgate.
  • 12:00                   Arrive at guest seat in stadium to watch game.
  • 1:05 p.m.          Kickoff—Seahawks vs Cardinals.
  • ~2:00                   Halftime score: Seahawks 38, Cardinals 7.
  • ~2:00                  Sound “Taps” to begin Salute to Service ceremony.
  • ~:2:30                 Exit stadium rather than watch game to the end.
  • ~3:15                   Arrive home. Watch 4th quarter on CBS-TV. Seahawks won, 44-22.
  • 5:00                     Toast the day with Prosecco and have dinner with wife.

After he sounded “Taps” at halftime, the crowd immediately roared. He was surprised and happy. Then he sat on the field’s sideline and watched the ceremony. When it ended, he walked with his escort behind the endzone toward the southwest exit tunnel. Suddenly, he heard nearby fans cheering loudly. He looked up to his left and saw them yelling and waving. Who, me, pointing at himself? They pointed back, Yes, you, cheering and clapping. He waved, blew a kiss, and walked on. Then a second group did the same, and so did he. That’s what “Taps” can do—make people cry, make people cheer!

“Salute to Service” halftime ceremony. Photo by Monica McNeal

Inside the tunnel, several other members of the ceremony and Seahawks staff congratulated him. Glenn asked his chief contact among the Seahawks staff if he knows Monica, a Seahawks volunteer. “Yes,” he said with a quizzical look in his eyes. “She’s my ‘in’,” Glenn said. “Monica’s everybody’s ‘in’,” he said. Soon, Glenn told his escort, “I’d like to go home.”

People began to post on Facebook. So did the Seahawks and Lumen Field. Likes, comments, and re-posts multiplied. It went on for two-three days before fading out, as time marches on.

Recall that Andy Warhol was quoted in Time magazine in 1967 as saying that in the future, with the rise of mass media, “Everyone will be famous for 15 minutes.”

You could say that without modern medicine and three stints in his heart arteries, Glenn wouldn’t have been at Lumen Field that day. None of his male ancestors, going back through his family branch to the first Ledbetter immigrant to America from England in the 1640s, ever lived past age 78.

Photo by Lynnwood Today

And without the referrals of Monica McNeal, he wouldn’t have been there either. She is the Gold Star mother of Lance Corporal Eric L. Ward, who tragically died in Afghanistan in 2010, may he rest in peace.

And if he were a young man, confidently out to make his mark in the world, Glenn might have said to himself, “I did it.” Even now, after sounding “Taps” 248 times in the past 14 years, he might be tempted say the same thing.

It’s certainly true that all those things vitally factored into his performance at Lumen Field. But today, at age 85, having recovered from being a broken man in 1994, he now gratefully says, “God granted my 15 minutes of fame.”

The official attendance was 68,723. The game broadcast was by CBS-TV. Glenn used his Getzen Field Trumpet (please see blog post of 4 May 2015, “My New Getzen Bugle!”). The Getzen website is https://www.getzen.com/trumpets/field-trumpets/. A relative of Glenn’s found a fan’s video of the “Taps” performance (absent the first three notes) on You-Tube: https://youtube.com/shorts/_9pHKNe-u1c?si=fK2OcbRqe8SBrvuG (~35 secs).

Photos are by Seahawks, Monica McNeal, Lynnwood Today, and Glenn Ledbetter. Please click on any photo to enlarge it.

Posted in Ceremonies & Celebrations | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments »

“Echo Taps” at Wreaths Across America: My Embouchure Troubles Subside Nicely

Posted by glennled on December 20, 2024

Despite the high, cold wind at 9 a.m. on Saturday, 14 December 2024, the participants and crowd gathered at the Doughboy statue in Veterans Memorial Cemetery at Evergreen-Washelli in north Seattle for the 16th annual Wreaths Across America (WAA) ceremony. The wind chill was so bad that the emcee, Lorraine Zimmerman, cut her own speech from the program. She is President and Executive Director of the Veterans Memorial Wreaths Foundation (WMWF—please see http://www.vmwf.org).

The croud gathers

My bugle call, “Assembly,” called the ceremony to order. The first major event, as always, was the placement of flags upon the 8 ceremonial wreaths by representatives of the Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, Space Force, Coast Guard, Merchant Marines and POWs/MIAs. (Read more about the POW/MIA representative below.) Then the Honor Guard of VFW Post 1040 of Lynnwood fired a 21-gun salute (3 volleys).

Lorraine Zimmerman presides as emcee

The ceremony concluded with “Echo Taps.” I sounded the lead part and James D. (Jim) Kellett, Army Musician CWO2, did the “echo.” I used my Getzen field trumpet (bugle), and he used his Super Olds trumpet. [Recall that I own a Super Olds cornet.] He is a member of the VFW 1040 Honor Guard and regularly sounds “Taps” with the Rifle Team at funeral services for veterans at numerous cemeteries throughout the area.

The second main event is the placement of wreaths against selected headstones among the more than 5,000 graves of veterans within Evergreen-Washelli. Seven Medal of Honor recipients are buried there. Zimmerman asked the wreath-laying volunteers to read aloud the names on the headstones as they placed the wreaths and thank them for their service—they are not forgotten.

Similar ceremonies are being held this year at the same local time in more than 4,500 participating locations in all 50 states, at sea, and abroad. More than two million volunteers and supporters are involved (please see http://www.wreathsacrossamerica.org).

Flag placement on POW/MIA Wreath

Capt. Wilson, Cadet Mugo, and Lorraine Zimmerman

When the time came, Zimmerman called the POW/MIA representative to the podium to receive the flag that he would place on the POW/MIA wreath. As he stood before her, she read a brief description of his POW experience.

““Captain William W. Wilson, U.S. Air Force, is assisted by Cadet Martin Mugo, UW USAF ROTC.

“Captain Wilson, former prisoner during the Vietnam War, made 33 missions over North Vietnam and Laos, flying an F-111 Aardvark before being shot down while bombing the Red River docks in downtown Hanoi on 22 December 1972. He evaded capture for a week, was nearly rescued by a Super Jolly Green helicopter, and then was captured by the North Vietnamese on 29 December. He spent a month in the ‘Heartbreak’ section of the ‘Hanoi Hilton’ [Hoa Lo Prison, loosely meaning ‘hell’s hole’ or ‘fiery furnace’] before being moved to the ‘Zoo’ [facility near the village of Cu Loc].

“He returned to U.S. control on the last C-141A Starlifter out of Hanoi on 29 March 1973 during Operation Homecoming.

“Bill will now place a flag in honor of the more than 83,000 United States servicemen and women from all branches of the service whose last known status was either Prisoner of War or Missing in Action. These individuals have never returned to their families and homes. We will not forget you.”

After he placed the flag and rendered a slow hand salute, he turned and walked slowly back across the grass toward the crowd. From a distance, I rendered a hand salute to him, and as he stepped onto the paved road, the crowd broke into warm applause. Zimmerman later told me, “I was so proud when the crowd honored him so spontaneously.” Indeed, it was the highlight of this year’s ceremony. Please see the photos (below, by Phil Onishi) of Captain Wilson and Cadet Mugo.

Embouchure Troubles Are Subsiding Nicely

Glenn Ledbetter warms up his bugle by sounding “Assembly” with a practice mute that deadens the sound

It was one year ago that I developed severe embouchure troubles for the first time in my life. Old age brought crooked teeth, to the point that my left front tooth had crossed over the right one just enough to disrupt the air flow into the mouthpiece of my horns. The problem flared up suddenly, right before last year’s WAA ceremony. I first alluded to it in my blog post of 10 June 2024, about the previous WAA ceremony. Then I wrote about it in more detail in my post of 12 June about my performance at The Bellettini retirement community in Bellevue. (Please use the Archives in the left column to find these articles, if you wish).

I had to go to the orthodontist for the solution: not braces, but Invisaligners (see http://www.invisalign.com). I wear them constantly, daily, except when eating. They have been gradually straightening my teeth since last February. Next spring, my teeth should be completely straight with the proper overbite—Oh, Happy Day!

But last May, after only four months, my teeth had straightened sufficiently that I was able to start performing again. My first public appearances were on Memorial Day when I performed at the ceremonies at Veterans Park in Lynnwood and in T-Mobile Park at the Seattle Mariners baseball game before a crowd of 24,000. Since then, on a reduced schedule, I have performed my one-hour trumpet shows at several retirement communities in the Greater Seattle area (scroll down this page). I’ll resume normal scheduling in 2025.

Photos Credits and Donations, Likes and Comments

Please click on any photo to enlarge it. All photos (except the one by me) are by Phil Onishi (please see https://philonishiphotography.smugmug.com). Mr. Onishi, long-time Band Director at Lynnwood High School, sang the National Anthem.

Donations are welcomed by both WAA and WMWF. I invite you to “Like” and “Comment” by clicking on the links below.

Posted in Ceremonies & Celebrations | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

“Echo Taps” in the Morning of Veterans Day at Veterans Park, Lynnwood

Posted by glennled on December 11, 2024

Photo by Julia Wiese, Lynnwood Today

The national tradition is to conduct the Veterans Day ceremony at 11 a.m. local time, worldwide, on the 11th day of the 11th month—formerly known as Armistice Day, WWI. Never forget, as succeeding generations were charged by Canadian Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae in his elegant poem, “In Flanders Field.” And so this is done annually at Veterans Park in downtown Lynnwood.

This is the second time that I’ve sat in my walker at this location for sounding the two bugle calls, ‘”Assembly” and “Echo Taps.” My lower back hurts, and when I stand to play, I’m a bit shaky. Also, I am challenged by the aligners that are in my mouth to straighten my teeth. (They should be removed by next Memorial Day.) Old age does its thing. So, when I sit, it sounds better. Judah Deuman sounded the “echo” part. He graduated from Lynnwood High School last spring. I used my Getzen field trumpet, and he used his trumpet.

Please click on any photo to enlarge it.

Photos by Julia Wiese, Lynnwood Today:

Other photos:

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Two Bugle Calls at Early Memorial Day Ceremony at Edmonds College

Posted by glennled on June 2, 2023

Edmonds Community College may have dropped its middle name in April, 2020 (the first Covid year), but none of the many veterans and civilians got confused or lost on 25 May when the college held its traditional early Memorial Day ceremony on campus. I’ve been sounding two bugle calls—“To the Color” and “Taps”—at every such event since 2014.

I use my Getzen field trumpet, starting with my B-flat tuning slide for “To The Color” and my G tuning slide for “Taps.” (For photos and more information about the horn and these slides, see my blog post of 4 May 2015, using the Archives in the left column).

The keynote speaker, Wally Webster II, gave one of the most moving speeches that I have heard at any of these ceremonies. He is a native of southern Alabama. To him, as a young black man, the American flag symbolized his terror of men riding on horseback in white robes and conical hats and burning crosses. Then he joined the U.S. Air Force. He said that his military service at a hospital in Japan, caring for wounded soldiers during the Vietnam War, was one of the two most pivotal events in his life. That’s when his deep pride and gratitude for the USA developed and changed him forever. After a 30-year career in banking, he is now one of the six Trustees of Edmonds College, appointed by the Governor of Washington state.

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Memorial Day Essentials on 31 May at Veterans Park, Lynnwood

Posted by glennled on August 14, 2021

For the second year in a row, due to Covid restrictions, VFW Post 1040 performed a shortened, non-advertised Memorial Day commemoration ceremony at Veterans Park in Lynnwood. Normally, the ceremony would draw 200 or more people, and there would be music and speeches and presentations and honors and rifle salutes and “Taps” and more. It would take a half hour or more, and then at noon, the flag would be raised from half-staff to full-staff, accompanied by “To the Color” on the bugle.

This year, only the essentials were kept on the program:

  • “Amazing Grace” by Piper Kevin Auld and two members of the Northwest Junior Pipe Band;
  • “Armed Forces Medley” on the P.A. system;
  • Laying of the wreaths by Patricia McCarty and John Beam, Commander, VFW Post 1040;
  • Rifle salute by the Post Honor Guard;
  • “Taps” by me; and
  • Raising the flag to the top at noon.

Please see http://www.vfw1040.org, http://www.nwjpb.org, and http://www.goldstarmomwa.org.

The City of Lynnwood recorded it all (except the flag raising) in this 9:19-minute video (please see https://youtu.be/lWCOAdCS3Jg). As you’ll see and hear, I lead off with the bugle call, “Assembly,” on my Getzen Field Trumpet (bugle) and sound “Taps” at the 8:05-minute.

We’re all hoping that on Veterans Day, 11 November, we’ll be able to resume celebrating with the customary, full program involving more people and organizations, open to the public.

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Staff Uses Drone to Video My “Taps” at Evergreen-Washelli’s Veterans Cemetery in North Seattle

Posted by glennled on July 17, 2020

At Veterans Cemetery, Evergreen-Washelli, north Seattle, there are 5,000 graves of military service men and women. Seven of them are Medal of Honor recipients. Cemetery staff recorded me as I sounded “Taps” using my Getzen Field Trumpet (bugle) on 15 May 2020. Please watch the one-minute video below. The images begin to appear at 0:06.

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2015 Memorial Day Ceremony, Veterans Park, Lynnwood

Posted by glennled on September 17, 2015

Memorial Day plus 197

Glenn (Taps) and Robert (Echo)

It was the same this year but not the same. Same national holiday, same place, same participating organizations, same order of events, etc. But when it came to X-Memorial Day plus 207sounding “Echo Taps,” this was the first time that one of my trumpet students, Robert, was ending his senior year in high school and planning to attend college in the fall. Farewell to Inglemoor High School in Kenmore and hello to Washington State University in Pullman–a big leap for a young man!

This is the second time he sounded “Echo Taps” with me at this place–please see my post of 19 June 2014. For more about Memorial Day, please see my posts of 18 August 2015, 1 June 2013, 2 June 2012, and 3 June 2011 in the Archives (left).

All photos by Nancy MacDonald unless otherwise marked. Please click on any photo to enlarge it.

 

 

 

 

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