Thursday, July 29, 2010

The Show - The Machine

I have had lots of people asking me about the show and I figure "The Cat's Out of the Bag" so here it goes. The is show is based on the music of Deus Ex Machina by Micheal Daugherty. This piece is originally composed for Piano and Orchestra. It has three movements: Fast Forward, Train of Tears, and Night Steam. The music is built around several visual items. Although the original work is meant to depict locomotives, our show focuses on the Machine itself. The music is much more rhymthic that anything DF has attempted before. The following notes are taken directly from Michael Daugherty's website:

I. Fast Forward (Di andata veloce)The first movement departs from the Manifesto of Futurism (1909), in which the Italian futurist F.T. Marinetti declared that machine technologies would propel the world toward a universal culture. The image of a speeding locomotive became an icon in modernist art of European painters in the early twentieth century. Two important paintings I had in mind were States of Mind (1911), the Cubist trilogy of a noisy and dissonant train arriving and departing at a modern railroad station, painted by the Italian Futurist Umberto Boccioni, and Time Transfixed (1936), the strange image of a steam locomotive emerging from a dining room fireplace, painted by the French Surrealist Rene Magritte. I synthesize these various avant-garde perspectives on trains in motion and commotion, creating my own musical manifesto. Abstract musical lines, mechanical velocities, contrary vectors, polyrhythmic vibrations, and fragmented reverberations all move “fast forward” to arrive at a modernist utopian future.



II. Train of TearsFrom April to May of 1865, a “lonesome train on a lonesome track” with “seven coaches painted black” carried the body of the assassinated American Civil War President Abraham Lincoln from Washington D.C. to his home in Springfield, Illinois for burial. During the 1,650 mile journey though seven states, this slow moving funeral train passed through American cities and towns where memorials were held by millions of mourners who lined the railroad tracks to give their final farewell to “Abe” Lincoln. The second movement, Train of Tears, is music for a slow moving funeral train. First we hear a “ghost” melody that I have composed, performed con passione by the strings and accompanied by a lonely bass drum. Metal wind chimes and bowed suspended cymbal echo, as the piano soloist plays a funeral dirge in a minor key. Over the dirge, a distant trumpet and English horn play Taps. I incorporate Taps (also known as Gone to Sleep) because this simple but emotionally charged melody has been used since the Civil War in America as a military bugle call, sounded at soldier’s funerals. During the journey of the second movement, I intertwine the “ghost” melody and “Taps” in various guises, counterpoints, transpositions, and orchestrations.


III. Night Steam By the 1950s, trains in America were powered by electricity or diesel fuel. The only remaining coal-burning steam locomotives were those of the Norfolk and Western railroad line, operating in the states of Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, and Maryland, where coal was still plentiful. Aware of the impending loss of these gigantic and beautiful steam locomotives, the photographer O. Winston Link documented the last days of the Norfolk and Western trains from 1955 to 1960 and the people who lived alongside them. Using complex banks of flashbulbs and timers that he invented, Link frequently photographed the trains in action during the night, in black and white. Among my favorite photos is Hot Shot Eastbound, photographed in Iaeger, West Virginia in August 1956. In this amazing midnight photo, we see dozens of teenagers in parked cars and convertibles watching a “B” movie at the drive-in theater, while only yards away a Norfolk and Western coal-powered train speeds by at 80 miles an hour in white clouds of steam. Like O. Winston Link’s photographs, I have composed music that sonically captures the final journeys of trains from a bygone era. In Night Steam, we hear majestic fire-eating steam locomotives rumble and whistle their way through the small towns and lonely back roads of the Shenandoah Valley into extinction.


I guess the first thing that might come to mind is how do you take an orchestral work for piano and orchestra and develop it into a marching band show? Well I can tell you, IT AIN'T EASY! and I have lots of help, but when one remembers that a piano is really a percussion instrument you can start to think a bit differently. I will leave it at that. This show is the greatest "risk" I have taken with my bands yet. But you must remember the greatest rewards lay with those who take the greatests risks. So here I go again...I bet you will like the result though.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Marching Band Begins


We started real practice this past Monday with guard, percussion, and leaders. Then came the Rookies and assorted others. I always invite everybody to come to rookie camp if they want to brush up on a few things and some usually do. Of course many will wait until Monday morning when full day and full band camp really gets going to make a grand entrance. In my younger days, I use to think I had to do everything. As I age I have discovered I don't have to do it all. I have a very good instructor that has done a great job of teaching the rookies, a great percussion instructor that is teaching the percussion, and two great ladies that are teaching the guard. I get to check on things and order stuff and make sure everybody is happy and things are going smoothly. The rookies may even wonder what it is that I do. I can assure them that they will know what it is I do by the end of next week! I have been very happy to see some of the students that took a while to catch on last year are joining us this week and guess what? They are great. I always feel bad for the student that struggle early in the season and then make great strides by the end and then...don't come back. They really don't get to enjoy what marching band is all about. But anyway...I teach and respect who comes. That is my way. I hate it when I hear band directors or coaches say "If you don't want to be here, just go home!" How stupid. If they didn't want to be there, guess what? They wouldn't be there!!!!

I just looked on my home office wall and saw the picture of my first marching band in which I was the head director. There they are all 49 of them. Yeap 49 total. They are now adults and many have children of their own but to me they are still my kids. This week a new group of my kids started with the best choice of all...they were present.
The picture above is my true Agony of Defeat picture. It was taken in my office immediately after my band at Swansea had finished second at state and everybody knows we should have won. ( And I mean it!!! Watch and listen to the tape!!!) Any way that band made a choice to win and they had silent rehearsals for two weeks before lower state and won! The next week were awarded a silver medal. It was great but made me want first more than ever. If you look close at the picture you will see, I didn't have anything left to give. I tried my best. Sunburned, hot, and tired don't really give that picture justice but content I was because I had given it my all and so had those around me.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

What Makes You Happy?


I use to think that being one of the best and most recognized band directors in the state would make me happy. I will not say I don't like to win because I do. I won't say that getting high ratings at festival doesn't make me happy because it does. But what really makes me happy. Every time I come home, good day or bad day, there are things that come running to me. Ted and Henry always are happy to see me but the most important is Cindy. She has seen me lose when I should have and seen me lose when I shouldn't have but she is always in support of what I am trying to do. I do love band practice and rehearsal. I believe I will try to concentrate on that aspect more this year. Here are some things that make me happy:
  • My dogs' kisses
  • Watching the sun come up as I cast a line and knowing nobody else saw it exactly the same way I did
  • Cindy's smile when nobody else sees it
  • My mom and dad telling me they are proud of me
  • My garden and yard
  • A parent that tells me thank you for helping their child when nobody else is around
  • Hearing from an old student
  • Watching a really big fish swim away

None of these have much to do with winning or money. They just have a lot to do with enjoying life.

What really makes you happy?

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Band Camp Letters


Bet some kids got letters in the mail today. Ted and Henry got theirs. I do actually send them one just to make sure all the letters went out. They were excited to get mail! It is not much longer now for band camp although I can assure I have been plagued with band issues this summer. Is it true if you put your ear up to a conch shell you can hear the ocean?

Thursday, July 08, 2010

You Ain't From Around Here!



Nope, I am not! Of course you all know facebook at this point and I have a page. You get to put down where you are from and lots of people put down weird things because facebook is supposed to be fun you know. If you look at my home page it states that my home town is Key West, Florida. That is not a joke. You see I was born there. I am a true and genuine Conch! There are two types of Conchs. The freshwater kind are people that move in and the saltwater kind are born there. Sometimes I feel a draw back to the home land. Maybe one day...maybe sooner!

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

Leadership = ???

As the first few days of summer band approach, I think about the leadership within my group. We have student leaders and I rely on them heavily. Unlike a football team, which may have 10 or 12 coaches, there is but one of me so if I don't have good, reliable leaders to help me...I am sunk. So I thought what makes a good leader. Somebody once told me "All great leaders have had two distinct and common characteristics. They understand the chain of command and they have a sense of urgency. " That seems like pretty good stuff to me. I have always said you don't have to have a title to be a leader. You don't have to be a "section leader" to make a difference. In the spring I will often get questions from younger students about what they have to do to be a student leader and when are the tryouts? The answer is always the same. "You try out every day." I believe leadership has many different levels. Some are elected into leadership, while others have it thrust upon them. I had a student my first year at Batesburg-Leesville named Michael Lewis. He was a freshman and an OK trumpet player. Well the other trumpet players who had been pretty good decided to quit because there was new band director and maybe some other reasons too. I don't really care. They weren't there and I wasn't calling them so anyway...Michael came to band camp and he was the oldest most respectful trumpet student so I appointed him section leader. He was a shy kid and very quite. He didn't ask to be section leader...He was assigned. Over the years, his playing improved drastically but he always had trouble sightreading. I never worried though. I knew the next day he would have the part correct. That is a leader. He led by example. He did what had to be done and I never had to tell him to do it. I don't know what he is doing today but I bet he does well at it. Leaders don't tell others to do what they don't want to do. They do what others don't or won't do. They don't tell you how to do it. They show you. They don't always stand in front. Many times they are not even seen. Somebody once asked me why I don't go to the front of the line at meals. After all I am the DIRECTOR! Why? Because my students should always be served first. If there is any left, then I eat. (Sometimes there is none left though.) So what qualities to good leaders have? Well I can't really tell and I bet you can't either. There is just something about them but one thing is for sure. If you want to see a true leader, find a group in times of disappointment and look for the one everybody else is following. THAT IS THE LEADER.
" People ask the difference between a leader and a boss...
A leader works in the open and the boss in covert.
The leader leads and the boss drives." - Theodore Roosevelt
To lead people, walk beside them...As for the best leaders, people do not notice their existence. The next best, the people honor and praise. The next people fear; and the next, the people hate...When the best leader's work is done the people say, "We did it ourselves!" - Lao-tsu