Healdsburg Community Band, 3 June 2007

On Sunday I attended a performance of the Healdsburg Community Band at the new Gazebo in downtown Healdsburg, California. (Pictures of the event from the Press Democrat) I attended this in the saxophone section where I now rehearse (on those Tuesday nights when I am in town), and perform. The band is 30 years old and accepts any adult or high school student who expresses an interest. Some members have played for years, and some haven’t played in years when they join the group. And some of us move among sections depending on our favorite instrument du Jour. My son played in the group through his high school years and played three or four different instruments in those four years. After ten years playing in the flute and piccolo section, I have now played about four years in the saxophone section.

I enjoy concerts – but I particularly enjoy them from the inside. I once was on a business trip in Amsterdam, and mentioned that I would love to attend a concert at the famous Concertgebouw. One of my hosts told me after lunch that there was a ticket waiting for me that eveing at will call. I asked what it was for – and he didn’t know – and I didn’t care.

When I arrived for the performance, I discovered it was to be Handel’s Messiah. When I walked up to my designated door to go in to the theater, there was a long line of men and women in tuxedos and black dresses. I thought ‘they sure seem to dress up more in Amsterdam’ – I got to the back of the line, and then realized this was the choir. Much to my surprise – and pleasure, my seat was one row behind the choir. Perhaps not the best place to ‘hear’ the piece – but an incredible place to be part of the piece. Every time the conductor queued the tenors I felt like joining in – because he was signaling me. Fortunately I resisted that impulse. But I did get a very different sense of the piece, and a feeling of the energy generated by the conductor and the singers that you would never get ‘out front’.

And it is this same feeling I get in the saxophone section of the Healdsburg Community Band, reacting to the queues of the conductor, noticing the energy of those around me (sometimes anxious over a coming entrance – or over standing to play the piccolo solo in The Stars and Stripes Forever; sometimes looking forward to a favorite riff). I sit there and think about important musicians and people who enjoy music in my life and about my own entrances and favorite parts. And I play my instrument – trying to sound better than I every have – and perhaps better than I ever will.

2 Comments »

Jim on June 7th 2007 in Arts Commentary

2 Responses to “Healdsburg Community Band, 3 June 2007”

  1. nocturne@alum.mit.edu responded on 12 Jun 2007 at 7:22 am #

    Being smack dab in the middle of the energy and the music an be really amazing.
    I’ve played in the pit orchestra for at least a couple dozen musical theater productions now. Without fail, the peak (for me) of every production is the sitzprobe, the rehearsal where the full orchestra and cast come together for the first time. The singers stand directly behind the orchestra, sans blocking or acting, simply focusing on the meshing of our collective sounds. At no other time will the orchestra be so fully immersed in the voices of the cast; the intensity of energy and volume makes my skin literally tingle, filling me with a sense of wonder and joy and unutterable beauty.

  2. Jim Panttaja » Notes from the National Flute Association Convention responded on 13 Aug 2007 at 8:45 am #

    [...] for contra bass flute. It is a great sound – and fun to be in the middle of it (see my earlier post on [...]

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