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Ridgewood Concert Band: “Annual Generations Concert”

Ridgewood Concert Band

Friday, May 12th
West Side Presbyterian Church
Ridgewood, New Jersey

7:30pm
Prelude Performance
West Milford High School Wind Ensemble

8:00pm
Ridgewood Concert Band

Featuring:
Youth Soloist Competition Winner Saxophonist Christopher Mantell
and “Side By Side” High School Musicians

Program Highlights:
Angels in the Architecture – Frank Ticheli
Pineapple Poll – Sir Arthur Sullivan
Sun Dance – Frank Ticheli
Rhosymedre – Ralph Vaughan Williams

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Ridgewood resident and soprano Kristen Plumley will perform works by Schubert, Strauss, and Arlen with the Ridgewood Concert Band

Ridgewood Concert Band
February 5,2017
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, The RCB is pleased to be joined by Ridgewood resident and soprano Kristen Plumley. Described as possessing a “shimmering soprano” (The New York Times) with “sparkle and precision” (The Washington Post),  she enjoys singing everything from opera’s light lyric roles to oratorio to pops classics.

Ms. Plumley will perform works by Schubert, Strauss, and Arlen with the RCB.

The program will include Tan Dun’s “Internet Symphony – Eroica”, which is a four-and-a-half minute micro-symphony that combines multicultural influences and the iconic theme from Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 (“Eroica”).

Unfamiliar with the melody or want a refresher before next week’s concert?

Take some time to enjoy the above video of the Vienna Philharmonic performing Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 under the baton of Leonard Bernstein.

Don’t miss out on your final chance to take advantage of discounted tickets through our
Pick 3! Subscription plan.
Click here to attend the remaining three concerts of our 34th season at a 20% discount!
Friday, February 10th
with guest soloist soprano Kristen Plumley
Friday, March 31st
featuring solos from principal musicians of the RCB
Friday, May 12th
bringing together the finest musicians from area high schools (including the winner of the Youth Soloist Competition)
and the RCB
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TUBACHRISTMAS coming to Ridgewood

TUBACHRISTMAS

November 18,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, For those who are new to TUBACHRISTMAS, it is an event that allows tuba and euphonium players of all ages and abilities to come together to play holiday music specifically arranged for their instruments. The first TUBACHRISTMAS took place at New York City’s Rockefeller Plaza Ice Rink on Sunday, December 22, 1974. Since then TUBACHRISTMAS events have been held all over the world.

This year’s event in conjunction with the second concert in the Ridgewood Concert Band’s (RCB)34th Season promises to be an exciting night of music for audience and musicians alike. TUBACHRISTMAS participants will rehearse and then will be invited to enjoy the RCB portion of the program, which will include Commando March (Barber), Yiddish Dances, and Nutcracker Suite (Tchaikovsky). Tuba soloist Mike Salzman will also be featured. The concert will conclude with the TUBACHRISTMAS performance of carols arranged for tuba and euphoniums.

4:00 pm – Registration Opens
5:00 pm – Rehearsal
6:30 pm – Dinner
7:30 pm RCB/NJWS Concert
Post Concert Tuba Christmas Performance

Cost to Participate: $10

What is Included:
-TubaChristmas 2016 Pin
-Participation in Rehearsal and Performance
-Complimentary entrance into RCB/NJWS Concert on December 9

What to Bring:
-Your Instrument
-TubaChristmas Carol Book (available for purchase at event)
-Music Stand

What to Wear:
-Festive Clothing

Registration:
-Pre-Register online: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/BM5CK6X
-On-Site Registration will be available if capacity has not been reached in pre-registration.

Friday, December 9 at 4 PM – 9:30 PM
West Side Presbyterian Church Ridgewood, NJ
6 S Monroe St, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450

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Ridgewood Concert Band: Season Subscription Sale Extended

ridgewood concert band

September 25,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Do you have your tickets to our 2016-2017 season yet? The “5 for 4” concert subscription ticket sale promotion has been extended to September 30th. Don’t miss out!

https://ridgewoodband.org/purchase/subscription.aspx

Its their 34th Season and there is a great line up of concerts for you. Act now to take advantage of our season ticket special to get tickets to all five concerts for the price of four!

Check out these soloists for the season!

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Ridgewood Concert Band: Concert Friday!

Ridgewood Concert Band

Ridgewood Concert Band prides itself on the number of music educators in the group. Thank your local music teacher during the last few days of Music in Our Schools Month! #miosm #rcbnjws#keepingtheartsalive #thankyou #teachers — withJason Stier, Alison Meyer, Joseph Stella, Michelle McGuire, Dave Bychek, Jackie Sarracco, John J. Palatucci, Mark J. Donellan, Jeff Bittner, Chris Wilhjelm, Andre Baruch and Jen Wise.

Friday April 8th 8 pm ,West Side Presbyterian Church 6 South Monroe Street, Ridgewood, NJ 07450

7:00PM Pre- Concert Talk
Join us for a pre-concert talk to hear from award-winning broadcaster and author Robert Sherman as he shares a brief history of WQXR (including his own embarrassing pre-station stint as an Army bandsman) and reconnects with RCB Musician Rick Summers, who played on his program in 1972.  (A recording of that broadcast can be heard here!)

7:30PM Prelude Concert
The Hackensack High School Band under the direction of Lisa MacVicar will perform the following program:
The Star Spangled Banner (arr. Jack Stamp)
English Folk Song Suite (Ralph Vaughn Williams)
Selections from Les Miserables (arr Warren Barker)
The Invincible Eagle (John Philip Sousa)

8:00PM Ridgewood Concert Band
The Ridgewood Concert Band (RCB), A New Jersey Wind Symphony, continues its 33rd season with a concert featuring a wide variety of music.   Guest soloist Scott Hartman (trombone instructor at Yale University’s School of Music) will perform Gregory Fritze’s “Trombonico”.  Also joining the RCB will be Robert Sherman, who will act as guest narrator on Vincent Persichetti’s “A Lincoln Address”.  The program will also include Joseph Schwanter’s “Luminosity” and this concert’s featured “classic”:  Richard Wagner’s “Elsa’s Procession to the Cathedral”.

Tickets
Online Tickets can be purchased on the Ridgewood Concert Band website here..

At the Door
Tickets are available at the door the night of the concert.

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Ridgewood Concert Band hosts French band

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RCB director Chris Wilhjelm (R) with Jean-Luc Wastable (L), the director of L’Harmonie La Croix Valmer in Cannes in 2012. They will be reunited later today as the RCB and L’Harmonie share a concert at West Side Presbyterian Church on October 18th!.

OCTOBER 16, 2015    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2015, 12:30 AM
BY BETSY MURPHY
CORRESPONDENT |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Brush up on your bonjour and bonsoir so you can greet any of the French band members and/or their families who might be sauntering the village streets this weekend.

Thirty members of L’Harmonie La Croix Valmer are leaving their village in southeastern France to spend time in ours. They are here to perform with the Ridgewood Concert Band (RCB) on Sunday evening at West Side Presbyterian Church. It’s old stuff – they’ve done it before; but no less exciting for the players involved.

RCB started out as a village band in 1983. One of its founders, Chris Wilhjelm, had wanted to assemble a concert band of adults to play challenging literature. “A group of adults playing for the joy of mastering the music,” was his dream.

“Our goal was unique,” states Wilhjelm. “We tried to be a community band with a mission a little different from other community bands in our area. We programmed serious literature right from the very beginning.”

Their repertoire and their reputation grew. “We have a reputation for playing high-end literature,” he can say today. “Our programming is as ambitious and aggressive as the finest professional conservatory ensembles in the country.”

https://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/music/ridgewood-concert-band-puts-the-we-in-oui-1.1433844

The concert, Sunday, Oct. 18, at 7 p.m. at West Side Presbyterian Church, will be performed by the RCB, with Dr. Chris Wilhjelm and L’Harmonie, with Jean-Luc Wastable and will feature the music of Saint-Saëns, Sousa, and Giroux. L’Harmonie will be performing a wide range of pieces from the French Can Can (Offenbach) to “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” with a trumpet soloist. A highlight of the program will be the RCB’s performance of Camille Saint-Saens’ “Hail! California,” which was written for the Panama-Pacific Exposition held in San Francisco in 1915. Arranger Peter Stanley Martin will speak about bringing this classic back to life at a Pre-Concert Talk at 6 p.m. (This event is free with concert ticket).

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Ridgewood Concert Band : The Lincoln Legacy

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Ridgewood Concert Band : The Lincoln Legacy

Sunday, March 8, 2015 , 7:00 PM

West Side Presbyterian Church ,Ridgewood, New Jersey

Special Guest
Ramapo College Chorale – Dr. Lisa Lutter, Director

Soloist
Diana Powers Rettie – Flute

Buy Tickets Now https://ridgewoodband.org/purchase/singleticket.aspx

Program Highlights

American Hymnsong Suite – Dwayne Milburn

Major Dwayne S. Milburn is a native of Baltimore, Maryland. In 1986 he graduated from UCLA with a BFA in Music and received a Masters of Music in Orchestral Conducting from the Cleveland Institute of Music in 1992. In 1993 he became the Director of Cadet Music for the Unites States Army Military Academy at West Point. He received his Ph.D. in Music from UCLA in 2009 and is in great demand as a conductor, composer, arranger and clinician. Milburn notes that “American Hymnsong Suite is firmly rooted in [his] family history as church musicians.” He grew up singing and playing many different hymns, including the four hymns featured in this work: Prelude on “Wondrous Love” (“What Wondrous Love Is This”), Ballad on “Balm in Gilead,” Scherzo on “Nettleton,” and March on “Wilson.” Milburn says that “whilst many audience members will certainly make various religious connections to the piece, the ongoing goal is to introduce all listeners to the richness of our American musical heritage.”

Program notes compiled by Marcie Phelan.

Lincoln Portrait – Aaron Copland

Lincoln Portrait was commissioned by Andre Kostelanetz for the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra in early 1942. Copland initially chose Walt Whitman as his subject, but immediately picked Lincoln instead when Kostelanetz suggested a historical government figure. For the narration, which occurs only in the Portrait’s third and final section, Copland used Lincoln’s words, adding his own brief descriptions of the former president. Characteristic of Copland’s populist and patriotic music, Lincoln Portrait quotes traditional popular tunes: “Springfield Mountain” and Stephen Foster’s “Camptown Races,” while the largest portion of the musical work is Copland’s own genius.

Program notes compiled by Marcie Phelan.

Battle Hymn of the Republic- Peter Wilhousky

Battle Hymn of the Republic originated when Julia Ward Howe, the wife of a prominent Boston abolitionist, visited a Union army camp in Virginia during the Civil War. There she heard soldiers singing “John Brown’s Body” to a tune attributed to William Steffe, a Philadelphia insurance salesman, and probably composed in 1855 or 18566. Howe decided to write new verses more fitting to the conflict between the North and theSouth. Her “Battle Hymn” was published in The Atlantic Monthly in February 1862 and has expressed America’s resolve during every conflict since. The arrangement heard here was prepared by Mr. Wilhousky, a New York-based chorus master. This setting has become the definitive rendition of the work as it never fails to stir the emotion of its audience.

Program notes compiled by Marcie Phelan.

Washington Greys – Claudio Grafulla/L. Schissel

This classic march is Grafulla’s most widely known composition, and it has been arranged and rearranged for countless contemporary bands. Research indicates that The Washington Greys were the 8th Regiment of New York, based at Kingsbridge Armory in the Bronx. Their name is chiseled in stone in the Armory entranceway. The 8th became the 258th Field Artillery and is still part of the 42nd InfantryDivision (Rainbow) of the Army National Guard. Prior to the Civil War, gray was a standard color for military uniforms; it was not until the development of the Confederacy that the Union uniform color became blue. The Washington Greys were the original honor guard for George Washington when he was welcomed back to New York City after the British evacuated in 1783. The Washington Greys March is Grafulla’s most famous work because of the way the march is constructed. It is musically cohesive, with its running sixteenth notes and a responding rich bass voice making a magnificent counterpoint. This very spirited march demands virtuosity from its performers.

Program notes compiled by Marcie Phelan.

Marching through Georgia – John Philip Sousa/Brion

Sousa marches often bear a dedication to people, places, or events. Marching Through Georgia is a powerfully inventive patrol setting of Henry Clay Work’s immensely popular 1865 civil war song. It was written to commemorate William Tecumseh Sherman’s famed and decisive Union Army “March to the Sea” which historically broke the backbone of the rebellious Confederacy. The patrol setting gives the listener the aural view of the band approaching from the distance, sounding full as it passes, and fading in its retreat.

Program notes compiled by Marcie Phelan.

Spring Song – Jean Sibelius arr. Patrick Burns

Sibelius wrote extensivelyand wonderfully for orchestra, yet relatively few of his tone poems are performed regularly in this country, apart from Finlandia, and the Swan of Tuonela. Spring Song is a hymn to nature tinged with a hint of the wintry melancholy that can linger into the sub-arctic spring of Sibelius’s beloved Finnish homeland. Mr. Burns has honored both the composer and the Ridgewood Concert Band with his concert band arrangement of this Sibelius jewel composed originally in 1894. Although gentle and wistful in its opening, the work also contains some lovely and memorable melodies that will now be available to performers and audiences alike in this delightful new setting, as the Ridgewood Concert Band premiers this new arangement.

Program notes compiled by Marcie Phelan.

Precious Metal – D.J. Sparr

Precious Metal is a concerto for flute and winds and is based on the three metals of which the flute is made. Each metal is a descriptive title that influenced the construction and materials of each movement of the work. In the first movement, Silver Strettos, the flute is heard as bright and pristine within the simple and pure melodic material and the call and response canonic orchestration. In the second movement, Platinum Sheen does not have the glimmer of silver, so the orchestration in this movement is not as flashy as in the first movement, but as with platinum, the orchestration is strong and durable – using the low instruments of the ensemble for a strong foundation. Gold Rush begins with a solo flute motive based on material from the first movement but now in a minor key. The ensemble interrupts with a pulsating crescendo that leads to a virtuosic flute cadenza. The middle section of this movement features a long accelerando with a soaring flute melody that ultimately leads to a musical accompaniment to a westward bound journey into the sunset, a search for gold and riches.

Program notes compiled by Marcie Phelan.

 

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Ridgewood Concert Band Season Finale: “Celebrate New Jersey”

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Ridgewood Concert Band Season Finale: “Celebrate New Jersey”

Friday, May 9th
8:00pm

7:30 Prelude Performance
the Midland Park High School Concert Band

West Side Presbyterian Church
Ridgewood, New Jersey

Featured Guest Soloists:

Alan Baer, Principal Tuba New York Philharmonic

Emmett Rapaport, Saxophone
Ridgewood High School Senior and Winner of the 2013 – 2014 Youth Soloist Competition

Also presenting the Sixth Annual Side-by-Side Concert with the finest High School musicians from the area

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Alan Baer joined the New York Philharmonic on June 21, 2004, as Principal Tuba. He was formerly principal tuba with the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Long Beach Symphony Orchestra, and Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra. His other performing credits include recordings with The Cleveland Orchestra led by Vladimir Ashkenazy, performances with the Peninsula Music Festival of Wisconsin, New Orleans Symphony, Los Angeles Concert Orchestra, Ojai Festival Orchestra (California), Los Angeles Philharmonic, and Chicago Symphony Orchestra. He has also performed as a featured soloist, touring several countries in Europe, including Switzerland, Austria, Germany, and France.

Mr. Baer began his undergraduate work at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, where he studied with Dr. Gary Bird. He completed his bachelor of music degree with Ronald Bishop at the Cleveland Institute of Music, and has done graduate work at the University of Southern California, Cleveland Institute of Music, and California State University, Long Beach, where he studied with Tommy Johnson. While in Long Beach, Mr. Baer taught at California State University, where he also directed the university tuba ensemble and the brass choir. In Milwaukee, Mr. Baer was adjunct professor of tuba and euphonium at the University of Wisconsin and director of the Tuba-Euphonium Ensemble

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Ridgewood Concert Band March Winds

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March Winds
Friday, March 21, 2014
8:00 PM
West Side Presbyterian Church
Ridgewood, New Jersey

Meet The Soloist: Richard Summers

Richard Summers is a music educator, performer, arranger, conductor, and composer. He grew up in Wheeling WV, became interested in a musical career, and attended the University of Kentucky for two years under a full scholarship. He moved to the NY/NJ area when he was accepted as a clarinetist and saxophonist of the United States Military Academy Band at West Point from 1972-1975. Following his military career, he attended Juilliard, where he received his BM and MM degrees in music performance on clarinet under Leon Russianoff and Joseph Allard.

Newly retired from NJ public schools, Mr. Summers taught instrumental music for 32 years in Kinnelon and Pequannock, NJ and served as adjunct professor for concert band, clarinet, and woodwinds at William Paterson University, where he established the Summer Honors Band.

As a performer on clarinet, saxophone, and other woodwind instruments, Mr. Summers has performed as a member of the New Jersey Pops Orchestra, The Orchestra at William Paterson, The New Music Ensemble, The Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra, Adelphi Chamber Orchestra, North Jersey Philharmonic, and has been principal clarinetist, soloist, assistant conductor, personnel manager, and arranger with the Ridgewood Concert Band for over 25 years. Throughout his career, he has been a featured performer both locally and internationally, playing solo works across the US and Europe.

Mr. Summers has recently arranged and composed music that has been published for Bandworks Publications, and Carl Fisher Publications, and is hoping to write and publish more music in the future. Mr. Summers resides in West Milford, NJ and has a musical family of his own. His wife Karen and his son Stephen are also clarinetists and perform together in area music ensembles like the Ridgewood Concert Band.