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Season 34, Concert 5 - May 12, 2017
BENEFACTOR ($3,000 and above) Thomas & Victoria Price
Bank of America/Merrill Lynch Wealth Management
Bergen County Division of Cultural and Historic Affairs
PATRON ($2,000 to $2,999)
Carolyn & Howard Crumb Judy & Roger Widicus
SPONSOR ($1,000 to $1,999)
Michael & Darel-Ann DePompeo In Memory of Gunther Schuller
Daiichi-Sankyo, Inc. PVH Corporation
SUPPORTER ($500 to $999)
Barbara Abney Bolger Lawrence & Donna Friedman
Gregory Fritze In Memory of Aquilina Lim
Dr. Christian Wilhjelm & Jacqueline Sarracco John & Marilyn Wagner
In Memory of Emma Wode Fred & Patricia Yosca
ASSOCIATE ($250 to $499)
Mary & Paul Bergquist Jeff Bittner
Naomi Freshwater Paul Goldberg
Elisa Grim Paul & Carolyn Kirby
Kathy & John Palatucci Deloss Schertz & Rose Kraybill Beth Seavers & Neil Sheehan
AFFILIATE ($100 to $249)
Ginny Baird John Bolger
John & Louise Butler David & Jacalyn Bychek
Suzanne Coletta Paul & Helene Emanuel
Sally Fillmore & David Appel Marie Kane
Michael Kokola Annette & Andy Lieb
James & Cheryl Mallen
Joseph & Deborah Marsicovete Marks Family
Jerry, Mary, Leah, & Brendan Meyer Keith Mogerley Irene Montella Dorothy Neff
Marcella Phelan Jean Roughgarden
Carol Sawitz Francis & Barbara Schott
Richard & Karen Summers Richard & Jessie Ver Hage
Dr. Richard & Katherine Wise Nancy Zweil
Blue Moon Mexican Cafe
FRIEND ($1 to $99) Andre Baruch
Jill Bloom Lloyd & Jane DeVries
Mary Dorian Michelle Dugan
Richard & Gayle Felton Frances Ferraro
Eileen Ginn Katherine Grasso
Richard Hahn Emily James
Emmett & Elizabeth Johnson Janet Johnston
Janis Keown-Blackburn Nathan Kinney
Lorraine Mariella Thelma Peres
Larry & Barbara Roshon Albert Schagen
Rachel Schulman Ann Sirinides
Virginia Sirinides Mr. & Mrs. Harold Sylvester
Janet Vidovich William Vollinger
Arnold & Diane Zettler Mark & Andrea Zettler
Amazon Smile Foundation
If you are a recent subscriber or donor, we may have received your name too late to include in
this program and we apologize for that, but you will be in subsequent programs. Thank you.
2016-17 CONTRIBUTORS The Ridgewood Concert Band gratefully acknowledges the support of our donors
and subscribers whose generous support makes these programs possible.
Printing of this program generously underwritten by Konica Minolta Business Solutions.
________________________________________________________________________
Funding has been made possible in part by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, through grant
funds administered by the Bergen County Department of Parks, Division of Cultural and Historic Affairs. ________________________________________________________________________
The Ridgewood Concert Band would like to thank all of the many volunteers who have made this concert possible.
________________________________________________________________________
The Ridgewood Concert Band would like to give a special “thank you” to David Marks and the
Midland Park School District. The Midland Park High School band room is our weekly rehearsal site.
________________________________________________________________________
For additional RCB information, please visit our website or scan our QR code:
WWW.RIDGEWOODBAND.ORG
Dr. Christian Wilhjelm, Music Director
Annual Generations Concert
PRELUDE CONCERT - 7:30 PM
West Milford High School Wind Ensemble Dr. Brian McLaughlin, Director
FEATURED GUEST SOLOIST
Christopher Mantell, Alto Saxophone 2016-2017 RCB Youth Soloist Competition Winner
THE RIDGEWOOD CONCERT BAND SIDE-BY-SIDE SYMPHONIC BAND
Jacqueline Sarracco & Jennifer Wise, Co-Directors
Friday, May 12, 2017 - 8:00 PM West Side Presbyterian Church, Ridgewood, NJ
Konica Minolta Business Solutions U.S.A. is a Proud
Sponsor of the Ridgewood Concert Band
SIDE-BY-SIDE STUDENT MUSICIANS One of the most important missions of the Ridgewood Concert Band is to reach out to the youth in our area and expose them to fine wind ensemble literature and performance. With this in mind, Dr. Chris Wilhjelm suggested that we set up a concert in which deserving high school students would have the opportunity to play side-by-side with the musicians in the RCB and prepare several works that would challenge them musically and involve them in a professional level performance situation. Music teachers from the RCB and area high schools made their recommendations, and we are delighted this evening to host the 9th Annual “Side-by-Side Concert.” The music you will hear during the second half of tonight’s concert is the result of hours of personal practice as well as joint rehearsals with the students and the RCB. It is our hope that the students and you, our audience, will find this annual event both educational and enjoyable. Below are the names of the student participants. We are grateful to them, their teachers, their parents, Dr. Chris Wilhjelm and the Side-by-Side Committee (Jacqueline Sarracco & Jennifer Wise) for making this performance possible. We would also like to give a special "thank you" to The Music Shop in Boonton for donating the student music folders.
First Name Last Name Grade Instrument SchoolMadison Asch 11 Oboe Midland Park HSDaniela Avelar 10 Flute Memorial HS
Dylan Balsamo 11 Tuba Indian Hills HSBrett Berger 11 Trombone Pascack Hills HS
Daniel Chi 9 Clarinet Hackensack HSKenneth Cho 10 Trumpet Ramapo HS
Cody Cline 12 Trombone Butler HSNicholas Colicchio 12 Baritone Saxophone Pequannock Township HS
Joseph D'Andrea 10 Tuba Pequannock Township HSMatthew D'Andrea 12 Trombone Ramapo HSDanielle Dreyer 11 Bass Clarinet West Milford HS
Jordan Dreyer 11 Bassoon West Milford HSLauren Estes 11 Flute Hawthorne HS
Raelene Ford 11 Oboe Indian Hills HSNicole Gallegos 11 Clarinet Passaic Valley HS
Amanda Garcia 11 Flute North Bergen HSArlene Garcia 11 Clarinet North Bergen HSKarina Garcia 10 Trombone North Bergen HSNatalie Gonzalez 11 Flute Memorial HS
Kent Hefele 10 Percussion Morristown HSAndrew Held 10 Euphonium Midland Park HS
Gaia Hutcheson 11 French Horn Pompton Lakes HSAnthony Kalanick 11 Clarinet Morris Knolls HSKathryn Keller 11 Oboe West Milford HSAudrey Leibig 11 Clarinet West Milford HS
Benjamin Mascuch 12 Tuba Ramapo HSGabriela Menjivar 10 French Horn North Bergen HS
Erin Mickey 12 French Horn Kinnelon HSElizabeth Monkemeier 11 Clarinet Madison HS
Kevin Mueller 10 Alto Saxophone Morristown HSMark O'Malley 11 Bassoon Morristown HS
Katherine Park 10 Flute Bergen County AcademiesNelvi Piantino 12 Euphonium North Bergen HSKevin Pinney 12 Alto Saxophone Ramapo HSDylan Quattro 10 Trumpet Morristown HS
Joanna Ramirez 12 Percussion North Bergen HSSamantha Ramsden 11 Flute Kinnelon HS
Isabella Rossi 9 Bass Clarinet Pascack Hills HSAmanda Roth 10 Flute West Milford HSTheresa Santa Lucia 10 Clarinet West Milford HS
Nikki Schuldt 11 Clarinet Hawthorne HSSarah Shahidi 12 Flute/Piccolo Madison HS
Matthew Vera-Corcoran 10 Percussion Pompton Lakes HSChris Winiarski 12 Tuba Ramapo HS
RIDGEWOOD CONCERT BAND BOARD OF TRUSTEES
PRESIDENT: Deloss Schertz
IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT: Mark Zettler VICE PRESIDENT: Lawrence Friedman RECORDING SECRETARY: Annette Lieb
CORRESPONDING SECRETARY: James Mallen TREASURER: Neil Sheehan
MEMBERS AT LARGE: John Butler, Mike DePompeo,
Carolyn Kirby, David Marks, Beth Seavers, John Wagner & Marilyn Wagner
___________________________________________________________________
Conductor's Notes: Tonight marks a huge milestone in the life of the Ridgewood Concert Band. In January of 1983, a group of citizens gathered at the home of Jack and Joanne Rodland on Orchard Place to discuss the formation of a new adult community band in Ridgewood. This band was to be unlike any adult concert band known on the East Coast. This band was designed from the very start to perform fine music that required a degree of musical expertise and understanding that only the finest collegiate and professional ensembles attained. The original name of the band was the Ridgewood Community Concert Band. Marcia Sloat, a local arts critic for the Ridgewood News, a true village newspaper owned by a local family, wrote in an early review, "This is no community band." The band quickly changed its name to the Ridgewood Concert Band and was compared favorably in many reviews to very prominent ensembles. I believe that the band has continued to develop and grow over the years with a long legacy of excellent performances. Recognized by leading composers all over the world, the band has truly developed a national and international reputation for excellence. To that end, the band will be formally changing its name next year to the New Jersey Wind Symphony. This will serve to publicly acknowledge the band's regional reputation and responsibility. At the same time we will always hold our Ridgewood roots close to our hearts. Thank you for your continued steadfast support. -Dr. Christian Wilhjelm ______________________________________________________
Christopher Mantell is a saxophonist and a junior at Randolph High School in Randolph, NJ. He has played the saxophone for seven years, and is in his second season performing in the Ridgewood Concert Band’s saxophone section. He is actively involved in Randolph High School’s music program, performing in the Wind Ensemble, Jazz Ensemble, Pit Orchestra, Marching Band, and Concert Choir. Additionally, he has successfully auditioned for North Jersey Area Band, New Jersey Region I Band, and New Jersey All-
State Band. He has been principal soprano saxophonist with the North Jersey Youth Saxophone Ensemble for four years. Most recently, Christopher won the Hanover Wind Symphony Summer Music Scholarship in March of 2017. He was selected to perform with the 2016 Honors Performance Series at Carnegie Hall Honor Band and The College of New Jersey High School Honors Wind Ensemble in 2015. He was named MAYO Performing Arts Center’s Jazz Musician of the Month in March 2014. Christopher aspires to study Saxophone Performance and Music Education in college and pursue a career in Music Education.
PICCOLO Max Taylor
FLUTES Chrysten Angderson
Kristin Bacchiocchi-Stewart * Jill Bloom
Lisandra Hernandez Jennifer Kasyan
Annette Lieb Tomomi Takamoto
Max Taylor
OBOES Drew Greis *
Andrea Nowalk ENGLISH HORN
Molly Raum
BASSOONS Robert Gray *
Christy Luberger Jason Stier
CONTRA BASSOON Robert Gray
Eb CLARINET
Michelle McGuire CLARINETS
Suzanne Coletta Francesca Ferrara Naomi Freshwater
Joe Mariany Michelle McGuire
Leigh Myers Marcie Phelan
Jean Roughgarden Beth Seavers Neil Sheehan
Karen Summers Richard Summers * Sabrina Tempesta
Janet Vidovich
ALTO CLARINET Francesca Ferrara
BASS CLARINETS Bianca D’Agostaro
Joel Kolk *
CONTRA-BASS CLARINET Glenn Chernicky
SAXOPHONES
Andre Baruch - Alto Lois Hicks-Wozniak * - Alto/Sop
Christopher Mantell - Alto Ryan Mantell - Tenor
Michael DePompeo - Baritone
CORNETS/TRUMPETS Dave Bychek Mike Connor Dave Hurd
Tamara McLaughlin Richard Roberts Michael Russo
Thomas Siebenhuhner Ann Sirinides Joseph Stella
Roger Widicus *
FRENCH HORNS Ben Fine
John Harley Carolyn Kirby *
Brian McLaughlin Deloss Schertz
TROMBONES
Thomas Abbate * Stephanie Dutcher
Ryan Halliwell Paul Kirby
Keith Marson Rob Paustian Nate Rensink
Kristen Siebenhuhner Robert Tiedemann
EUPHONIUMS Robyn Keyes
John Palatucci * Don Van Teyens
TUBA
Michael Gould Bob Sacchi *
STRING BASS Charlie Nolet
PERCUSSION Ellis Berger Ben Carriel
James Mallen Chris Tarantino John Wagner * Mark Zettler *
HARP
Irene Bressler
PIANO/CELESTA Don Dean
PIANO/CELESTA & ORGAN Alison Meyer
* PRINCIPAL
___________________________
ASSOCIATE CONDUCTORS John Palatucci
Richard Summers
LIBRARIAN Dave Bychek
PERSONNEL MANAGER
Richard Summers
STAGE MANAGER Tony Spinuzzi
BOX OFFICE
Marilyn Wagner
PARKING DIRECTOR John Hahn
WEB ADMINISTRATOR
Deloss Schertz
PROGRAM DESIGN Joseph Stella
Sun Dance – Frank Ticheli (b.1958) was commissioned to write this piece by the Austin Independent School District for the Silver Anniversary Celebration of the 25th Annual All-City Band Festival, on March 18, 1997. It has been described as a sparkling ballet full of light, playful motives, and warm melodies. The dance-like, transparent score and variety of interesting musical elements are enhanced by a syncopated rhythmic figure that is used as the structural building block for virtually everything in the piece. Sun Dance evokes images of a town festival on a warm, sun-washed day with its syncopated dance rhythms and sunny tonality. It comes as no surprise that the phrase “bright joy” was on the mind of the composer while composing this work. Rhosymedre – Ralph Vaughn Williams (1873-1958) used this melody as the basis of the second movement of his organ composition Three Preludes on Welsh Hymn Tunes. Rhosymedre is the name of the hymn tune written by the 19th-century Welsh Anglican priest John David Edwards who named the tune after the village of Rhosymedre in the County Borough of Wrexham, Wales, where he was the vicar from 1843 until his death in 1885. Also known by the title Lovely, this popular organ prelude, arranged for band by Walter Beeler, is remarkable in its simple beauty. Ralph Vaughan Williams has joined hymn tune, bass and obbligato to create a grand, soaring piece. Tempered Steel – Charles Rochester Young (b.1965) has won high praises and honors for his compositional work both in the United States and abroad. Currently Dr. Young is the Chair of Composition and Music Theory at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. As man grows stronger and more resilient through hardship, he becomes “tempered.” Tempered Steel is a celebration of triumph over the unavoidable hardships and obstacles that man faces. It rejoices in the tenacious and unrelenting resolve that is a part of all mankind. As the title implies, the metallic sonorities of the wind band are continually explored and developed throughout the work, while the “tempest” is a symmetric hexachord that is exposed and developed through textures and themes. Tempered Steel was written in 1997 as the first work to be commissioned by the Big 12 Band Director’s Association. Program Notes compiled by Marcie Phelan __________________________________________________________________________ Dr. Christian Wilhjelm, conductor, professional musician and educator, has been the Ridgewood Concert Band’s Musical Director since it was founded in 1983. He was also Music Director of the renowned Goldman Memorial Band in New York City. As a guest conductor, Dr. Wilhjelm has conducted the West Point Band, the United States Army Field Band, the Virginia Wind Symphony, the Allentown Band, the Hanover Winds, the Raritan Wind Symphony, and the Norwalk Symphony. Dr. Wilhjelm has been the conductor of the annual New York City Tuba Christmas since 2000. He was recently appointed the conductor of the Ramapo College Concert Band. As a French horn player, he has performed under the world’s great conductors including Leonard Bernstein, Seiji Ozawa, Sir Colin Davis and Arthur Fiedler. Dr. Wilhjelm has played the French horn with the Boston Symphony, the Boston Pops and, as a principal, with the Boston Ballet Orchestra, the Boston Opera Orchestra and the Richmond Symphony. An honors graduate of the New England Conservatory, he received his doctorate from Columbia University in 1998. He has been the band director at Pascack Hills High School since 1984. Dr. Wilhjelm was recently honored by his election to the American Bandmasters Association. He is the 2012 recipient of the Outstanding Conductor Award presented by the Association of Concert Bands. Dr Wilhjelm is the state chair for the National Band Association. In 2013, he was elected to the Board of Directors for the Association of Concert Bands.
DR. CHRISTIAN WILHJELM, MUSIC DIRECTOR
PROGRAM NOTES Machu Picchu – Satoshi Yagisawa (b.1975) is one of the most vigorous young Japanese composers today. He writes a variety of orchestral, choral, and chamber music as well as works for concert band. Machu Picchu is the composer’s musical description of a mountaintop Incan city that was discovered 378 years after the Spanish Conquistadors invaded and destroyed Cuzco, the capital of the great sixteenth-century empire that unified most of Andean South America. Intihuatana (known in translation as “hitching post of the sun”) is a column of stone rising from a block of granite where an Incan priest would “tie the sun to the stone” at winter solstice to insure its seasonal return. Yagisawa wants the audience to musically visualize the shimmering city of Cuzco, set in the dramatic scenery of the Andes first, and then feel the destructiveness of violent invasion, and finally sense the re-emergence of Incan glory, as the city again reached for the sun. His musical picture is a masterpiece. Diversion for Alto Saxophone and Band – Bernhard Heiden (1910-2000) composed this work in 1943 while serving in the US Army Band during World War II. In a career that would span roughly six decades, he was to become an influential voice in writing for the saxophone, enjoying an early success with the debut of his 1937 Sonata for Alto Saxophone and Piano, widely considered to be the first sonata written expressly for the instrument. The influence of the composer’s mentor, Paul Hindemith is evident in Diversion’s tonal but non-diatonic harmonies, paired with Heiden’s own elegant melodic writing. Constructed in a loose rondo form, the composition is light and tuneful, revealing a mastery of instrumentation, with graceful lines for the solo saxophone and accompaniment passages that lightly support the soloist. Contrasting sections for wind and brass choirs, punctuated with full ensemble provide interesting variety and underline climactic moments. Angels in the Architecture – Frank Ticheli (b.1958) was commissioned and received its premiere performance in July of 2008 by a massed band of young musicians from Australia and the U.S. at the Sydney Opera House. The work journeys as a dramatic conflict between the two extremes of human existence, one divine, the other evil. The work’s title is inspired by the Sydney Opera House itself with its halo-shaped acoustical ornaments hanging directly above the performance stage. Angels in the Architecture begins with a single voice singing a 19th century Shaker song. This “angel” frames the work, surrounding it with a protective wall of light and establishing the divine. In opposition, turbulent, fast-paced instrumental music appears later in the piece as a symbol of darkness, death, and spiritual doubt. The alternation of these opposing forces creates, in effect, a kind of five-part rondo form. Angels in the Architecture poses the unanswered question of existence. It ends as it began, as the angel reappears singing the same comforting melody. But deep below, a final shadow reappears distantly, ominously. Pineapple Poll – Sir Arthur Sullivan (1842-1900) did indeed compose the music that is written here. However he had been dead for fifty years at the time of Pineapple Poll’s beginning. Due to copyright law, Sullivan’s music became public domain in 1950. However, his lyricist partner Sir William Gilbert died several years later, so his portion of the famous Gilbert and Sullivan work was still under copyright. This necessitated that any use of the Gilbert and Sullivan material must be purely instrumental. Sir Charles Mackerras took pieces of the existing material and created the ballet music. The ballet itself is a spoof of the extremely popular Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. A true Gilbert and Sullivan fan will be able to identify some tidbits from various operettas that Mackerras wove so skillfully into this work. Everyone will enjoy Sullivan’s melodic felicity, light-fingered orchestration and wonderfully joyful music.
PROGRAM
Prelude by the West Milford High School Wind Ensemble Dr. Brian McLaughlin, Director
Bookmarks From Japan - Julie Giroux 1. Fuji-san
2. Nihonbashi 3. The Great Wave off Kanagawa
4. Kinryuzan Temple 5. Evening Snow at Kambara
6. Hakone -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Machu Picchu - City in the Sky Satoshi Yagisawa Diversion for Alto Saxophone and Bernhard Heiden Concert Band Edited by R. Mark Rogers
Christopher Mantell, Alto Saxophone 2016-2017 RCB Youth Soloist Award Winner
Angels in the Architecture Frank Ticheli
Lois Hicks-Wozniak, Soprano
Pineapple Poll - Suite from the Ballet Sir Arthur Sullivan 1. Opening Number Arranged by Charles Mackerras 2. Jasper's Dance 3. Poll's Dance 4. Finale
INTERMISSION
The Ridgewood Concert Band Side-by-Side Symphonic Band:
Sun Dance Frank Ticheli Presentation of the 2016-2017 Ridgewood Concert Band Youth Soloist Awards
Rhosymedre Ralph Vaughan Williams Arranged by Walter Beeler
Conducted by Jennifer Wise
Tempered Steel Charles Rochester Young Conducted by Jacqueline Sarracco
*Flash photography and audio or video recording of this concert is strictly prohibited.*
PROGRAM NOTES Machu Picchu – Satoshi Yagisawa (b.1975) is one of the most vigorous young Japanese composers today. He writes a variety of orchestral, choral, and chamber music as well as works for concert band. Machu Picchu is the composer’s musical description of a mountaintop Incan city that was discovered 378 years after the Spanish Conquistadors invaded and destroyed Cuzco, the capital of the great sixteenth-century empire that unified most of Andean South America. Intihuatana (known in translation as “hitching post of the sun”) is a column of stone rising from a block of granite where an Incan priest would “tie the sun to the stone” at winter solstice to insure its seasonal return. Yagisawa wants the audience to musically visualize the shimmering city of Cuzco, set in the dramatic scenery of the Andes first, and then feel the destructiveness of violent invasion, and finally sense the re-emergence of Incan glory, as the city again reached for the sun. His musical picture is a masterpiece. Diversion for Alto Saxophone and Band – Bernhard Heiden (1910-2000) composed this work in 1943 while serving in the US Army Band during World War II. In a career that would span roughly six decades, he was to become an influential voice in writing for the saxophone, enjoying an early success with the debut of his 1937 Sonata for Alto Saxophone and Piano, widely considered to be the first sonata written expressly for the instrument. The influence of the composer’s mentor, Paul Hindemith is evident in Diversion’s tonal but non-diatonic harmonies, paired with Heiden’s own elegant melodic writing. Constructed in a loose rondo form, the composition is light and tuneful, revealing a mastery of instrumentation, with graceful lines for the solo saxophone and accompaniment passages that lightly support the soloist. Contrasting sections for wind and brass choirs, punctuated with full ensemble provide interesting variety and underline climactic moments. Angels in the Architecture – Frank Ticheli (b.1958) was commissioned and received its premiere performance in July of 2008 by a massed band of young musicians from Australia and the U.S. at the Sydney Opera House. The work journeys as a dramatic conflict between the two extremes of human existence, one divine, the other evil. The work’s title is inspired by the Sydney Opera House itself with its halo-shaped acoustical ornaments hanging directly above the performance stage. Angels in the Architecture begins with a single voice singing a 19th century Shaker song. This “angel” frames the work, surrounding it with a protective wall of light and establishing the divine. In opposition, turbulent, fast-paced instrumental music appears later in the piece as a symbol of darkness, death, and spiritual doubt. The alternation of these opposing forces creates, in effect, a kind of five-part rondo form. Angels in the Architecture poses the unanswered question of existence. It ends as it began, as the angel reappears singing the same comforting melody. But deep below, a final shadow reappears distantly, ominously. Pineapple Poll – Sir Arthur Sullivan (1842-1900) did indeed compose the music that is written here. However he had been dead for fifty years at the time of Pineapple Poll’s beginning. Due to copyright law, Sullivan’s music became public domain in 1950. However, his lyricist partner Sir William Gilbert died several years later, so his portion of the famous Gilbert and Sullivan work was still under copyright. This necessitated that any use of the Gilbert and Sullivan material must be purely instrumental. Sir Charles Mackerras took pieces of the existing material and created the ballet music. The ballet itself is a spoof of the extremely popular Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. A true Gilbert and Sullivan fan will be able to identify some tidbits from various operettas that Mackerras wove so skillfully into this work. Everyone will enjoy Sullivan’s melodic felicity, light-fingered orchestration and wonderfully joyful music.
PROGRAM
Prelude by the West Milford High School Wind Ensemble Dr. Brian McLaughlin, Director
Bookmarks From Japan - Julie Giroux 1. Fuji-san
2. Nihonbashi 3. The Great Wave off Kanagawa
4. Kinryuzan Temple 5. Evening Snow at Kambara
6. Hakone -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Machu Picchu - City in the Sky Satoshi Yagisawa Diversion for Alto Saxophone and Bernhard Heiden Concert Band Edited by R. Mark Rogers
Christopher Mantell, Alto Saxophone 2016-2017 RCB Youth Soloist Award Winner
Angels in the Architecture Frank Ticheli
Lois Hicks-Wozniak, Soprano
Pineapple Poll - Suite from the Ballet Sir Arthur Sullivan 1. Opening Number Arranged by Charles Mackerras 2. Jasper's Dance 3. Poll's Dance 4. Finale
INTERMISSION
The Ridgewood Concert Band Side-by-Side Symphonic Band:
Sun Dance Frank Ticheli Presentation of the 2016-2017 Ridgewood Concert Band Youth Soloist Awards
Rhosymedre Ralph Vaughan Williams Arranged by Walter Beeler
Conducted by Jennifer Wise
Tempered Steel Charles Rochester Young Conducted by Jacqueline Sarracco
*Flash photography and audio or video recording of this concert is strictly prohibited.*
PICCOLO Max Taylor
FLUTES Chrysten Angderson
Kristin Bacchiocchi-Stewart * Jill Bloom
Lisandra Hernandez Jennifer Kasyan
Annette Lieb Tomomi Takamoto
Max Taylor
OBOES Drew Greis *
Andrea Nowalk ENGLISH HORN
Molly Raum
BASSOONS Robert Gray *
Christy Luberger Jason Stier
CONTRA BASSOON Robert Gray
Eb CLARINET
Michelle McGuire CLARINETS
Suzanne Coletta Francesca Ferrara Naomi Freshwater
Joe Mariany Michelle McGuire
Leigh Myers Marcie Phelan
Jean Roughgarden Beth Seavers Neil Sheehan
Karen Summers Richard Summers * Sabrina Tempesta
Janet Vidovich
ALTO CLARINET Francesca Ferrara
BASS CLARINETS Bianca D’Agostaro
Joel Kolk *
CONTRA-BASS CLARINET Glenn Chernicky
SAXOPHONES
Andre Baruch - Alto Lois Hicks-Wozniak * - Alto/Sop
Christopher Mantell - Alto Ryan Mantell - Tenor
Michael DePompeo - Baritone
CORNETS/TRUMPETS Dave Bychek Mike Connor Dave Hurd
Tamara McLaughlin Richard Roberts Michael Russo
Thomas Siebenhuhner Ann Sirinides Joseph Stella
Roger Widicus *
FRENCH HORNS Ben Fine
John Harley Carolyn Kirby *
Brian McLaughlin Deloss Schertz
TROMBONES
Thomas Abbate * Stephanie Dutcher
Ryan Halliwell Paul Kirby
Keith Marson Rob Paustian Nate Rensink
Kristen Siebenhuhner Robert Tiedemann
EUPHONIUMS Robyn Keyes
John Palatucci * Don Van Teyens
TUBA
Michael Gould Bob Sacchi *
STRING BASS Charlie Nolet
PERCUSSION Ellis Berger Ben Carriel
James Mallen Chris Tarantino John Wagner * Mark Zettler *
HARP
Irene Bressler
PIANO/CELESTA Don Dean
PIANO/CELESTA & ORGAN Alison Meyer
* PRINCIPAL
___________________________
ASSOCIATE CONDUCTORS John Palatucci
Richard Summers
LIBRARIAN Dave Bychek
PERSONNEL MANAGER
Richard Summers
STAGE MANAGER Tony Spinuzzi
BOX OFFICE
Marilyn Wagner
PARKING DIRECTOR John Hahn
WEB ADMINISTRATOR
Deloss Schertz
PROGRAM DESIGN Joseph Stella
Sun Dance – Frank Ticheli (b.1958) was commissioned to write this piece by the Austin Independent School District for the Silver Anniversary Celebration of the 25th Annual All-City Band Festival, on March 18, 1997. It has been described as a sparkling ballet full of light, playful motives, and warm melodies. The dance-like, transparent score and variety of interesting musical elements are enhanced by a syncopated rhythmic figure that is used as the structural building block for virtually everything in the piece. Sun Dance evokes images of a town festival on a warm, sun-washed day with its syncopated dance rhythms and sunny tonality. It comes as no surprise that the phrase “bright joy” was on the mind of the composer while composing this work. Rhosymedre – Ralph Vaughn Williams (1873-1958) used this melody as the basis of the second movement of his organ composition Three Preludes on Welsh Hymn Tunes. Rhosymedre is the name of the hymn tune written by the 19th-century Welsh Anglican priest John David Edwards who named the tune after the village of Rhosymedre in the County Borough of Wrexham, Wales, where he was the vicar from 1843 until his death in 1885. Also known by the title Lovely, this popular organ prelude, arranged for band by Walter Beeler, is remarkable in its simple beauty. Ralph Vaughan Williams has joined hymn tune, bass and obbligato to create a grand, soaring piece. Tempered Steel – Charles Rochester Young (b.1965) has won high praises and honors for his compositional work both in the United States and abroad. Currently Dr. Young is the Chair of Composition and Music Theory at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. As man grows stronger and more resilient through hardship, he becomes “tempered.” Tempered Steel is a celebration of triumph over the unavoidable hardships and obstacles that man faces. It rejoices in the tenacious and unrelenting resolve that is a part of all mankind. As the title implies, the metallic sonorities of the wind band are continually explored and developed throughout the work, while the “tempest” is a symmetric hexachord that is exposed and developed through textures and themes. Tempered Steel was written in 1997 as the first work to be commissioned by the Big 12 Band Director’s Association. Program Notes compiled by Marcie Phelan __________________________________________________________________________ Dr. Christian Wilhjelm, conductor, professional musician and educator, has been the Ridgewood Concert Band’s Musical Director since it was founded in 1983. He was also Music Director of the renowned Goldman Memorial Band in New York City. As a guest conductor, Dr. Wilhjelm has conducted the West Point Band, the United States Army Field Band, the Virginia Wind Symphony, the Allentown Band, the Hanover Winds, the Raritan Wind Symphony, and the Norwalk Symphony. Dr. Wilhjelm has been the conductor of the annual New York City Tuba Christmas since 2000. He was recently appointed the conductor of the Ramapo College Concert Band. As a French horn player, he has performed under the world’s great conductors including Leonard Bernstein, Seiji Ozawa, Sir Colin Davis and Arthur Fiedler. Dr. Wilhjelm has played the French horn with the Boston Symphony, the Boston Pops and, as a principal, with the Boston Ballet Orchestra, the Boston Opera Orchestra and the Richmond Symphony. An honors graduate of the New England Conservatory, he received his doctorate from Columbia University in 1998. He has been the band director at Pascack Hills High School since 1984. Dr. Wilhjelm was recently honored by his election to the American Bandmasters Association. He is the 2012 recipient of the Outstanding Conductor Award presented by the Association of Concert Bands. Dr Wilhjelm is the state chair for the National Band Association. In 2013, he was elected to the Board of Directors for the Association of Concert Bands.
DR. CHRISTIAN WILHJELM, MUSIC DIRECTOR
Conductor's Notes: Tonight marks a huge milestone in the life of the Ridgewood Concert Band. In January of 1983, a group of citizens gathered at the home of Jack and Joanne Rodland on Orchard Place to discuss the formation of a new adult community band in Ridgewood. This band was to be unlike any adult concert band known on the East Coast. This band was designed from the very start to perform fine music that required a degree of musical expertise and understanding that only the finest collegiate and professional ensembles attained. The original name of the band was the Ridgewood Community Concert Band. Marcia Sloat, a local arts critic for the Ridgewood News, a true village newspaper owned by a local family, wrote in an early review, "This is no community band." The band quickly changed its name to the Ridgewood Concert Band and was compared favorably in many reviews to very prominent ensembles. I believe that the band has continued to develop and grow over the years with a long legacy of excellent performances. Recognized by leading composers all over the world, the band has truly developed a national and international reputation for excellence. To that end, the band will be formally changing its name next year to the New Jersey Wind Symphony. This will serve to publicly acknowledge the band's regional reputation and responsibility. At the same time we will always hold our Ridgewood roots close to our hearts. Thank you for your continued steadfast support. -Dr. Christian Wilhjelm ______________________________________________________
Christopher Mantell is a saxophonist and a junior at Randolph High School in Randolph, NJ. He has played the saxophone for seven years, and is in his second season performing in the Ridgewood Concert Band’s saxophone section. He is actively involved in Randolph High School’s music program, performing in the Wind Ensemble, Jazz Ensemble, Pit Orchestra, Marching Band, and Concert Choir. Additionally, he has successfully auditioned for North Jersey Area Band, New Jersey Region I Band, and New Jersey All-
State Band. He has been principal soprano saxophonist with the North Jersey Youth Saxophone Ensemble for four years. Most recently, Christopher won the Hanover Wind Symphony Summer Music Scholarship in March of 2017. He was selected to perform with the 2016 Honors Performance Series at Carnegie Hall Honor Band and The College of New Jersey High School Honors Wind Ensemble in 2015. He was named MAYO Performing Arts Center’s Jazz Musician of the Month in March 2014. Christopher aspires to study Saxophone Performance and Music Education in college and pursue a career in Music Education.
SIDE-BY-SIDE STUDENT MUSICIANS One of the most important missions of the Ridgewood Concert Band is to reach out to the youth in our area and expose them to fine wind ensemble literature and performance. With this in mind, Dr. Chris Wilhjelm suggested that we set up a concert in which deserving high school students would have the opportunity to play side-by-side with the musicians in the RCB and prepare several works that would challenge them musically and involve them in a professional level performance situation. Music teachers from the RCB and area high schools made their recommendations, and we are delighted this evening to host the 9th Annual “Side-by-Side Concert.” The music you will hear during the second half of tonight’s concert is the result of hours of personal practice as well as joint rehearsals with the students and the RCB. It is our hope that the students and you, our audience, will find this annual event both educational and enjoyable. Below are the names of the student participants. We are grateful to them, their teachers, their parents, Dr. Chris Wilhjelm and the Side-by-Side Committee (Jacqueline Sarracco & Jennifer Wise) for making this performance possible. We would also like to give a special "thank you" to The Music Shop in Boonton for donating the student music folders.
First Name Last Name Grade Instrument SchoolMadison Asch 11 Oboe Midland Park HSDaniela Avelar 10 Flute Memorial HS
Dylan Balsamo 11 Tuba Indian Hills HSBrett Berger 11 Trombone Pascack Hills HS
Daniel Chi 9 Clarinet Hackensack HSKenneth Cho 10 Trumpet Ramapo HS
Cody Cline 12 Trombone Butler HSNicholas Colicchio 12 Baritone Saxophone Pequannock Township HS
Joseph D'Andrea 10 Tuba Pequannock Township HSMatthew D'Andrea 12 Trombone Ramapo HSDanielle Dreyer 11 Bass Clarinet West Milford HS
Jordan Dreyer 11 Bassoon West Milford HSLauren Estes 11 Flute Hawthorne HS
Raelene Ford 11 Oboe Indian Hills HSNicole Gallegos 11 Clarinet Passaic Valley HS
Amanda Garcia 11 Flute North Bergen HSArlene Garcia 11 Clarinet North Bergen HSKarina Garcia 10 Trombone North Bergen HSNatalie Gonzalez 11 Flute Memorial HS
Kent Hefele 10 Percussion Morristown HSAndrew Held 10 Euphonium Midland Park HS
Gaia Hutcheson 11 French Horn Pompton Lakes HSAnthony Kalanick 11 Clarinet Morris Knolls HSKathryn Keller 11 Oboe West Milford HSAudrey Leibig 11 Clarinet West Milford HS
Benjamin Mascuch 12 Tuba Ramapo HSGabriela Menjivar 10 French Horn North Bergen HS
Erin Mickey 12 French Horn Kinnelon HSElizabeth Monkemeier 11 Clarinet Madison HS
Kevin Mueller 10 Alto Saxophone Morristown HSMark O'Malley 11 Bassoon Morristown HS
Katherine Park 10 Flute Bergen County AcademiesNelvi Piantino 12 Euphonium North Bergen HSKevin Pinney 12 Alto Saxophone Ramapo HSDylan Quattro 10 Trumpet Morristown HS
Joanna Ramirez 12 Percussion North Bergen HSSamantha Ramsden 11 Flute Kinnelon HS
Isabella Rossi 9 Bass Clarinet Pascack Hills HSAmanda Roth 10 Flute West Milford HSTheresa Santa Lucia 10 Clarinet West Milford HS
Nikki Schuldt 11 Clarinet Hawthorne HSSarah Shahidi 12 Flute/Piccolo Madison HS
Matthew Vera-Corcoran 10 Percussion Pompton Lakes HSChris Winiarski 12 Tuba Ramapo HS
RIDGEWOOD CONCERT BAND BOARD OF TRUSTEES
PRESIDENT: Deloss Schertz
IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT: Mark Zettler VICE PRESIDENT: Lawrence Friedman RECORDING SECRETARY: Annette Lieb
CORRESPONDING SECRETARY: James Mallen TREASURER: Neil Sheehan
MEMBERS AT LARGE: John Butler, Mike DePompeo,
Carolyn Kirby, David Marks, Beth Seavers, John Wagner & Marilyn Wagner
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Printing of this program generously underwritten by Konica Minolta Business Solutions.
________________________________________________________________________
Funding has been made possible in part by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, through grant
funds administered by the Bergen County Department of Parks, Division of Cultural and Historic Affairs. ________________________________________________________________________
The Ridgewood Concert Band would like to thank all of the many volunteers who have made this concert possible.
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The Ridgewood Concert Band would like to give a special “thank you” to David Marks and the
Midland Park School District. The Midland Park High School band room is our weekly rehearsal site.
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For additional RCB information, please visit our website or scan our QR code:
WWW.RIDGEWOODBAND.ORG
Dr. Christian Wilhjelm, Music Director
Annual Generations Concert
PRELUDE CONCERT - 7:30 PM
West Milford High School Wind Ensemble Dr. Brian McLaughlin, Director
FEATURED GUEST SOLOIST
Christopher Mantell, Alto Saxophone 2016-2017 RCB Youth Soloist Competition Winner
THE RIDGEWOOD CONCERT BAND SIDE-BY-SIDE SYMPHONIC BAND
Jacqueline Sarracco & Jennifer Wise, Co-Directors
Friday, May 12, 2017 - 8:00 PM West Side Presbyterian Church, Ridgewood, NJ
Konica Minolta Business Solutions U.S.A. is a Proud
Sponsor of the Ridgewood Concert Band
BENEFACTOR ($3,000 and above) Thomas & Victoria Price
Bank of America/Merrill Lynch Wealth Management
Bergen County Division of Cultural and Historic Affairs
PATRON ($2,000 to $2,999)
Carolyn & Howard Crumb Judy & Roger Widicus
SPONSOR ($1,000 to $1,999)
Michael & Darel-Ann DePompeo In Memory of Gunther Schuller
Daiichi-Sankyo, Inc. PVH Corporation
SUPPORTER ($500 to $999)
Barbara Abney Bolger Lawrence & Donna Friedman
Gregory Fritze In Memory of Aquilina Lim
Dr. Christian Wilhjelm & Jacqueline Sarracco John & Marilyn Wagner
In Memory of Emma Wode Fred & Patricia Yosca
ASSOCIATE ($250 to $499)
Mary & Paul Bergquist Jeff Bittner
Naomi Freshwater Paul Goldberg
Elisa Grim Paul & Carolyn Kirby
Kathy & John Palatucci Deloss Schertz & Rose Kraybill Beth Seavers & Neil Sheehan
AFFILIATE ($100 to $249)
Ginny Baird John Bolger
John & Louise Butler David & Jacalyn Bychek
Suzanne Coletta Paul & Helene Emanuel
Sally Fillmore & David Appel Marie Kane
Michael Kokola Annette & Andy Lieb
James & Cheryl Mallen
Joseph & Deborah Marsicovete Marks Family
Jerry, Mary, Leah, & Brendan Meyer Keith Mogerley Irene Montella Dorothy Neff
Marcella Phelan Jean Roughgarden
Carol Sawitz Francis & Barbara Schott
Richard & Karen Summers Richard & Jessie Ver Hage
Dr. Richard & Katherine Wise Nancy Zweil
Blue Moon Mexican Cafe
FRIEND ($1 to $99) Andre Baruch
Jill Bloom Lloyd & Jane DeVries
Mary Dorian Michelle Dugan
Richard & Gayle Felton Frances Ferraro
Eileen Ginn Katherine Grasso
Richard Hahn Emily James
Emmett & Elizabeth Johnson Janet Johnston
Janis Keown-Blackburn Nathan Kinney
Lorraine Mariella Thelma Peres
Larry & Barbara Roshon Albert Schagen
Rachel Schulman Ann Sirinides
Virginia Sirinides Mr. & Mrs. Harold Sylvester
Janet Vidovich William Vollinger
Arnold & Diane Zettler Mark & Andrea Zettler
Amazon Smile Foundation
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2016-17 CONTRIBUTORS The Ridgewood Concert Band gratefully acknowledges the support of our donors
and subscribers whose generous support makes these programs possible.
Season 34, Concert 5 - May 12, 2017