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Wind Symphony 2016 Southwest tour group photo

Wind Symphony Southwest Tour: on the road with Emily Kerski, clarinet

The CSU Wind Symphony has been rolling through the southwest this week on our 2016 tour of Colorado and New Mexico! It’s been a terrific opportunity for us to share some amazing repertoire with a wider audience and show off the accomplishments and growth of the band program and CSU school of music as a whole.

We have been preparing this epic program of music since the end of Feb., and it’s quite a collection: newly composed works alongside classics for band, and almost every genre of wind music featured as well. Of particular joy has been the chance to work with our two faculty soloists, Dr. John McGuire (horn) and Dr. Wesley Ferreira (clarinet) on their solo concerti. We also seized the opportunity to showcase Big Four on the River, a piece written by our composition professor Dr. David, and dedicated to our fantastic director of bands, Dr. Phillips. The incredible variety of our program is invigorating for both the players and the audience. The concert concludes with the exuberant Bernstein Divertimento, which finishes with a breathless, life-affirming march!

Wind Symphony Clarinets in concertThe tour kicked off on Tuesday night with our send-off concert on home turf at CSU. This included our new graduate conducting student Georgianna Oswald making her debut with the Wind Symphony, leading us through three lively pieces by Percy Grainger. The next morning, we hit the road! I was excited we had the chance to play this concert three more times thanks to the tour – we work incredibly hard preparing a concert program, and it’s sometimes hard to see it all end after one one performance, so to play it a few more times and enjoy the pieces that much more was a blast.

And so, with our bus and a myriad of percussion instruments carefully packed into two other vehicles, we wound through spectacular Colorado mountains, across sparse shrub land in the southwest corner of the state, and over fascinating New Mexico rock formations on our way to the three tour destinations: Grand Junction (Colo.), Las Lunas (N.M.), and Monument (Colo.)!

The concerts were very well-received in each host high school by an enthusiastic audience of local students and community members. Each host band director conducted us on one of our pieces, Barber’s Commando March, and it was fun to talk with many of the students after our performances.

Being a part of this particular clarinet section has been really special. It’s a talented and close-knit group with a huge range, from freshmen to second year grad students. Playing together all semester has allowed us to refine and unify our sound.

Wind Symphony is a relatively small ensemble (we all fit on one bus!), and I love the focus and precision this allows us to have. I also love learning from our fearless leader, Dr. Phillips. Her vision and relentless drive pushes us to be our very best and her presence as a conductor leads to truly memorable and powerful music-making.

As a senior, embarking on this tour has been the perfect way to end my time in the CSU music program, celebrating the great music and great people that have been part of my life in the past four years.

~ submitted by Emily G. Kerski
www.emilykerski.com


Wind Symphony 2016 Southwest Tour performance photo

Wind Symphony on Southwest Tour and Headed to Grand Junction

John McGuire practices on the bus ride to Grand Junction.

John McGuire practices on the bus ride to Grand Junction.

After a rousing concert at the University Center for the Arts on Tuesday, the Wind Symphony left early Wednesday morning on a bus bound for the Western Slope. Ahead lies concerts in Grand Junction, Albuquerque, N.M., and Monument, Colo. This first leg of the trip is incredibly scenic going over the Rockies. It’s many of our players’ first time to the Western Slope and there have been countless pictures taken from the bus windows. But even with all the wonderful views, many of our brass players have felt the need to get some practice time in – unconventional, but effective!

This first night away from Fort Collins brought us to Grand Junction High School where Mr. Isaak Lavatie hosted us in their acoustically terrific auditorium! While we all love performing in the beautiful Griffin Concert Hall at CSU, getting out and experiencing a variety of high quality acoustical settings is so important for our students, especially when it also allows us to come to an area that hasn’t heard our music for a good many years.

CSU Composition Professor James David’s piece, Big Four on the River (2014), was a hit, being enthusiastically received, as was Grainger’s English Waltz conducted by Richard Frey. The piece that I am soloing on, The Glass Bead Game by James Beckel, is such a high energy romp!

John McGuire and Wesley Ferreira following the Wind Symphony concert in Grand Junction

John McGuire and Wesley Ferreira following the Wind Symphony concert in Grand Junction

Every performance can be such a unique and exciting experience (even different performances of the same piece!) that it’s always a blast to stand onstage and see what magic happens on any particular night. This night was no disappointment! I haven’t talked about this with Professors Wesley Ferreira, Richard Frey, or Rebecca Phillips, but I suspect they are of like mind.

After ending our long day with a stellar performance, we headed off to the hotel to catch a few precious hours of shut eye before leaving Grand Junction just before sunrise for Albuquerque. Let’s see what magic we can make happen tomorrow!

Dr. John McGuire
Assistant Professor of Horn
Colorado State University