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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
January
Historic first: U. of I.
Wind Symphony to play at Carnegie Hall
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
1/25/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Chris Brown |
| The
University of Illinois Wind Symphony will make its
debut at Carnegie Hall on Feb. 17. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— The 21st-century incarnation of the ensemble John Philip Sousa
once dubbed “the world’s greatest college band” –
the University of Illinois Wind Symphony – is tuning up for its
debut at Carnegie Hall on Feb. 17.
The concert,
scheduled to take place at 8 p.m. in the Isaac Stern Auditorium, also
will feature performances by U. of I. School
of Music faculty percussionists Ricardo Flores and William Moersch,
and by the Illinois Brass Quintet. Members of the quintet are Illinois
music professors Elliott Chasanov, trombone; Michael Ewald and Ronald
Romm, trumpet; Kazmierz Machala, horn; and Mark Moore, tuba.
The 62 student members of the Wind Symphony will perform under the baton
of James F. Keene, the director of bands and the Brownfield Professor
of Music at the U. of I. at Urbana-Champaign.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Bill Wiegand |
| James
Keene, the director of bands and the Brownfield Professor
of Music at the U. of I., will conduct at the Carnegie
Hall concert. |
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“This is the
first time the band has played at Carnegie Hall, and for many of these
students, it will be a life-changing experience,” Keene said.
“For some, it may be the first time they’ve played on a
major concert stage in New York, and for others, inevitably, it won’t
be the last. Though it will be one of – if not the –
most memorable experiences of their lives. Not a student will ever forget
this.”
The concert will wrap up a weeklong recruitment tour of the New York
metropolitan area, where the band will be performing for high school
and university audiences.
The Carnegie Hall concert represents one of a series of milestones for
the band and for Illinois, which Keene said is generally regarded as
the birthplace of the modern concert band.
“Through the years,” he noted, “U. of I. bands have
created the most extensive band recording series of all time; these
recordings have been sold and broadcast throughout the world.
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Chris Brown |
| The
Carnegie Hall concert represents one of a series of
milestones for the band and for Illinois, which Keene
said is generally regarded as the birthplace of the
modern concert band. |
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“Most recently,
the Wind Symphony was featured on Vatican Radio, and its recordings
have been on public radio as far away as Prague, Tel Aviv, Tokyo, Sidney
and Singapore.”
The Carnegie Hall concert is the inaugural event in the University Honors
concert series organized by Choice Music Events, a nonprofit group based
in Lubbock, Texas. Its president, Jon Locke, said the Wind Symphony
was chosen to inaugurate the series because the selection committee
“could not think of a more qualified group to perform at Carnegie
Hall.”
“Rich tradition, commitment to excellence, and outstanding leadership
are qualities synonomous with the University of Illinois Band,”
he said, noting that it was those characteristics he hopes will become
associated with the series as well.
The Wind Symphony’s Feb. 17 program will include the New York
premieres of works by composers Scott Boerma, David Gillingham and Shafer
Mahoney, along with pieces by John Corigliano, Percy Grainger, Vincent
Persichetti and Frank Ticheli. Another highlight will be the performance
of James Curnow’s “Illini Fantasy,” a symphonic arrangement
a variety of Illinois-themed songs, including “Illinois Loyalty.”
Keene said 2006 is the 100th anniversary of “Illinois Loyalty”
– otherwise known as the university’s school song. The song,
written by Thatcher Guild, a U. of I. English professor, was first performed
by the U. of I. Military Band on March 3, 1906.
Home audiences at the U. of I. will get a sneak preview of the performance
during a concert scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 9 at the university’s
Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets for the local concert
are available on the Web
or by contacting the ticket office, 217-333-6280; 800-527-2849.
Because the New York performance takes place just a few days before
the nationally designated President’s Day holiday, Keene said
that event has been planned as an opportunity to introduce the university’s
new president, B. Joseph White, and new campus chancellor, Richard Herman,
to university friends and alumni in New York.
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Chris Brown |
| The
Carnegie Hall concert is the inaugural event in the
University Honors concert series organized by Choice
Music Events, a nonprofit group based in Lubbock,
Texas. Its president, Jon Locke, said the Wind Symphony
was chosen to inaugurate the series because the selection
committee “could not think of a more qualified
group to perform at Carnegie Hall.” |
|
|
White and Herman
will attend the concert and also will be the featured guests at a reception
the following day sponsored by the U. of I. Alumni Association and the
Illinois Alumni Club of Greater New York. The reception, hosted by Illinois
alumnus and Fox Television president Dennis Swanson, will be held from
4 to 6:30 p.m. on Feb. 18 at Club 101, located at the corner of Park
Avenue and 40th Street in Manhattan. The reception is free and open
to the public, but reservations are recommended. Reservations will be
accepted through Feb. 9 by calling 800-355-2586 or sending e-mail to
alumni@uillinois.edu.
Tickets for the concert may be purchased through the Carnegie Hall box
office at 212-247-7800. For information about purchasing group ticket
blocks (for groups of 30 or more), contact Peter Griffin, U. of I. assistant
director of bands, at 217-333-3028.
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