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2002 |
Jazz
Band ties for second at big annual festival in Reno
The Sisters High School Varsity
Jazz Band made a second place finish in its division at a major festival
in Reno last month.
The Sisters band was one of
about 330 bands to perform in the Reno International Jazz Festival the
third weekend in April. The Reno festival is the largest festival of its
kind in the Western United States.
The Sisters jazz band tied
for second place with Brookings out of the 18 bands in its division. The
bands were judged on the same criteria used at the district competition
(see story, page 3).
The jazz band scored ratings
of 83, 87, and 88 from the three judges. Scores were posted from all categories
at the end of the festival, which showed that only about 40 bands at the
entire festival received cumulative scores as high as the Sisters band,
which included all categories of high schools and colleges.
During performances clinicians
and adjudicators note individual talent within each band.
According to band director
Henderson, "each adjudicator and clinician is a professional jazz musician
or professional band leader, or, in most cases, both. This results in
a festival staff of 55 top notch jazz professionals, all at one educational
event."
They seemed to think highly
of Sisters' players. Generally, two to three members of each band receives
outstanding recognition awards.
However, seven individuals
from the Sisters band were awarded outstanding musician awards: Ryan Reed,
Justin Little, Shane Connor, Robin Hoagland, Mike Kurtz, Ben Scharf and
Travis Napier.
"The coolest thing was the
band's review with the judges after their performance," said parent chaperone,
Cindy Glick.
"He told the band they were
one of the best they had heard all day. His final words were 'dream big'
and the kids' eyes just lit up and huge smiles of confidence spread across
their faces."
The event is also known for
the 40 plus college and university bands that attend.
The college performance venue
at the festival is an intentional first stop for the Sisters students.
"The most important element
of great musicianship in playing jazz is listening," Henderson said. "Hearing
great bands makes you play better, so it is an obvious good thing to do
before a performance. Listening to live jazz is such a reactive and interactive
activity, and listening to it together as an entire band is even better."
In addition to the college
band divisions there are eight divisions of high school classifications
and a middle school classification. Sisters participated as part of the
E division which represents the smallest high schools.
Junior Ben Scharf was thrilled
with the Reno experience.
"The Reno trip was so cool,"
he said. "People from all over the country got together to celebrate jazz
music.
"Our band learned a lot and
had fun in the process. The whole experience made us a better band."
This was Senior Chris Mintiens'
second trip to the Reno festival and he noticed a definite difference
in the band's abilities compared to the previous year.
"We have improved so much,"
he said. "This year we earned rankings a lot of bands can only wish for.
"Every year I'm blown away
by the talents of everyone there, from the youngest middle school student,
to the oldest college student," Mintiens said.
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