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Sisters High School Band wows judges The Sisters High
School Concert Band took top honors at the OSAA State Music Championships
on Tuesday, May 13.
Each year the band has been
one of only 12 from 3A schools to qualify for the event, making its place
on these programs an honor and mark of achievement all by itself.
This is Sisters' fourth consecutive
trip to the championships and this time the 63 members of the band took
their achievement to its highest level.
"Each year a different panel
of judges is brought in for the state festival," said music director Jody
Henderson. An objective scoring process is used in judging the bands,
but the end results really depend on the values the judges have about
specific qualities of music making.
"This was just our year,"
Henderson said. "The judging panel was elated with the strengths the Sisters
bands have always shown: their ability to play with a beautiful, refined
sound and the mastery they have shown in playing with extreme expression."
All three judges awarded the
Sisters ensemble no less than 27 out of 30 points in each of three major
categories of their evaluation: quality of sound, technique and musicality.
The group had difficulty in the sight-reading category, finishing with
the median score.
But in the overall rankings
based on a 360-point scale, Sisters earned the championship eight total
points ahead of second place and 22 points ahead of third place.
"When they announced first
place -- Sisters -- I was surprised and I jumped out of my seat," said
senior alto saxophone player Ben Boro.
"I felt that we had played
well, but I didn't know we had played well enough to get first."
Boro credited hard work on
"musicality" for putting the band in the position to win.
Musicality is a hard-to-define
subjective quality that Boro described as the "feel" of the music. It
requires a lot more than hitting the right notes to make a piece come
alive.
The band has to play together
dynamically, listening to each other and playing with meaning and feeling.
"Everyone has to be in on
it, not just one person working on it," Boro said.
That willingness to work together
is a hallmark of the band.
"All the students have remained
dedicated to the success of the band," Henderson said. "I feel they have
earned something they really deserve."
The band made a first trip
to the State Festival in 1999, placing third in its debut appearance.
This year, 14 of the freshmen who were a part of the 1999 band are senior
members of the 2003 Champion Band.
To Henderson, this was particularly
good timing to win the title.
"I remember meeting some of
the current seniors at the end of their fifth grade school year when I
visited Sisters for a job interview," Henderson said.
"I always have a difficult
time saying good-bye to the senior students in the band," the music director
noted. "The honor we've shared this year will make this even more sentimental."
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