I tacet on the horn solo; Hilary’s piece went well in the Tour rehearsals, so I was looking forward to the first performance. The lack of a backstage area, though, meant we hovered in an adjacent hallway, unable to hear much through the doors. Back on stage for the Dello Joio Variants on a Mediaeval Tune, I realized pitch would be interesting every C program at this point in the concert – I have to pull out quite a bit for the Shostakovich,
Semper Fi went well – two Band newbies in the brass section, and our rehearsal at home had an unexpected stinger. No stingers tonight!
The second half started with Liberty Fanfare, on of the many John Williams’ tunes we performed this summer. I belatedly realized my earplugs were in the dressing room – normally a big mistake for this piece. Fortunately, the lack of risers meant the trumpets were blowing into the sound shields in front of them instead of the back of my head.
The next piece is one of those pieces for which I have mixed emotions; the suite from The Perfect Fool, by Holst.
I tacet for the vocal solo, and I am hoping to hear it better at the next performance. I love listening to Sara; she has a great repertoire for this tour.
The best part about tonight’s concert was the enthusiastic fellow in the audience. Immediately following the final note of Festive Overture, he jumped to his feet, yelling out “Oh, Yeah!!” before the rest of the audience even began to applaud. Every piece he enjoyed was followed by an enthusiastic “Oh, Yeah!” all the way to the end of the concert.
2 comments:
Is that "Oh Yeah" like the Kool-Aid man would say it?
Love,
Jennie and Julia
Oh, yeah.
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