THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MUSIC Presents
THE UNIVERSITY WIND ENSEMBLE David Plack, Director Drew Hardy-Moore and Michael Tignor, Graduate Associate Conductors
Tuesday, November 8, 2022 Seven-thirty in the Evening Ruby Diamond Concert Hall
ng i t r o p p u S e Arts th
850-894-8700
www.beethovenandcompany.com 719 North Calhoun Street, Suite E Tallahassee, Florida 32303
Tom Buchanan, owner
PROGRAM Cuban Overture
George Gershwin (1898–1937) arr. Mark Rogers
Shaker Suite (For Brass Quintet and Concert Band) Rayburn Wright (1922–1990) arr. Mark Davis Scatterday Matthew Strickland and Bob Kerr, trumpet Luis Oquendo, horn; Christian Estades, trombone; Matthew Morejon, tuba Festival Variations
Claude T. Smith (1932–1987)
Overture to “The School for Scandal” Drew Hardy-Moore, graduate associate conductor
Samuel Barber (1910–1981) tr. Frank Hudson
Hymn to A Blue Hour
Michael Tignor, graduate associate conductor
Eternal Memoir (Saga of the Lucky Dragon)
John Mackey (b. 1973)
Hirokazu Fukushima (b. 1971)
Please refrain from talking, entering, or exiting while performers are playing. Food and drink are prohibited in all concert halls. Please turn off cell phones and all other electronic devices. Please refrain from putting feet on seats and seat backs. Children who become disruptive should be taken out of the performance hall so they do not disturb the musicians and other audience members. Health Reminder: The Florida Board of Governors and Florida State University expect masks to be worn by all individuals in all FSU facilities. Thank you for your cooperation.
ABOUT THE DIRECTOR David Plack was appointed to the wind band conducting and music education faculty at Florida State University in 2004 as the Director of Athletic Bands. His responsibilities include the “world renowned” Marching Chiefs and FSU’s athletic pep band program, Seminole Sound, which primarily supports the men’s basketball program, the women’s basketball and volleyball programs, and provides numerous other performances in support of FSU athletics and the University at large. Other responsibilities include supervision of music education intern teachers, teaching the Marching Band Techniques course, and conducting the University Symphonic Band. Plack was recently nominated for the prestigious University Teaching Award for his contributions and work with undergraduate students at FSU. Plack graduated from Shaw High School in Columbus, Georgia where his high school band director, Timothy Zabel, was a significant influence on his desire to become a music educator. He later graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree, a Master of Music Education degree, and a Doctor of Philosophy in Music Education degree from the Florida State University College of Music, where he studied with Richard Clary, Patrick Dunnigan, Clifford Madsen, Bentley Shellahamer, and his primary conducting teacher and mentor, James Croft. Prior to his collegiate teaching, Plack taught seven years at Vero Beach High School alongside James Sammons. He holds active memberships in the National Association for Music Education, the College Band Directors National Association, the Florida Music Educators Association, and the Florida Bandmasters Association. Plack is also a member of Pi Kappa Lambda, Phi Mu Alpha, and holds honorary memberships in both Tau Beta Sigma and Kappa Kappa Psi, serving as the faculty sponsor for both organizations at FSU. He currently serves as the President of the Atlantic Coast Conference Band Directors Association. Plack is an active drill designer and arranger having provided numerous creative projects for the Marching Chiefs and other athletic band endeavors. He is also an active guest clinician, conductor, and adjudicator. NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Gershwin: Cuban Overture George Gershwin (September 26, 1898 - July 11, 1937), born Jacob Gershowitz, lived a tragically short life, but in that time he had a wildly successful career writing music for Broadway musicals, films, and orchestra. His pieces, such as Rhapsody in Blue and An American in Paris helped create a uniquely American sounding musical genre that combined elements from classical and jazz music.
During the summer of 1932, while on a trip to Cuba, Gershwin developed a fascination for Cuban music and the percussion instruments that gave it its distinctive sound: maracas, bongos, claves, and the guiro. These instruments became the inspiration for his third orchestral work entitled Rumba, later changed to Cuban Overture. The piece premiered on August 16, 1932, in Lewisohn Stadium, in New York City. The premiere was a hit with 17,845 tickets sold, and 5,000 people at the closed gate trying desperately to get in. Gershwin noted this about the evening, “the most exciting night I have ever had, first, because the Philharmonic Orchestra played an entire program of my music, and second, because the all-time record for the Stadium concerts was broken.” Wright: Shaker Suite Rayburn Wright was an American trombonist, composer, conductor, and professor of jazz studies at the Eastman School of Music, and is responsible for initiating the university’s famous jazz program. He had a successful career composing for both film and television and was nominated twice for Emmy awards. He also co-authored a popular book on film scoring, On the Track: A Guide to Contemporary Film Scoring. His piece, Shaker Suite, uses several Shaker melodies including the familiar “Simple Gifts,” along with “The Happy Journey” and “I’ve Set My Face for Zion’s Kingdom,” and features a brass quintet comprised of members from the FSU Wind Ensemble. Smith: Festival Variations Claude T. Smith wrote over 180 works for band, orchestra, choir, small ensembles, and soloists. He began his musical career as a trumpet player, but upon being drafted into the Army during the Korean Conflict, auditioned and won a position in the 371st Army Band on French Horn. Smith’s contributions to the music profession are noted by his many commissions, including works for many of the Armed Services’ Bands as well as his composition Flight being adapted as the official march of the National Air and Space Music of the Smithsonian Institute. Festival Variations was commissioned by the United States Air Force Band and premiered at the 75th anniversary of the Music Educators National Conference (now NAfME). At the premiere, the conductor, Colonel Arnald Gabriel said that the piece was filled with “brilliant technical passages coupled with glorious romanticism,” and would “rank as one of the monumental compositions of the 21st Century.” Despite its difficulty, this piece is performed often amongst the top wind band ensembles. Barber: Overture to “The School for Scandal” Samuel Barber was born on March 9, 1910, in West Chester, Pennsylvania to a family full of professional musicians. His musical talents began to show at a young age, studying piano and composition at the age of seven. As a young teenager, Barber entered the Young Artist Program at Curtis Institute of Music where he spent the next decade studying composition,
piano, and voice. During his final year at Curtis, Barber premiered his first piece for full orchestra, Overture to “The School for Scandal.” The School for Scandal by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, is a satirical comedy that premiered May 8, 1777. The main characters, Lady Sneerwell and her henchman Snake, are gossipers who cause chaos with their many schemes. Samuel Barber composed his overture not as a prelude to the play but as “a musical reflection of the play’s spirit.” The overture opens with a sneering fanfare followed by a nefarioussounding melody that scurries along in the clarinet section. Barber contrasts the opening with a second theme, a sentimental melody introduced by the oboe. This contrast of themes happens frequently throughout the piece and helps create a sense of drama and suspense, reflective of the story. The transitional music in-between themes is quite challenging, keeping both the audience and performers on their toes. Mackey: Hymn to A Blue Hour John Mackey is one of the most well-regarded composers of the 21st century. Despite his nontraditional background in music, he holds degrees from Julliard and the Cleveland Institute of Music. Mackey is known for his unique sonorities and interesting use of constantly changing meters. His works are some of the most commonly played pieces in the wind band arena. Hymn to a Blue Hour is one of Mackey’s earliest pieces for Wind Band. It represents the idea of sacred tones and the color blue, which has many ties with American music. The piece is built upon three recurring motives: a series of descending thirds, a stepwise descent, and finally an upwards ascent that represents hopeful optimism. The piece, though not its intent, shares many similarities to Mackey’s earlier piece for Wind Band, Aurora Awakes. Fukushima: Eternal Memoir (Saga of the Lucky Dragon) Hirozaku Fukushima is an active Japanese composer and arranger in the wind band and orchestra medium. He is the winner of the 1999 Asahi Composition Prize for his work, Chant of Dosozin and the 2001 Japanese Bandmasters Association Shitaya Prize for his composition Ryujo no Mai. Eternal Memoir (Saga of the Lucky Dragon) was inspired by American artist Ben Shahn’s painting series called the Lucky Dragon. This painting series is dedicated to the Japanese fishing boat, Daigo Fukuryu Maru (Lucky Dragon V), that was contaminated by the nuclear fallout from the United States’ Castle Bravo hydrogen bomb test in the South Pacific on March 1, 1954. Fukushima writes, “I composed this work to promote remembrance of the Fukurya Maru’s truth. The English title is derived from the Japanese subtitle, Daigo Fukuryu Maru no Kioku (Memoir of the Lucky Dragon V).” The piece begins with the tragedy of the event followed by the second half which represents a dragon, the boat’s spirit, “breathing life to become the Lucky Dragon, rising to Heaven.”
University Wind Ensemble Personnel David Plack, Director Drew Hardy-Moore and Michael Tignor, Graduate Associate Conductors Piccolo Kylie Boschen
Bass Clarinet Carly Davis
Flute Adeline Belova Allison Acevedo Cameron McGill Isabelle Rodriguez
Contrabass Clarinet Mark Stevens Soprano Saxophone Jason Shimer
Bass Trombone Tristan Goodrich
Oboe Veronica Jacob Sarah Ward Alex Rushe
Alto Saxophone Jason Shimer Evan Blitzer Drew Hardy-Moore
Euphonium Luke Heinrich Adam Zierden
English Horn Alex Rushe
Tenor Saxophone Ethan Horn
Bassoon Timothy Schwindt Zach Martin Ryan Kegg
Baritone Saxophone Alex Krynski
Contrabassoon Ryan Kegg E-Flat Clarinet Jalen Smalls B-Flat Clarinet Jariel Santiago Sadie Murray Reymon Contrera Leah Price Jalen Smalls Morgan Magnoni Jesse Rigsby Mark Stevens
Trumpet Matthew Strickland Bob Kerr Easton Barham CarlosManuel Aceves Thum Rangsiyawaranon Thana Rangsiyawaranon Israel Martinez Horn Luis Oquendo Alex Garcia Patrick Creegan Jordan Perkins AC Caruthers
Trombone Christian Estades Taylor Haworth Connor McDonald
Tuba Matthew Morejon Levi Vickers Sebastian Bravo String Bass Lucas Kornegay Harp Isabelle Scott Piano Oliver Schoonover Percussion Jordan Brown William Howald Jake Fenoff Will Vasquez Program Manager Chelsea Blomberg
Coming Soon UNIVERSITY WIND ORCHESTRA featuring special guests
Stacy Garropp, composer David Thornton, conductor Geoffrey Deibel, saxophone Justin Benavidez, tuba Wednesday, November 16, 2022 7:30 PM | Ruby Diamond Concert Hall Tickets and information at tickets.music.fsu.edu
2022-23 Concert Season
www.theartistseries.org 850-445-1616 Live Concert, 4 PM Opperman Hall Livestream & Video available
September 18, Bak & Chang, viola/piano
October 23, Dominic Cheli, piano
January 22, Sinta Quartet, saxophone
February 17, Jasper String Quartet, Valentine Fundraiser, 7 PM St. Peter’s Anglican Cathedral
March 5, Coro Vocati, vocal ensemble
May 7, Cuarteto Latinoamericano, string quartet
Photo: Claire timm PhotograPhy
Michael Hanawalt, Artistic Director
2022-2023 Concert Season – Celebrating 35 Years of Song! –
FA LL
U N I T Y 16
S PR I N G
Sunday, November 20 4:00 PM
Sunday, January 29 4:00 PM
Sunday, April 30 4:00 PM
“Repair The Future”
Carmina Burana, Carl Orff
Coronation Mass in C major, W.A. Mozart *Tickets: tcchorus.org or call 850-597-0603
Weather, Rollo Dilworth, Poem by Claudia Rankine Joined by The Florida A&M University Concert Choir
All performances in Ruby Diamond Concert Hall, The Florida State University
Florida State University
COLLEGE OF MUSIC special thanks to
Les and Ruth Akers Sole Sponsors of the UMA Concert Series
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Joyce Andrews Mary S. Bert Marcia and Carl Bjerregaard Virginia W. and John L. Bryant Joan and Kip Carpenter Stacey Christian Malcolm Craig Rochelle Davis William H. Davis Jeannie Head Dixon Judith Flanigan John S. and Linda H. Fleming L. Kathryn Funchess Ruth Godfrey-Sigler Bryan and Nancy Goff Harvey and Judy Goldman Dianne Gregory Julie Griffith Carole Hayes Jerry and Bobbi Hill Madeleine Hirsiger-Carr Jane A. Hudson Richard and Linda Hyson Judith H. Jolly Carolyn Jordan Dean Kindley
Associate Jayme Agee Robert M. Bukovic David and Mary Coburn Carla Connors and Timothy Hoekman Martha Cunningham Dr. Aleksandra and Dr. Geoffrey Deibel Pamala J. Doffek John and Jodi Drew The Fennema Family Gene and Deborah Glotzbach Laura Gayle Green Miriam Gurniak Donna H. Heald
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*University Musical Associates Executive Committee
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