northshore concert band-winter concert
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1Northshore Concert Band
WINTER PROGRAM
Sunday, February 13, 20113:00 P.M.
Pick-Staiger Concert Hall
Mallory Thompson conductorLifetime of Music students
PROGRAM
Marche Joyeuse ..............................................................Emmanuel Chabrier (1841 – 1894) (arr. F. Junkin)
Lincolnshire Posy ...................................................................... Percy Grainger (1882 – 1961) I. Lisbon II. Horkstow Grange III. Rufford Park Poachers IV. The Brisk Young Sailor V. Lord Melbourne VI. The Lost Lady Found
INTERMISSION
7 Petites Pièces pour 8 Instruments..................................Francis Chagrin (1905 – 1972) 1. Promenade 2. Etude 3. Reverie 4. En Bateau 5. Nostalgie 6. Petite Valse 7. Parade des soldats de bois
NCB WITH LIFETIME OF MUSIC STUDENTS
English Dances ........................................................................Malcolm Arnold (1921 – 2006) 1. Andantino (arr. M. Johnstone) 2. Vivace 3. Mesto 4. Allegro risoluto
El Capitan .............................................................................. John Philip Sousa (1854 – 1932) (arr. Brion/Schissel)
The use of cameras and recording devices during the performance is prohibited. Please turn off all cell phones and pagers. Large print programs are
available on request. Please ask an usher.
This program is made possible in part by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency.
2 Northshore Concert Band
WELCOME
Dear Audience Member:
Welcome to our annual Lifetime of Music concert!
Artistic Director Mallory Thompson and the Northshore Concert Band share the stage today with over 50 of the finest high school musicians in the Chicagoland area. This is more than twice the number of students who participated in our first Lifetime of Music initiative in 2003. This program, along with our annual Festival of Music here at Northwestern University, represents our commitment to music edu-cation. In addition, the Northshore Concert Band will present a concert for Lincoln Way West High School students next month and in April the band will join Marian Catholic High School students in a concert at Governors State University.
Today we are hosting our fifth annual silent auction. Proceeds from this auction will go directly to support our Lifetime of Music initiatives. There are number of great items on which to bid. We ask that you consider supporting the band, not only through today’s auction, but also by joining The Paynter Society, buying a CD, or bringing family and friends to our next performance.
We also ask that you patronize those businesses advertising in our program book. Income from the ads helps to pay our program printing costs which keep our ticket prices affordable and allows us to share our music with you in this fine performance hall.
Thank you for attending today’s concert. We hope that you enjoy the music and look forward to seeing you for our next series concert on April ere in Pick-Staiger.
Laura Stibich
Northshore Concert Band Board Chair
3Northshore Concert Band
CONDUCTOR
Mallory Thompson Conductor/Artistic Director of the Northshore Concert Band
Dr. Mallory Thompson is director of bands, professor of music, and coordinator of the conducting program at Northwestern University. In 2003 she was named a Charles Deering McCor-mick Professor of Teaching Excellence. As the third person in the university’s history to hold the director of bands position, she
conducts the Symphonic Wind Ensemble, teaches undergraduate and gradu-ate conducting, and administers all aspects of the band program. Prior to this appointment, Thompson held similar positions at the University of Cincinnati Col-lege-Conservatory of Music, University of South Florida, Oberlin Conservatory, and Bucknell University. She has released recordings with the University of Cincinnati Wind Symphony and the Northwestern University Symphonic Wind Ensemble.
Thompson received a bachelor of music education degree and master of music degree in conducting from Northwestern University, where she studied conduct-ing with John P. Paynter and trumpet with Vincent Cichowicz. She received a doc-tor of musical arts degree in conducting from the Eastman School of Music, where she studied with Donald Hunsberger. Thompson maintains an active schedule as guest conductor, clinician, and guest lecturer throughout the United States and Canada. She has appeared as a conductor or clinician at College Band Directors National Association regional and national conventions, the Midwest Clinic, the In-terlochen Arts Academy, and the Aspen Music Festival, and she has conducted the United States Army Field Band, the United States Air Force Band, the Dallas Wind Symphony, the Symphony Silicon Valley, and the United States Navy Band. Her professional affiliations include Pi Kappa Lambda, the Music Educators National Conference, the College Band Directors Association, and the American Bandmas-ters Association.
Thompson first conducted the Northshore Concert Band in April 1999 and was named principal guest conductor the same season. She conducted one subscrip-tion concert each year and also appeared with the band at the 2001 Midwest Clinic. In 2003, Thompson took on the expanded role of Artistic Director. The 2005–2006 season marked her first year as sole musical and artistic leader of the Northshore Concert Band, conducting the ensemble in all four subscription concerts.
ASSISTANT CONDUCTOR
Daniel J. Farris
Dan Farris is Director of Athletic Bands and Conductor of the “Wildcat” Marching Band and Concert Band at Northwestern University. He teaches courses in conducting and marching band techniques, and was former Assistant Director of Bands and Marching Band Director at Illinois State University and University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Farris also is a former director
and consultant, Walt Disney World Collegiate All-Star Band, and a member of the College Band Director National Association, National Band Association, and Inter-national Association of Jazz Educators.
4 Northshore Concert Band
L I FETIME OF MUSIC H IGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
The NCB extends sincere thanks to our talented Lifetime of Music students for participating in today’s concert. We also wish to thank the students’ band directors, private music teachers, and parents/guardians for their dedication and commitment!
Flute Jason Arnold, Orland Hills, Victor J. Andrew High School
Caitlin Carter, Roselle, Lake Park High SchoolJessica Johnson, Carol Stream, West Suburban Home School Band
Caitlyn Marsh, Long Grove, Adlai E. Stevenson High SchoolMegan Marshalla, Lake Zurich, Lake Zurich High School
Jessica Shatkin, Evanston, Evanston Township High SchoolMargaret Tazioli, Mundelein, Mundelein High School
Abby Turay, New Lenox, Lincoln-Way West High SchoolRosa Yoon, Buffalo Grove, Adlai E. Stevenson High School
Oboe/English Horn Henry Lin, Buffalo Grove, Adlai E. Stevenson High School
Alex Molica, North Aurora, West Suburban Home School BandJessica Omark, Palatine, Fremd High School
Jacob Zimmer, Schaumburg, Schaumburg High School
Bassoon Laura Birkhold, Wilmette, New Trier High School
Beth Ann Nance, Palos Park, Almos Alonzo Stagg High School
Give us a listen.We’ll blow your mind.
The trumpet section www.northshoreband.org
MM
S
Montgomery Music Services
Dennis Montgomery
422 East Oakwood Drive Barrington, IL 60010-1459
Phone: (847) 526-0125
Cell: (847) 224-2192 Fax: (847) 487-7167
5Northshore Concert Band
L I FETIME OF MUSIC H IGH SCHOOL STUDENTS (c o n t.)
Clarinet Ethan Borre, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest High School
Stephanie Chin, Mundelein, Mundelein High School Mark Franklin, Wheaton, West Suburban Home School Band
Linnea Garcia, Evanston, Evanston Township High School Alex Kroger, Lake Forest, Lake Forest High School
Brittany Neely, Lansing, Thornton Fractional South High School Audrey Pfauth, Wheaton, West Suburban Home School Band
Bass Clarinet Will Gregg, Lake Forest, Lake Forest High School
Alto SaxophoneKiwon Lee, Buffalo Grove, Adlai E. Stevenson High School
Richard Tang, Schaumburg, Schaumburg High SchoolZach Tuazon, Tinley Park, Victor J. Andrew High School
Baritone Saxophone Steve Czerniak, Lansing, Thornton Fractional South High School
Trumpet Ben Clemons, Tinley Park, Victor J. Andrew High School
Julia Huldin, Barrington, Barrington High SchoolAdam Moy, Mundelein, Mundelein High School
Alex Seizovio, Barrington, Barrington High School
French Horn Joseph Aquino, Lake Forest, Lake Forest High SchoolJonathon Catlin, Barrington, Barrington High School
Patrick Dunaj, Orland Hills, Victor J. Andrew High School Molly Hunt, Wilmette, New Trier High School
Matthew Swartwout, Evanston, Evanston Township High School Kaethe Wright Kaufman, Evanston, Evanston Township High School
Trombone Edward Brennan, New Lenox, Lincoln-Way West High School
Nicholas Foszcz, Barrington, Barrington High School Wesley Frye, Tinley Park, Victor J. Andrew High SchoolJordan Harvey, Joliet, Lincoln-Way West High School
Marcus Wallace, North Chicago, North Chicago Community High School
Euphonium Jessie Sove, Lombard, Willowbrook High School
Tuba Gilbert Sanchez, River Grove, East Leyden High School
Percussion Jonah Angulo-Hurtig, Evanston, Evanston Township High School
Rob Madsen, Kildeer, Lake Zurich High School
String Bass Zach Carter, Mundelein, Mundelein High School
Izzy Rubin, Wilmette, New Trier High School
6 Northshore Concert Band
ABOUT US
The Northshore Concert Band (NCB) is a 110-member adult symphonic band with membership drawn from the greater Chicago metropolitan area. Founded in 1956 by the late John P. Paynter, the ensemble has become internationally known and respected for its musical excellence, membership continuity, and service to music education. Dr. Mallory Thompson, director of bands and professor of con-ducting at Northwestern University, is NCB’s artistic director. Thompson is in great demand as a guest conductor and clinician throughout the United States and is widely regarded as one of the leading wind conductors in the nation.
NCB performs 10 to12 concerts a year in the Chicago metropolitan area, reaching over 20,000 people. These include a four-concert series at Northwestern Univer-sity’s Pick-Staiger Concert Hall, educational outreach programs at area schools, many summer concerts at the invitation of various communities and venues, and professional band festivals and conferences. Over the years, the group has worked with many renowned soloists and conductors, including Doc Severinsen, Wynton Marsalis, Frederick Fennell, Leroy Anderson, and dozens of musicians from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, including Christopher Martin, John Bruce Yeh, Dale Clevenger, Adolph Herseth, and Mathieu Dufour. NCB has produced eight CDs and receives playtime on Chicago’s classical music station, WFMT, among others. The band has also toured in Canada and Europe and extensively throughout the United States.
NCB’s mission is deeply rooted in the concept of “community” and in encour-aging involvement in music for people at all stages of life. NCB strives to be a leader in performance, educational outreach, recorded works, and new com-missions, while reaffirming the heritage of bands in America. Several programs in NCB’s Lifetime of Music initiative help further the band’s educational mis-sion. NCB co-sponsors the Northshore Concert Band/Northwestern University Festival, which annually provides 4,000 Chicago area young musicians the opportunity to perform solos and ensembles, with NCB members serving as judges and clinicians. The band also awards its John P. Paynter Scholarship to an outstanding young musician and invites dozens of talented high school students to perform with the band at the Winter Concert to help encourage young people to pursue their musical endeavors after graduation.
The ensemble’s musicians come from throughout the Chicago area, northern Indiana, and southern Wisconsin, and represent many professional backgrounds. Approximately half are professional music educators; the rest have a diverse set of occupations including business executives, attorneys, and physicians. Musicians range in age from 20 to 85, many with a tenure of two decades or more with the ensemble. All of the musicians are selected by audition and are strongly commit-ted to volunteering their time and talents to the group.
NCB has sponsored three adult band conferences and has published a guide to organizing community bands. The guide has been used by hundreds of commu-nity bands over the past 20 years. These community band resources are available for download on our website, www.northshoreband.org
THE JOHN P. PAYNTER FOUNDATION
An Illinois not-for-profit corporation
OUR AIM:
To mirror the musical passions which made up his life
by awarding scholarships and grants to promising musicians and programs
To encourage the development of
new compositions for concert band
To promote and support
the community band movement
For further information, please contact: The John P. Paynter Foundation
Marietta Paynter president 1437 Hollywood Ave., Glenview, IL 60025
847-724-6082
8 Northshore Concert Band
PROGR A M NOTES
Marche Joyeuse — Emmanuel Chabrier (1841-1894) (arr. by Fred Junkin)Born in the Auvergne, Emmanuel Chabrier was the son and grandson of lawyers. Even though he showed musical talent at an early age, his family insisted on a career in law. This training led to his appointment in 1863 as a clerk in the Ministry of the Interior where he worked for the next 17 years. During this time, however, he began to compose, indulged his passion for French art, developed a reputation as a boulevardier on the Paris scene, hobnobbing with artists, poets, and musicians, and was recognized for his unique piano playing. A friend described, “The sight of Chabrier, in a drawing-room full of elegant women, advancing towards the fragile instrument and then playing in a blaze of broken strings, hammers reduced to pulp and splintered keys, was a spectacle of truly epic grandeur.” However, in 1879, after hearing Tristan und Isolde, “...He was the victim of such strong emotion that in spite of his natural gaiety, he left us after the performance to shut himself up in his room. At that time, he was not intending to commit himself entirely to music; Tristan showed him where his vocation lay.” Shortly afterwards, Chabrier left the Ministry to devote himself exclusively to music. Four years later, España was performed for the first time; and its success made Chabrier famous overnight. In general, Chabrier’s music was inspired by broad humor, a sense of caricature, and by performances of popular songs in Paris nightclubs. A review of the first Paris performance in 1888 of Marche Joyeuse for the original orchestral setting described the piece as, “the high-spot of the evening; impossible to have more verve, more gaiety and life.”
Lincolnshire Posy — Percy Grainger (1882-1961) (full score ed. assembled by Frederick Fennell)Born in Australia, Percy Grainger, after moving to England, became a gifted concert pianist of international stature. He came to America in 1915 and served as a musician in the U.S. Army during World War I. In 1919 he became a U.S. citizen and America be-
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came his home for the rest of his life. In 1937 the American Bandmasters Association commissioned Lincolnshire Posy, based on folk songs Grainger and Lucy Broadwood collected thirty years before. The composer wrote, “This bunch of ‘musical wildflowers’ ... is dedicated to the old folksingers who sang so sweetly to me. Indeed, each number is intended to be a kind of musical portrait of the singer who sang its underlying melo-dy.” As an example, “...the first number in my set, Lisbon, was collected under character-istic circumstances. In 1905, when I first met its singer — Mr. Deane, of Hibbaldstowe — he was in the workhouse at Brigg, N.E. Lincolnshire. I started to note down his Lisbon, but the workhouse matron asked me to stop, as Mr. Deane’s heart was very weak and the singing of the old song — which he had not sung for forty years — brought back poignant memories to him and made him burst into tears. I reluctantly desisted. But a year or so later, when I had acquired a phonograph, I returned to get Mr. Deane’s tune ‘alive or dead’. I found him in the hospital ward of the workhouse, with a great gash in his head — he having fallen down stairs. He was very proud of his wound, and insisted that he was far too weak to sing. ‘All right, Mr. Deane,’ I said to him, ‘you needn’t sing yourself; but I would like you to hear some recordings made by other singers in these parts.’ He had not heard half a record through before he said, impulsively: ‘I’ll sing for you, yoong mahn.’ So the phonograph was propped up on his bed, and in between the second and third verse he spoke these words into the record: ‘It’s pleasein’ muh.’ Which shows how very much folksinging is part of the folksinger’s natural life.” Frederick Fen-nell, who knew Grainger, and conducted several excellent recordings of the piece, has commented, “Many of the freedoms he so admired in the original folk singing could not be transcribed in easy meters, obliging him to score his compositions from them in equally free and/or complex translations in terms of traditional band notation....move-ments 2, 3 and 5 ..... were unique, extraordinary - far out!”
7 Petites Pièces pour 8 Instruments — Francis Chagrin (1905-1972)Francis Chagrin described himself as “Rumanian by birth, British by nationality and cosmopolitan by inclination.” Expected by his parents to join the family business, he took an engineering degree while secretly studying at a music conservatory. Moving to Paris, he made his own way by playing piano in night clubs and cafes and writ-ing popular songs and film scores. Later he settled permanently in Britain. With the outbreak of war, he was appointed musical adviser and composer-in-chief to the BBC French Service, for which he was later decorated by the French Government. He spoke elegant and fluent French, and was often taken for a Frenchman. In addition, he spoke perfect English (albeit with a French accent), was fluent in Rumanian and German, and knew much Italian and Spanish. His concert music ranges over most genres. In the orchestral field, there are two completed symphonies, a piano concerto, a Prelude and Fugue, and a Rumanian Fantasy (for harmonica). In addition there is much chamber music, including Sept Petite Pièces pour 8 Instruments composed in 1966, and songs in English and French. The sheer volume of commercial work is staggering, including 200 films, television episodes (including a Dr. Who in 1964), and many commercials. His friends remember him as incredibly industrious, but selfless, resourceful, urbane and with a great generosity of heart, ‘always able to see the lighter aspect of serious effort.’
English Dances, Op. 27 — Malcolm Arnold (1921-2006) (arr. for band by Maurice Johnstone)Sir Malcolm Arnold’s early musical influences came from his mother, a fine amateur pianist, and, later, from writing and improvising jazz with his brother and friends. He took up the trumpet at age 12, much influenced by hearing Louis Armstrong. At 21 he became the youngest ever principal trumpet in the London Philharmonic. But after 1947, when he won a scholarship for composition, Arnold became a full-time composer. His remarkable catalogue contains nine symphonies, seven ballets, two operas, one musical, two string quartets, and music for brass-band and wind-band. His output of over twenty concertos for a great variety of instruments won particular admiration from orchestral players; as an ex-performer he was adept at writing for solo instruments and well knew what could and could not be demanded. He also wrote 132 film scores, including “Bridge on the River Kwai” for which he received an Oscar. The
PROGR A M NOTES (c o n t.)
11Northshore Concert Band
PROGR A M NOTES (c o n t.)
Four English Dances, written in 1950, feature bell tones in several of the movements. The church bells in the towns and cities of England are often tuned to the notes of the diatonic scale (i.e., the notes of the white keys of a piano), and this scale is used extensively by Arnold, who believed in its “eternal value.” Bell tones that seem to signal the start of festivities in a village town introduce the opening Vivace. The following Andantino begins quietly to 4-part chords played by the French horns and a melody introduced by the oboe. Mesto, the third movement, translates as sad or mournful. The driving final movement, Allegro risoluto, is characterized by a determined rhythm in the brass with ornamentation from the woodwinds.
El Capitan — John Philip Sousa (1854 -1932) (arr. Brion /Schissel)John Philip Sousa’s father, a trombonist in the U.S. Marine Band, started his son’s musical education at age six, with instruction in singing, violin, piano, flute, and several brass instruments. About to run off with a circus band when he was 13, his father enlisted him as an apprentice musician in the Marine Band. Through the next seven years, he played with the Band while “moonlighting” as violinist with theater orchestras. Sousa then left the Marines, and worked in Washington and Philadelphia as a theater violinist, conductor, arranger, and a member of a string quartet. By 1880, his fame as a conductor, composer, and arranger had been established, and he was appointed leader of the Marine Band. In 1892 he again resigned from the Marine Corps, this time to form his own civilian band. Sousa’s Band became a unique musical ensemble, presenting over 15,200 concerts while touring the North American continent each year from 1892 until the Great Depression, as well as making four European tours and one world tour. The operetta El Capitan (1896) marked Sousa’s return to the theater, a triumphant rejoining of that natural combination. The El Capitan March —- like all the marches that preceded it — is just a little different, though positively out of the same Sousa march mold.
AND THE BEAT GOES ON
The Northshore Concert Band Percussion Section
Tradition Innovation Precision
12 Northshore Concert Band
PERSONNEL
(number in parentheses indicates first year of band service)
PiccoloKelly McGregor, Chicago, Business Consultant (2002)
FluteJulianne Bilinski-Arvidson, Wheeling, Private Flute Instr./Home Specialist (1991) Kathryn Cargill, Palos Heights, Private Lesson Instructor (1978) Angela Deligiannis, Elmhurst, Instrumental Music Teacher (2000) Michele Gaus Ehning, Vernon Hills, Attorney/Private flute teacher (1996) Sandra Ellingsen, Buffalo Grove, Band Director (1990) Nancy Golden, Hinsdale, Band Director (1979) Gail Grana, Woodridge, English Teacher (2008)Tammy Lathan, Libertyville, Elementary Music Teacher (1992) Melanie Mathew, Oswego, Flute Teacher (2000) Jennifer Nelson, Chicago, Private Music Teacher (2001) Marija Robinson, Highland Park, Real Estate (1992) Amy Strong, Chicago, Attorney (2006)
Oboe/English HornSarah Cowan, Ingleside, Beginning Band Teacher (2009)Jacqueline Jellison-Landis, Private Music Teacher (2010)Don Kehrberg, Harwood Heights, Retired Professor of Music (2011) Melaine Pohlman, Geneva, Music Therapist (2004)
BassoonMeghan Bautista, Chicago, Operations Manager (2008)Pam Holt, Mt. Prospect, Band Director (2009)Maryann Loda, Arlington Heights, Music Teacher (1969)Steve Moline, Naperville, General Music Teacher K-3 (1981)Ann Motogawa, Evanston, Training Manager (2000)
B-flat ClarinetCorey Ames, Band Director (2010)Pamela Beavin, Chicago, H. S. Spanish Teacher (2004)Traci Bowering, Skokie, Band Director (1991)Janet Butterfield, Evanston, Band Director (2001)Laurie DeVillers, Waukegan, Group Tour Operator (1995)Alan Dubois, Chicago, Fitness Instructor (2003)Debbie Durham, Mundelein, Associate Band Director (1979)Gary Erickson, Wilmette, Engineering Manager (1975)Mark Iwinski, Roselle, Band Director (2008)Janet Jesse, Prairie View (1982)Jenna Kaferly, Chicago, Development Assistant (2010)Gail Kalver, Chicago, Executive Director, River North Chicago Dance (2006)Christine Kaminski, Villa Park, Elementary Band Teacher (2006)Kenneth Kelly, Clarendon Hills, Electrical Engineer (2000)Lee Kessler, Highland Park, Copywriter (1994)Bob Konecny, Wheeling, Retired Actuary (1977)Carolyn Merva Robblee, Chicago, Music Teacher (2010)Janet Schroeder, Glenview, Managing Editor, Retired (1961)Laura Stibich, Tinley Park, Band Director (1992)Rick Wadden, Wilmette, Retired Environmental Science Prof. (1994)David Zyer, River Forest, Investment Bank Management (1991)
I wanted an electric train for Christmas but I got a saxophone instead
- Clarence Clemons
The Northshore Concert Band Saxophone SectionAnn Betz • Heidi Helstad • Carey Polacek • Roland Colsen • Murray Fisher • Steve Nedzel
14 Northshore Concert Band
Bass ClarinetCarol Fisher, Morton Grove, Educational Consultant (1974)Susan Vaughn Grooters, Winnetka, Epidemiologist (2009)Robert Yaple, Evanston, Music Educator (2009)
Alto SaxophoneAnn M. Betz, Crete, Band Director (1978)Roland Colsen, Glenview, Trader (1996)Heidi Helstad, Chicago, Music Teacher (2006)Carey Polacek, Chicago, Music Teacher (2005)
Tenor SaxophoneSteve Nedzel, Chicago, Band Director (2010)
Baritone SaxophoneMurray Fisher, Morton Grove, Adjunct Professor, Educational Consultant (1969)
TrumpetKyle Berens, Lindenhurst, Music Educator (2008)Jared Brame, Northbrook, Financial Systems Analyst (2009)Sylvia Carlson, Chicago, Admin Assistant/Private Music Teacher (2006)Allissa Carter, Arlington Heights, Band Teacher (2011)Patrick Dawson, Chicago, Band Director (2009)John Evans, Elgin, Band Director (2011)Scott Golinkin, Chicago, Attorney (1979)Candace Horton, Prospect Heights, Band Director (2000)Stanton Kramer, Skokie, Photographer (2006)Erik Lillya, Chicago, Attorney (1994)Fred Powell, Elkhart, IN, Musician & Brass Instrument Designer (2007)Kyle Rhoades, Riverside, Band Director (2010)Barry Skolnik, Highland Park, Regional Service Assurance Manager (1979)Becky VanDonslear, Elmwood Park, Director, Email Operations (2008)Emily Whildin, Evanston (2011)
French HornBetsy Engman, Naperville, Internist (1995)Erin Foster, Chicago, Research Analyst (2000)Peter Gotsch, Chicago, Private Equity Investor (1987)Nancy Hinners, Evanston, Private Vocal & Brass Instructor (1964)Janene Kessler, Highland Park, Band Director (1995)Mollie McDougall, Chicago, Band and Orchestra Director (2005)Kelly Jo Schultz-Blanchard, Greenfield,WI, Music Educator (2008)Ryan Sedgwick, Chicago, Arts Fundraiser (2010)Hilary Strauch Logan, Evanston, Instrumental Music Teacher (2000)Jennifer Young, Evanston, Program Coordinator, Midwest Clinic (2007)Barbara Zeleny, Park Ridge, Investor (1969)
TromboneNick Atchley, Arlington Heights, Band Director (2005)Paul Bauer, Elmhurst, University Administrator (1982)John Christie, Skokie, Retired Band Director (1979)Ed Gadberry, Arlington Heights, Software Consulting Manager (2010)Greg Glover, Mount Prospect, IT Technical Architect (1989)Brian Russell, Peoria, Private Instructor (2000)Brad Say, Mundelein, Band Director (1999)Todd Smith, Niles, Band Director (2007)Andy Sturgeon, Chicago, Band Director (2009)Matt Taylor, Grayslake, Band Director (2007)
PERSONNEL (c o n t.)
15Northshore Concert Band
PERSONNEL (c o n t.)
EuphoniumKendra Gohr, Elmhurst, Private Teacher (2005)Bruce Nelson, Chicago, Project Manager (2001)Scott Oliver, Naperville, Band Director (2011)
TubaKevin Baldwin, Chicago, Mechanical Engineer (2007)John Harshey, Mundelein, Band Director (1987)Peter Lograsso, Westchester, Orchestra Director (1989)Rodney Owens, Lake Forest, Band Director (1987)Eric Weisseg, Chicago, Technology Specialist (2008)
PercussionDeborah Hawes, Glenview, Physician, Retired (1966)Derek Inksetter, Oak Park, Software Developer (2004)Matthew Janus, Chicago, Band Director (2009)Richard Lehman, Chicago, Band Director (2005)George Machay, Hinsdale, Percussion Instructor/NCB General Manager (2001)Chris Rasmussen, Chicago, Attorney (2006)Bill Seliger, Chicago, Supply Chain Manager (2004)
Member EmeritusGilbert Krulee, Evanston, Retired Psychology Professor (1966)Gordon A. Long, Prairie Grove, Consultant-Land Development (1985)Beatrice Mattenson, Deerfield, Retired Music Teacher (1983)Dennis Montgomery, Brass Instructor (1972)Herb Schneiderman, Highland Park, Retired (1964)David Shaw, Wilmette, Brass Teacher (1965)
To Another GreatBand Season
from theNCB Auxiliary!
Board Members:
Denise Bolman
Ralph Durham
Kim Fath
Mary Friedlieb
Marietta Paynter
Joe Schroeder
Mary Shaw
Dorothy Silver
Herb Schneiderman
16 Northshore Concert Band
PERSONNEL (c o n t.)
In Remembrance (Active members of the band and auxiliary who have passed away)Paul Bolman Barbara BuehlmanBill DitzlerKurt FriedemannSusan HirschfieldErnie KettnichJack MarksGordon McLeanMargaret Neuhaus (Peggy)John P. PaynterGeorge PeichlO. DeLap Premo Carol ScattergoodVictor W. ZajecElizabeth Zyer (Betty)
NCB Auxiliary BoardDenise Bolman chairRalph DurhamMary FriedliebMarietta PaynterHerb SchneidermanJoe SchroederDavid Shaw Mary ShawDorothy Silver
2010–2011 Board of Directors and StaffLaura Stibich, chairDr. Mallory Thompson, artistic directorGeorge Machay, business managerDr. Paul Bauer, development directorMeghan Bautista, librarianDebbie Durham, personnel directorGreg Glover, secretaryDeborah Hawes, treasurerAnn Motogawa, marketing/PR directorJulie Wolf, marketing and development manager
Members-at-largeTraci BoweringKathryn CargillNancy GoldenGail KalverRyan SedgwickBill SeligerJennifer YoungDavid Zyer
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19Northshore Concert Band
2010 -2011 PAYNETER SOCIET Y CONTR IBUTORS
THE PAYNTER SOCIETY is the society of donors making gifts of $500 or more to the Northshore Concert Band’s annual funds. Paynter Society donors ensure the future of the Northshore Concert Band and its continued ability to bring the finest in wind band music to the Chicago area and beyond, through high-quality perfor-mances, educational programs, commissions, and leadership to other community bands. For more information about the Paynter Society and the benefits offered to members, please call Julie Wolf at (847) 432-2263.
Sustaining Member ($5000+)John L. and Megan P. Anderson
in memory of John P. PaynterAnonymousArts Work FundGRAMMY® FoundationIllinois Arts Council
John P. Paynter FoundationMarietta M. PaynterGeorge & Arlene Rusch Foundation The Farny R. Wurlitzer FoundationDavid and Connie Zyer
in memory of Betty and Ben Zyer
Advocate ($1,000–4,999)Aileen S. Andrew Foundation
Ann M. Betz Scott G. Golinkin Charles and Deborah Hawes
Erik Lillya and Sarah Layton NSCB Foundation Chris Rasmussen and Amy Strong Herb Schneiderman Mary and David Shaw
in memory of Neil ShawJohn and Laura Stibich
Howard L. Willett Foundation, Inc. in honor of the contrabass clarinet section
Becky VanDonslearBarbara Zeleny
Benefactor ($500–999)Anonymous Anonymous
remembering CarolDenise Bolman
in memory of Paul BolmanBernie and Sally Dobroski
Debbie and Ralph DurhamNorm and Pat GatesGreg GloverNancy GoldenJohn and Wilma Hultman John W. McGowanApril and Dennis MontgomeryBruce and Bonita Paynter Joseph and Janet Schroeder
in memory of John P. PaynterRichard Wadden and Angela TrabertSally Ward
North Park University’s School of Music offers a bachelor of arts in music and a bachelor of music in education, worship, performance,
and composition, as well as a master’s in vocal performance.
Undergraduate AuditionsFebruary 12 and 26, 2011
Graduate AuditionsFebruary 13, 2011
Contact us today to schedule an audition, visit campus, attend a class,
see a performance, talk to faculty, and learn more.
Rebecca Olthafer, Music Admissions Counselor
(773) 244-5623www.northpark.edu/music no
rthp
ark.
edu/
mus
ic
BE P
URP
OSE
FUL.
21Northshore Concert Band
2010 -2011 SEASON CONTR IBUTORS
Many thanks to our contributors; the Northshore Concert Band continues to flourish because of their kindness and generosity.
Associate ($250–499)Anonymous
remembering CarolJames M. CerialePeter Gotsch and Dr.
Jana FrenchGreg Glover
Karel HusaStanley and Dawn Shell
remembering CarolMary Kay and William
Walsh
Patron ($100–249AnonymousJames and Mary-LouiseAagaardHelen Billings
in honor of Barbara Zeleny
Kathryn and Gregory Cargill
Roland ColsenChad CrawBruce CurrieLaurie DeVillersJennifer Giese DonathKim and Michael FathErin Foster and
Christopher BeckerHarold and Betty GohlEnid J. Golinkin
in honor of Scott Golinkin
Peter and Mary HerrJim and Pat Jocius
in memory of Barbara Buehlman
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Kahn
Christine and Ian Kaminski
Phil and Elizabeth Kana in honor of Elissa A. Kana
Gilbert and Carolyn Krulee
Jane MuellerBruce A. and Helen D.
NelsonNancy ReiserEllen SchollyJoseph U. SchorerJanet and Joseph
SchroederMallory Thompson
in honor of Dennis and April Montgomery
Contributor ($50–99) Peter and Sarma Allein honor of John Harshey
Mary Bilinski in memory of Don Arvidson
Janet Butterfield and Peter Jablakow
Karen CaseboltMr. and Mrs. Florian
DynekRobert EvansMary FriedliebBette Ward GainesJane and Richard GeorgeEllen and Jeff GluskinJanet and William JesseJanet KaminskiBob KaminskiSandra Markowitz
in memory of Dorothy Spriester
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Neuhaus in memory of Margaret “Peggy” Neuhaus
Thomas C. ParrishJoyce Riegel
in memory of Ben and Betty Zyer
Nancy and Peter RollElysian and Elizabeth
SchiavittiBeth and Barry SkolnikAl Spriester
in memory of Dorothy Spriester
Elizabeth Robinson Turner in honor of Ian, Marija, and Jacob Robinson
John and Ruth TuzsonEdwin SchmidtHarry and Louise Simon
Friend ($1–49)Anonymous
Sheri ConoverAngela DeligiannisJudith Disman in honor of Janet
SchroederDavid and Joan FosterMaxine GourseThe Halco FamilyJohn and Sharon
HanusinWerner and Ellen
HeimannMarjorie JuneElissa Kana
Jeannette KonecnyRose Matousek
in honor of Steve Moline
Ralph MuellerCarole and Michael
Powers in memory of Paul Bolman
Tim and Peg RuschGloria StepekPaul and Wanda Wagner
This list reflects gifts as of January 14, 2011. We also extend our appreciation to our 2009-2010 contributors too numerous to list in this program. Every effort has been made to list names accurately. Please call 847-432-2263 to bring errors or omissions to our attention.
23Northshore Concert Band
PL ANNED GIV ING
If you are looking for a way to pass on your cherished values to the nextgeneration and to benefit an organization that you love, please consider making a planned gift to the Northshore Concert Band. You can accomplish these goalsand potentially reduce estate taxes through your will or living trust. Weencourage you to consult with qualified professionals, such as your attorney andfinancial advisor, and to remember NCB with a bequest. More information isavailable on the NCB website, www.northshoreband.org.
SPONSORS
The following companies and individuals have made contributions in support of our 2010–2011 Season:
Platinum Level AdvertisersAnn BetzChristopher Burke EngineeringFrame WarehouseLevin Schreder & CareyLoser’s ClubMills AudioMontgomery Music ServicesNCB AuxiliaryNCB BoardNCB ClarinetsNCB FlutesNCB PercussionNCB SaxesNCB TrumpetsNCB Tubas/Meier’s TavernNorth Park CollegeNorth Shore Retirement HotelPaynter FoundationQuinlan and Fabish The Care of Trees
Silver LevelAllegra Print and ImagingMulti-Color Printing, High Volume Copy-ing, Digital Printing1255 Hartrey AvenueEvanston, Il 60202847-864-9797www.allegraevanston.com
Lapin Systems, Inc.Apple Authorized Service Provider: In/Out of Warranty Carry-In Service and On-Site Support832 Dempster St., Evanston, IL847-328-9945www.lapin.com
Bronze LevelAllegro Music Center Music instruction, instruments, and ac-cessories800 W. Devon, Park Ridge, IL847-692-6021
Greenbar PrintingBest wishes for the 55th season!
Handgun Press Publishing CompanyFine arms and military books for collec-tors and researchersBox 406, Glenview, IL847-657-6500handgunpress@comcast.net
Music and Arts CentersSales, Service, Rental and Lessons907 W. Irving Park Road, Itasca, IL630-285-14851512 N. Naper Blvd,Naperville, IL630-577-0820
NCB BassoonsWe raise our bells to the 55th season of the Northshore Concert Band!
Signature BankYour kind of bank6400 N. Northwest Highway, Chicago, IL 60631773-467-5634www.signature-bank.com
Music for Your Life
The Northshore Concert BandBoard of Directors
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