U2 & Mackey

Gratitude

On this Thanksgiving holiday, I am particularly thankful for you, the members of WSW. For the past 8 years you have challenged me, enriched my life, given me hope, and thrilled me. I wish you and yours all the best for your own Thanksgiving tomorrow.

Winter cycle

We’re starting the next cycle on Monday at TMH, and there are many challenges ahead of us. Please read and complete the short form below, then continue to read down the post to see the two short YouTube videos I’m asking you to watch (or just listen) before Monday. One of them is U2!

  • On November 30, the percussion are meeting offsite for a separate sectional to organize and work on their solo piece, Black Rainbow. So we’ll be reading through the entire program sans percussion.
  • The program, “Spirit & Fortitude,” is made up of four “standard works” and four unusual and challenging works. But I think it will be one of the most fulfilling and enriching programs to date.
  • We have four rehearsal dates coming up when TMH is not available, including the last Monday before the concert. Jim and Rachel are hard at work to secure an alternate rehearsal site for the four rehearsal dates, but losing Monday, February 22 at TMH is a special concern. Our current plan, as I described last Wednesday, is to cancel that Monday rehearsal, have a regular rehearsal on the currently scheduled Dress Rehearsal date (Wednesday, February 24), and move the actual dress rehearsal to Saturday, February 27, 10 am – 1 pm, when TMH is available. IMPORTANT: Please complete the short form below by Monday.

I played in the 92nd Street Y Orchestra for 10 years. The conductor, Yaacov Bergman, once said, “No one should ever sight-read Brahms.” He didn’t mean it literally, but he did mean that no one should play Brahms for the first time without some understanding of his writing beyond the printed notes. It’s in this spirit that I want to ask and encourage you all to listen to two pieces in preparation for Monday. You’ll find the links below.

One of the four unusual and challenging pieces on the program is John Mackey’s Aurora Awakes. In it, John acknowledges and quotes the final chord from the Holst Chaconne (also programmed on this concert) and the recurring guitar riff from U2’s “Where the Streets Have No Name.” He uses the guitar motive from U2 to create an incessant, vibrant, and infectious energy throughout the latter half of the piece.

Please take the time to listen to both of these pieces to understand this U2 reference, give you a feeling of what the work will sound like with percussion (since they will be offsite on Monday), and help us all grasp the richness of this piece right from the start. The links are below. Feel free to comment – I think you’ll find the relationship to be very similar to Mars & Star Wars!

Have a great holiday, and we’ll see you Monday.

https://youtu.be/OrBEoz9yHRU