A vocal job opening – and theater returns to Brewster!

WORKING at the Brewster Theater Company

Miss the theatre? Come see three of our own in the pit with Nate doing the musical direction for ”Working”!

Nate Brewster – Musical Director, piano
Mark Dodge – percussion
Buddy Griffith – basses
Rich Dashnaw – guitars
 
Click the graphic below for more information and tickets. Hope to see you!
 

 

Vocal music opening in North Salem

Steve Austin reports that there is a grade 6-12 opening for vocal music in North Salem. Click here for the posting description

Please share with others outside WSW who may be interested in this position. Thanks!

 

Sad news and a gig

iFirst, the sad news.  We recently learned through Joe Greco that our friend, Jerry Marshall, has passed. Joe played with Jerry in the West Point Band in the 1950s, and Jerry played a number of concerts with WSW, both as a section and antiphonal trumpet player. Jerry had a long career as a professional player and was a revered acoustical engineer and consultant. Please join me in extending condolences to Jerry’s family.

Second, the gig is tomorrow night, and it’s the Bear Mountain Brass again! Chris Carbone, Chris Larsen, Mike Lucke, Bob Bennett, David Church, and Ben Acrish from WSW, along with Austin Day and Uma Karkala, are playing the New Castle Summer Concert Series tomorrow evening,  Wednesday, July 21. Stop by if you can!

Gratitude

Caramoor

I slept so well on Sunday night. The tempo changes and details of all those rehearsal notes were still swimming around in my brain, but the grip it had on me is finally dissipating. The performance was transformational in so many ways, because we emerged from 16 months of trauma to present a concert that was not just “good enough for a post-pandemic performance,” but truly exceptional in so many ways.

I am so very, very grateful that you all stuck together, and stuck with me through all the Zoom calls, Google forms, nudges to participate in the webcasts, and donations in spite of an unknown future. Your trust that eventually we’d persevere through the tentative outdoor rehearsals at Chez Serafin, small sectionals at TMH in April, challenging masked rehearsals in the tent at Masters, and final unmasked rehearsals, both in the tent and in TMH, were all needed for us to emerge on the stage at Caramoor with high energy and superior musicianship. We truly connected with that audience. 

My take-away list of warm emotions includes:

  • Ed Lewis, the new CEO at Caramoor, came backstage immediately after we finished to pass on his sincere congratulations on the performance.
  • Kathy Schuman, VP for Programming, was literally speechless. She said the key jingling stunt worked and really engaged the audience at a level she didn’t expect. She had high compliments for your energy and musicianship.
  • Tim Coffey, Artistic Planning Manager, and my main point of contact for all the nuts and bolts, told me again that WSW is the #1 favorite concert each summer at Caramoor, not only for the audiences, but for the crew as well. He said that no one else treats the crew with such kindness and respect, and they truly look forward to work with us like no one else.
  • Candice Hoyes and Jorell Williams were exceptionally kind with their words of gratitude, but what meant the most to me was Candice’s comments about the collaboration between the ensemble, arranger, conductor, and soloists. She said she’d never felt so engaged and included as part of the process as a guest artist.
  • The Grice sisters (really WSW groupies) made the trip once again from Allentown, PA specifically for the concert, and they remarked how excited everyone around them in the audience was to be a part of a live performance once again.

Looking ahead

Our board meets again in two weeks to discuss plans for next year. Most of next year’s programs are already sketched out. We have the Percy Grainger House collaboration coming up on November 14, and I’m looking for a solid challenge for you in May as a springboard toward regathering our momentum for Maslanka 4 in 2022-2023. We learned a lot about reaching out to our audience and keeping them engaged through a pandemic emergency, and we are excited about the possibilities that our return to TMH holds for all of us.

We will also analyze the data submitted through the personnel form, and take up the discussion of the possible social event in August. I’ll write again in late July or early August to update you on that.

In the meantime, the most important dates ahead include:

  • Thursday, September 9 – Auditions via Zoom (contact David if you have players to recommend, or are a sub who needs to complete the required audition)
  • Monday, September 13 – first fall rehearsal at TMH at 7:30 pm
  • Saturday, November 13 at 9:00 am – Fall dress rehearsal
  • Sunday, November 14 at 3:00 pm – Fall Concert

Thank you all again. I really don’t have the words to adequately express my gratitude.

Les Miz video premieres tonight at 8 pm!

Some of you knew that the battery on the video camera died in the middle of the Les Miz performance in May 2019. Fortunately, Joe Higgins was on videographer duty and swapped out the battery for the backup. But this meant I had to do some tricky video editing to combine Rob LaPorta’s professional audio recording with the two pieces of video we had, and make it all look somewhat convincing. And that took two years.

So, to provide some inspiration to get us excited about our upcoming rehearsals (details coming soon), I hope you’ll join me to watch the premiere of your performance of Barton Green’s amazing arrangement, tonight at 8:00 pm EDT. Click here for the link on our YouTube channel, or click the video below. It will be archived on our channel after the premiere.