Capacity crowd on hand for free concert
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BARBARA DIAMOND
Hip hip hooray. Three cheers for the red, white and blue.
An enthusiastic, standing-room-only audience gave a standing
ovation at the Laguna Beach Community Concert Band’s second annual
free “America the Beautiful Concert.” Every seat in the 450-seat
theater and a couple of stairs were filled for the concert, held Feb.
8 at the Artists Theatre on the Laguna Beach High School campus.
“Americans really know how to do patriotic music,” said retired
attorney Joy Dickerson, a native of Canada. “All we had was ‘O
Canada’ and ‘God Save the Queen.’”
Both are musical expressions of loyalty and respect, but not the
foot-stomping, hand-clapping, crowd-pleasers performed by the band at
the concert.
The program opened with a fife and drum corps medley of “Garry
Owen,” “Dixie” and “Yankee Doodle Dandy” and closed with the
LagunaTunes chorus and band performing “Battle Hymn of the Republic”
and a rousing rendition of “Stars and Stripes Forever.” Music spanned
the gamut from Star Spangled Banner, performed after the presentation
of colors by members of American Legion Post 222, to hot and cool
jazz and show tunes.
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman, who missed her National Charity League debut
because she was scheduled to play the French horn in a concert,
conducted “Americans We.”
“The good thing is that no matter what I do, the band will
continue,” said Kinsman, tricked out in Oscar de la Renta tails.
Retired TV producer/director Bob Henry was the master of
ceremonies and sang with 11-year-old Sophia Tupy an adorable duet,
with special lyrics, written by Henry’s daughter, Ruth Massaro, set
to the tune of “I Remember It Well” from “Gigi.” The lyrics compared
the music of today with the music preferred by -- shall we say -- a
more mature audience: Sting vs. Bing.
Laguna Presbyterian office manager and church chorale-member Sandy
Grim performed excepts from the Broadway show “Fiddler on the Roof”
with George Wood, narrator and announcer of the Patriots Day Parade
and a member of LagunaTunes.
Terri Walker strutted her stuff to “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore”
and “Orange Colored Sky.”
“I am so glad you were here,” former Mayor Kathleen Blackburn told
the performer.
Friends of the Library Bookstore manager Barbara Alexander said it
was a joy to hear singers with such good elocution. She could
understand the soloists’ every word, even seated in the back row.
Also in the audience: former Arts Commissioner Carole (with an e)
Reynolds, not to be confused with former Arts Commission and band
President Carol (without an e) Reynolds or artist Carolyn Reynolds;
Nancy Kreder and Nicholas Kinsman, the mayor’s son, who celebrated
his 10th birthday at the concert with friends Sebastian Roger, Timmy
Crane and Makanakai Shipman.
The concert was a double-header for author and Coastline Pilot
humor columnist Sherwood Kiraly, son-in-law of the band president and
husband of a LagunaTunes member.
Roxanna Ward and Christin Cornell conduct the 2-year-old chorus.
Some familiar voices are in the group, including Arts Commissioner
Pat Kollenda and Sawdust Festival exhibitor Patti Jo. New members are
welcomed.
The concert was preceded by a SwingSet performance of “Big Band
Music” outside the theater. SwingSet is made up of band members, as
is the Fife and Drum Corps and the Olympia Brass Band, which
performed the typical New Orleans funeral music that has given us
jazz, which some say is America’s only indigenous art form.
William Nicholls, who performs on the trombone, is the band
director. Ed Peterson, also a trombonist, is the associate director.
Band President Reynolds, a retired music teacher, plays the French
horn.
Band members Dennis White, Hunter Cook, Sheryl Caverly, Marion
Anderson, Brian Cameron and Theresa Marino also serve on the board.
The America the Beautiful Concert Committee included Caverly,
Reynolds, Nicholls, Peterson, Henry, Lisa Morrice, Bobbette Cameron
and Pat Sperry. Sandy St. John was in charge of the refreshment
table. Gavin Kentle helped. Ann Wood handed out programs.
The band was begun about five years ago by Nicholls, Reynolds and
Marino. The changes are off the charts. Many of the original eight
members hadn’t played a band instrument in 20 years. They had no
money to buy music arrangements and no source of funding. Laguna
Beach High School gave them a place to practice and the founders
persevered. The band now numbers 45.
“They are really good,” Kinsman said.
Many of the band members help underwrite the costs. Among the
other donors: Ken Hansen and Kymberly Jeffries, Bill and Kathryn
Sanders, Billy Hansen, Felix Luna, Jacquelyn Shay, Charley and Cece
Schoettlin, Doris Shields, Richard and Jane Evans, Sue Freeman, Mary
Patricia Hunt, Don and Lona Ingwerson, John and Sue Prange and Ann
Morgan.
Although originally sponsored by the Laguna Beach Recreation
Department, the band is now part of the Irvine Valley College
emeritus program under the direction of David Anderson. Funding has
been provided by grants from the city’s Community Assistance Program
and the Business Improvement District Fund and from the Festival of
Arts. Rotary and the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce have also given
support.
The band’s next performance is scheduled for the Patriots Day
Parade.
Donations are welcomed, as are applause.
They got both at the America the Beautiful Concert II.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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