bloke was asked to join a band.

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bloke
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bloke was asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

In Memphis, the head band director at the University (who has garnered quite a positive reputation, both on the human side and on the musical side) has formed a wind band of studio teachers from the University, studio teachers from nearby universities and junior colleges, band directors who double as professional performers, probably some graduate students, probably some freelancers, et al.

As with a typical community band, it's not funded enough to pay anyone, but - having audited clips on facebook - it sounds like a (so-called) professional band. They just sent me an email and asked me if I would consider joining. According to the roster sent to me (along with music PDFs), I would be the third tuba player, though I have no idea whether one or both of the others listed are continuing or whatever... None of that matters, and - if someone is designated principal - I would be delighted for it to never end up being me. :thumbsup:

At least this upcoming concert and rehearsals all dovetail nicely - scheduling wise - with other engagements that I already have in my book.

Their upcoming concert involves four rehearsals and a concert. The literature all looks to be listenable yet somewhat challenging music...ie. not one single "grade six band piece" ("band pieces" being a group of pieces which mostly seem to demonstrate technical prowess - ie. "contest" music - without doing much entertaining of the patrons), and this (in my view) expression of the music director's musical tastes is also something that I find encouraging. To barely elaborate, I don't mind a challenge, but I also prefer to play pieces that people (me being a "people" too) enjoy hearing.

From what I've read over the years, some others of you have bands of this caliber in your towns, but I think that's the first for the Memphis area. I'm going to give it a shot, since they're giving me a shot. :smilie8:
Last edited by bloke on Sat Mar 29, 2025 6:14 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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tubatodd (Wed Mar 26, 2025 11:38 am) • Mark (Wed Mar 26, 2025 12:01 pm) • York-aholic (Wed Mar 26, 2025 1:18 pm) • Jperry1466 (Wed Mar 26, 2025 6:07 pm) • MN_TimTuba (Wed Mar 26, 2025 9:06 pm) and 2 more users


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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by the elephant »

We had a great couple of ringer bands, and I loved playing in them. One recently folded due to the director's retirement. It is supposed to start back up in a few months with a new guy swinging the stick. Looking forward to it, too.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by arpthark »

Chatting recently with a pro who plays in several orchestras, he mentioned something about how "tuba players never meet any other tuba players." Here's your chance! As long as you can play nice with others (as well as the tuba).

I am very fortunate that I played in a "professional" :laugh: wind band, funded by a local regional newspaper, making about $50-75 a gig with several gigs every year (holidays, summer festival, a few engagements in between). Not bad change for a young guy. Well, the group has survived some turbulent times, but you know how newspapers are faring these days, so there is now just enough money to pay me to play tuba on a mule-drawn cart in a parade every summer. By far my favorite "professional" engagement.

It was a really good group, and the summer personnel were always sort of eye-poppingly amazing, with brass personnel from the Chicago Symphony and the NY Phil sitting in. I was always too shy to say anything to them, but should've.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

I've been playing through the music (having printed out PDFs), and have been working on playing at "2-or-3-tubas" dynamic levels (in contrast to 1 tuba in a symphony orchestra - mostly entering when mountains are supposed to be bowled over, etc...)

and who knows?
Maybe - If they eventually decide to keep me around for a really long time - perhaps I can coax them into calling it a "band".
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by MiBrassFS »

Cool. I hope you have fun, bloke.

There was a summer park civic band that paid near me I played with for a number of years. After many decades the city council canned the budget line item. It still technically exists, but is very much different.

There is also an unpaid band director, professor, etc. band that my wife and I were invited to play in, but it’s a bit of a drive. It would be a time commitment that would be difficult to manage with family, etc. Maybe some day.

Years ago, I played a number of times with an actual professional band directed by an honest to goodness cornet soloist with links back to the Sousa era. He also directed a band near Cleveland. It was a great experience.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

In the folder are three John Williams (not "arrangements") movie music transcriptions, a Gershwin (I'd guess, without using a search engine) piano-to-wind-band bandistration, what appear (??) to be four movements from a Sousa operetta (again: I'm ignorant, and have not researched), some transcription of some Schindler's list stuff (ie. more movie music, but - again - nothing "watered down")...There are probably two more things in there, but I'm too lazy to get up and go remind myself...

in summary: "good stuff, good players, good music director, and LOTS of black dots"
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by ronr »

There are a couple high-quality “professional” level bands in the Minneapolis area. The one I play with puts on two performances a year. We hold five rehearsals and a concert. It allows us to get some really good players in the group, and at least one hack tuba player…
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by Schlitzz »

Hopefully he got a haircut, with a good starched shirt, BEFORE that 1st rehearsal. Strong handshake preferred.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by 1 Ton Tommy »

This sounds like a nice opportunity, Bloke.

I find playing "arrangements" often frustrating. Sometimes they're the conductor's own arrangements and he changes them from week to week if something doesn't work. Our community orchestra is a sort of reverse-pro wherein we pay the conductor/music director via the non-profit org. We rehearse or experiment with various pieces until the conductor thinks some pieces jell into a concert, maybe 8-10 meetings per concert. The director gets nervous when there isn't a full compliment of musicians and we're six weeks out. But few of us need even that much rehearsal (famous last words). So for many of us its a social event too with beer at the pub afterwards.

I enjoy it most of the time but this session is frustrating because of the "arrangements." Last week the conductor stopped the orchestra and looking at me asked, "What are you playing?" (Its the bassoon part of Hall of the Mountain King, rewritten for tuba). I tell him my entry is the second measure after the fermata. He looks at his score. "I don't see that anywhere." I read him the part designation off my chart. "That's a non-existent part. Ovac (neighboring orchestra) rewrote that when they didn't have a string bass."

So now what? It was in the folder from the librarian that he handed me at my first rehearsal and I've already played it several times in rehearsal; then the issue was noisy valves which I fixed. So now we're four weeks out and I have to come up with something that amplifies the string basses as necessary and fills the bassoon voice. In my folder are two 3rd trombone parts, a Bassoon part and two string-bass parts that I have to transpose down an octave, except when it goes below the range of my Eb tuba, while staying behind the string basses piano dynamic. The BBb tuba won't handle the trombone parts.

There's a lot to be said for playing stuff in the original that can be downloaded from IMSLP.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

Schlitzz wrote: Thu Mar 27, 2025 11:21 am Hopefully he got a haircut, with a good starched shirt, BEFORE that 1st rehearsal. Strong handshake preferred.
Just in case they don't really need any tubas, I'm going to bring an alto sax. You know: the viola of the band.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by Schlitzz »

bloke wrote: Thu Mar 27, 2025 7:03 pm
Schlitzz wrote: Thu Mar 27, 2025 11:21 am Hopefully he got a haircut, with a good starched shirt, BEFORE that 1st rehearsal. Strong handshake preferred.
Just in case they don't really need any tubas, I'm going to bring an alto sax. You know: the viola of the band.
Actually had that happen last night in my band. The instrument repair tech had an alto sax, AND an alto clarinet in his car. Some people, and we read the Hunsberger Star Wars trilogy.

Let’s try replacing words in Star Wars dialogue. Get rid of rebels, and replace it with, violas. :tuba:
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

Schlitzz wrote: Thu Mar 27, 2025 7:10 pm
bloke wrote: Thu Mar 27, 2025 7:03 pm
Schlitzz wrote: Thu Mar 27, 2025 11:21 am Hopefully he got a haircut, with a good starched shirt, BEFORE that 1st rehearsal. Strong handshake preferred.
Just in case they don't really need any tubas, I'm going to bring an alto sax. You know: the viola of the band.
Actually had that happen last night in my band. The instrument repair tech had an alto sax, AND an alto clarinet in his car. Some people, and we read the Hunsberger Star Wars trilogy.

Let’s try replacing words in Star Wars dialogue. Get rid of rebels, and replace it with, violas. :tuba:
...but let's just make sure they're Star Wars violas...


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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by dsfinley »

bloke wrote: Wed Mar 26, 2025 6:45 pm In the folder are three John Williams (not "arrangements") movie music transcriptions, a Gershwin (I'd guess, without using a search engine) piano-to-wind-band bandistration, what appear (??) to be four movements from a Sousa operetta (again: I'm ignorant, and have not researched), some transcription of some Schindler's list stuff (ie. more movie music, but - again - nothing "watered down")...There are probably two more things in there, but I'm too lazy to get up and go remind myself...

in summary: "good stuff, good players, good music director, and LOTS of black dots"
Are the Sousa pieces from Last Days of Pompeii? We did Nydia the Blind Girl from that when I was in college and I think that piece trumps all of his marches. And I REALLY like his marches.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

It's "People Who Live in Glass Houses". It's not an operetta or anything; it's just a little suite he wrote before the world tour... Each movement based on portraying a different type of liquor.

Based on the fact that these were edited in the modern era by a high profile band director and published by a high profile publisher, I'm sure this set of pieces is widely known to band scholars. It's just that I'm not any sort of band music scholar and I didn't know what they were until I looked up what they were, due to my ignorance. I actually took a class about band literature a long time ago one summer when I really wasn't even enrolled in a degree program, but a class like that can't possibly cover everything, and it was so long ago that Bourgeois may have not even edited and published the set of four pieces by that time..
I have only done surface investigation, but the set of pieces tells me that Sousa had a sense of humor, and - when not being commissioned to write some march - he still tended to lean towards march composition, but with more of a sense of humor.
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by Pauvog1 »

Will Fat Bastard be the tool of choice for this setting?
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Re: bloke asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

Pauvog1 wrote: Sat Mar 29, 2025 8:07 am Will Fat Bastard be the tool of choice for this setting?
duh
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Re: bloke was asked to join a band.

Post by bloke »

There's a suite of selections from the Bernstein Opera, "Candide" included in the music programmed for this concert. When I was attending school decades ago, this operetta was actually performed, but I didn't get to participate because the actual pit orchestration only includes two trumpets and four horns. Playing through the several pieces in this suite (orchestrated for wind band), I now understand how the overture (which most of us have played both in wind bands and symphony orchestras) was "sewn" together..
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