Hernando High School band
Posted: Thu Feb 16, 2023 9:00 pm
The town is named Hernando, and the county is named Desoto for Hernando de Soto - supposedly the first European to have been shown the Mississippi River by Native Americans.
The band is amazing. They don't have incredible instruments.The students probably own intermediate level clarinets, I saw sort of almost professional model trumpets and trombones, and the rockstar tuba players were playing some old ruddy-looking King 2341 tubas with detachable upright bells. Mrs bloke patched up their old plastic Vito and Yamaha bass clarinets today on site, and they seemed remarkably grateful. They do own a remarkably nice Fox Renard bassoon, and just bought a second one from us...
I saw quite a few stock mouthpieces being used, and can only imagine that the band would have sounded even nicer and could have generated even more volume with some $200 types of woodwind mouthpieces, rather than $60 ones.
The band is playing is clean as a whistle, remarkably nicely in tune, and they obviously understand phrasing - which is something that some professional musicians have to have dictated to them from music directors. I wasn't thinking "good for a high school band" when I was listening to them. I was simply thinking "good". (I sort of consider myself to generally be a picky/critical listener.) There are two adult community bands that rehearse regularly within an hour of that school, and this high school band is quite a bit better than either of those.
They do get a lot of support from multiple band directors and private instructors, but they don't swagger, and simply seem to consider what they do to be existential...and It's not a highfalutin town.
The head band director shuns graded "band pieces", and only programs what one would probably consider to be art music, but not the regular old Holst/Vaughan Williams/Sousa/Grainger, but quite a few things that might even be considered esoteric. He told me that he probably would have fit in better had he been born several decades before he was. (I don't know if any of the pieces that I saw on his stand or heard them play are found on so-called approved lists, but were they or if they are, I'm sure they are/would all be graded at the top, as far as difficulty is concerned.)
They also are extraordinarily competitive in the fall (marching), but they put that stuff away when it's time and get busy indoors.
Getting back to the tuba players, I would be glad for either one of them to sub for me - for many of the jobs I'm hired to play.
OK:
Texas-Texas-Texas/yankee-yankee-yankee...
... but this Mississippi delta school band - in the "backward" State of Mississippi - I'm sure would stand up with the best of them.
I wish I could have played in the band like this when I was in high school.
The band is amazing. They don't have incredible instruments.The students probably own intermediate level clarinets, I saw sort of almost professional model trumpets and trombones, and the rockstar tuba players were playing some old ruddy-looking King 2341 tubas with detachable upright bells. Mrs bloke patched up their old plastic Vito and Yamaha bass clarinets today on site, and they seemed remarkably grateful. They do own a remarkably nice Fox Renard bassoon, and just bought a second one from us...
I saw quite a few stock mouthpieces being used, and can only imagine that the band would have sounded even nicer and could have generated even more volume with some $200 types of woodwind mouthpieces, rather than $60 ones.
The band is playing is clean as a whistle, remarkably nicely in tune, and they obviously understand phrasing - which is something that some professional musicians have to have dictated to them from music directors. I wasn't thinking "good for a high school band" when I was listening to them. I was simply thinking "good". (I sort of consider myself to generally be a picky/critical listener.) There are two adult community bands that rehearse regularly within an hour of that school, and this high school band is quite a bit better than either of those.
They do get a lot of support from multiple band directors and private instructors, but they don't swagger, and simply seem to consider what they do to be existential...and It's not a highfalutin town.
The head band director shuns graded "band pieces", and only programs what one would probably consider to be art music, but not the regular old Holst/Vaughan Williams/Sousa/Grainger, but quite a few things that might even be considered esoteric. He told me that he probably would have fit in better had he been born several decades before he was. (I don't know if any of the pieces that I saw on his stand or heard them play are found on so-called approved lists, but were they or if they are, I'm sure they are/would all be graded at the top, as far as difficulty is concerned.)
They also are extraordinarily competitive in the fall (marching), but they put that stuff away when it's time and get busy indoors.
Getting back to the tuba players, I would be glad for either one of them to sub for me - for many of the jobs I'm hired to play.
OK:
Texas-Texas-Texas/yankee-yankee-yankee...
... but this Mississippi delta school band - in the "backward" State of Mississippi - I'm sure would stand up with the best of them.
I wish I could have played in the band like this when I was in high school.