commencements
- SplatterTone
- 5 valves

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The last commencement I attended (nephew) had a hired group of six players of the Great Highland pipes and a drummer. Do you think there might be some connection in the availability of school bands playing commencement and school support for music?
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dwaskew
- pro musician

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- Steve Marcus
- pro musician

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- The Big Ben
- 6 valves

- Posts: 3169
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- Location: Port Townsend, WA
Maybe yes, maybe no. It depends on the makeup of the school's band. If all of the key players in the band are seniors and graduating, it may be difficult to put together a commencement band. My HS is small (<300 students) and the graduating classes are from 50 to 70 students. sometimes, 40 members of the band are seniors and sometimes not. the band is pretty thin when 30-40 members are gone. Still sounds fine, though...SplatterTone wrote:The last commencement I attended (nephew) had a hired group of six players of the Great Highland pipes and a drummer. Do you think there might be some connection in the availability of school bands playing commencement and school support for music?
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smurphius
- 3 valves

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A new trend is for larger universities to have their large commencement ceremony as well as having various colleges (within the university) commencements. Those, such as College of Science, typically call on quintets, etc. I've got a few quintet gigs myself for commencement.
Any way we can innovate new ideas and raise the potential to get a gig is a plan I'm all for!
Any way we can innovate new ideas and raise the potential to get a gig is a plan I'm all for!
- MartyNeilan
- 6 valves

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For the last few years, my university's own Wind Ensemble played for our large outside spring commencement ceremony. Every member was paid around $35.00 for the privilege. We were encouraged to play at our own graduations, which I myself did do. I thought it was effective; our repertoire varied year to year but including the J. Williams Olympic Fanfare and the Dukas fanfare.
Adjunct Instructor, Trevecca Nazarene University
- GC
- 5 valves

- Posts: 1800
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One of our local colleges hosts a community band, and a small group from the band plays (15-25 depending on the season). The individuals don't get paid, but the band's music and equipment fund does. We usually have one very short rehearsal, or none if we're only using music from a recent concert. Since there are two ceremonies (one for the local campus, one for a remote campus' MBA students), it can make for an inconvenient Saturday, but many of us just chip in to be helpful.
And it's fun to play a Conn 25J in a gym. Though I'm not saying that anyone besides me enjoys it.
And it's fun to play a Conn 25J in a gym. Though I'm not saying that anyone besides me enjoys it.
JP/Sterling 377 compensating Eb; Warburton "The Grail" T.G.4, RM-9 7.8, Yamaha 66D4; for sale > 1914 Conn Monster Eb (my avatar), ca. 1905 Fillmore Bros 1/4-size Eb, Bach 42B trombone
- UTTuba_09
- bugler

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Yup, got on on May 10th.
Eric Hamilton
University of Tennessee/Knoxville
Performance Major
Kalison Daryl Smith CC
Yamaha YEB-321 Eb
UT Symphony/Wind Ensemble
http://www.hammytuba.com/
University of Tennessee/Knoxville
Performance Major
Kalison Daryl Smith CC
Yamaha YEB-321 Eb
UT Symphony/Wind Ensemble
http://www.hammytuba.com/
- MileMarkerZero
- 3 valves

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- Location: Knoxville, Tennessee
When I was at OU, they asked for volunteers from the wind ensemble and symphonic bands to play the big all-university shindig. Playing processionals long enough for ~8000 graduates to file in has to be penance for a past life. At least they paid $50 worth of beer money. I could always count on tying one on the night after graduation. The beer helped get the feeling back in my chops.
SD
I am convinced that 90% of the problems with rhythm, tone, intonation, articulation, technique, and overall prowess on the horn are related to air issues.
I am convinced that 90% of the problems with rhythm, tone, intonation, articulation, technique, and overall prowess on the horn are related to air issues.