Posts Tagged ‘Springfield’

Building Community

Saturday, November 10th, 2012

On Saturday, November 17, I’ll be in Dayton, Ohio for the world premiere of Daytime Drama, a concertpiece for clarinet and band.  Magie Smith, a classmate from Ohio State, will be the soloist and she’ll be accompanied by Ken Kohlenberg leading the Sinclair Community College Wind Symphony.  The next day, I’ll make my debut as the music director with the Lakeland Civic Orchestra, one of our five community-based ensembles at Lakeland Community College.  Looking back on my career as a musician, this is not at all unusual.

The list of community groups I’ve been a part of over the years is long–I’ve spent much more time being a non-paid member of a community musical ensemble or paid director of one than I have getting paid for gigs or performing with professional groups.  The list of groups is long–the Middle Georgia Concert Band, Tara Winds, the Sinclair Community College Wind Symphony, the Ohio Valley British Brass Band, the Community Concert Band, Community Orchestra and Community Jazz Ensemble at Lorain County Community College, the Oberlin Choral Spectrum, the Oklahoma Panhandle State University Concert Band and Concert Choir, and now the Lakeland Civic Orchestra.

What makes next Saturday’s premiere so exciting, though, is that I credit the Sinclair Wind Symphony with saving my life in some respects.

In September 1999, I was starting a new teaching job in Springfield, Ohio.  I had gone through a divorce over the summer that came as a complete surprise to me, and had decided to move back to Ohio after what had been a very difficult year teaching in an inner-city school in Georgia.  Getting a late start, I was glad to have nailed down a full-time job teaching choir, as it meant that I wouldn’t be living with my parents, but it was not the direction I thought my career would take.  I was lonely, despite being close to my parents, and the weeks seemed simply endless.  One of the ironies about teaching is that you are surrounded by people all day, and none of them can really be your friends.  Trying to become friends with students is almost always a mistake, and I’ve always found it difficult to befriend my colleagues; at this particular job, I traveled between two schools and didn’t share a common lunch hour with the rest of the faculty, which made the situation even worse.

One day, a representative from a fund-raising company came to visit.  Don Rader was a former band director, as so many of these reps are, and we got to talking about music.  He mentioned that he played in a group in Dayton, about a half-hour drive from where I was living, and that I should look into joining.  Desperate to get out of my apartment, I called the director, Ken Kohlenberg.  Dr. Kohlenberg explained that they didn’t need trombone players, so I quickly volunteered myself for euphonium, and he invited me to come on in, and I joined the Sinclair Wind Symphony that fall.

There was something fortuitous about this–I’m not a particularly good euphonium player, and I have a strange bell-front instrument that doesn’t always blend well.  Furthermore, the band already had two euphonium players and probably didn’t really need a third.  Somehow, I ended up in the back row of the band, as though Ken realized that I needed to be there.

And that fall, I needed to be there.  More importantly, I needed someplace to be where I wouldn’t hang out with my cat and feel sorry for myself at least one night a week.  That fall, there were days that I just wanted to quit my job, get out of music completely and find something that would let me wallow more than getting in front of thirty seventh-graders seemed to allow.  I thought there might be something where young, eager minds weren’t depending on me to somehow pull it together.  There were weeks when the only thing I had to look forward to was the Wednesday night rehearsal, and it wasn’t even about making through the week until Friday–it was about getting to 3:30 on Wednesday, when I would take myself to a fast-food dinner and drive over to Dayton.  In the band, I was a musician, not a divorced guy on his second teaching job in as many years–I was doing what had got me into music in a serious way in the first place, namely, playing in a band.

I spent three years in the Sinclair band, until a new job took me away, and I didn’t do a particularly good job keeping in touch, as with many other parts of my life in those years.  I know that some members of the group have probably moved on–at least one, Joanie Apfel, who mentored me as a teacher, has died, a loss for the profession and for the world.  Next Saturday, when I get to rehearsal, I hope to see some familiar faces, and I hope to take a moment to express to everyone what that group has meant to me–if not, there will at least be this blog post.

I hope my story makes the point of why we need community music-making.  In a society in which we are increasingly distant from our “friends,” neighbors and even our families, community music groups offer the chance to be together, enjoying something we are passionate about.  They keep us young, and they keep us happy.  They keep us from disappearing into our iPads or Androids or whatever other technology vies for our attention.  They keep us human.

In memoriam Ed Nickol

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

I just got an email forward from Lou Driever, band director emeritus at Northeastern High School, where I used to teach.  Lou is a fantastic human being and was a mentor to me when it was my turn to get raked over the coals at Northeastern.

The message was from Francis Laws, who just retired from teaching low brass at Wright State University.  I got to know Lou and Francis (“Buddy”) when we all played together in the Ohio Valley British Brass Band under the baton of Mr. Ed Nickol, a fixture in the world of school bands in western Ohio.   The message said that Ed left band rehearsal early  and died in the hospital last night.

People who know me know that I am a proponent of community musical ensembles.  The idea of people just getting together to play and make music is one that brings me joy.  When I played with the OVBBB, from 2000 to 2002, our musical product was of a high quality, and Ed got it out of us the old-fashioned way–by cracking the whip, and sometimes by hurting our feelings.  I imagine rehearsals with Fritz Reiner to have been slightly less intense than our Thursday night sessions at Wright State used to be.  Ed was hard to work with (or work for).  People with thinner skins and less devotion to music than he had sometimes quit the band–often in mid-rehearsal.  But even if he didn’t always remember that we were supposedly doing this for fun, Ed was someone whose band I wanted to play in.  Ed was a yeller and a screamer and an all-around passionate person of a type that doesn’t make it as a music educator these days.  People a little older than me and younger won’t sit still for the kind of martinet tactics that were a weekly feature of OVBBB rehearsals.  As much as I try to be the musician that Ed was, I almost never want to be the type of person he was on the podium.

On the other hand, he was uncompromising, relentless and authentic.  If it wasn’t worth doing right, it wasn’t worth doing for Ed.  I have a CD of some recordings–of dubious technical quality, since they are of live performances–but they capture what it was like to play in the OVBBB:  polished, taut, unashamed, and unafraid of difficult music, but always, always, music that was worthwhile.  Even some of the garbage that we played became worthwhile because Ed would seek out the good in a well-arranged version of a bad piece of music.  If it could be played well, it could be good music.

This is exactly the reason I encourage non-students to play in the band at OPSU.  Between Ed’s group on Thursday nights and another group, the Sinclair Community College Wind Symphony, on Wednesdays, the practice of community music-making brought me out of my shell, gave me someplace to go, someplace to play, and sometimes, a reason to keep going through the rest of the week during my time in Springfield.  Without those places to just make music, I might have drifted off into some other career entirely.

I also learned how to “do” marches from Ed–how to hose them out and make them into musical entities that are exciting and fun to play instead of the drudgery many think them to be.  I don’t see how someone can be a band director in America without knowing how to rehearse and conduct a march, and I didn’t learn that in college–I learned it from Ed.

Ed also encouraged me in composition, a little bit, and certainly without knowing where it would lead.  I showed him a piece called See No Evil, Hear No Evil, and he was all set to read it one Thursday night, but had mislaid the parts.  Someday, I hope that piece will get played, but the fact that he was willing to look at it gave me hope that I could write music for groups other than the ones I directed.

When I left the OVBBB to move out of town, I didn’t do a good job of keeping in touch.  A year later, when I asked Ed for a reference for graduate school, he turned me down, saying that he didn’t know me and my work well enough.  I never really made any effort after that, but I wish I had.

Somewhere–I hope in heaven, but I’m not completely sure–Ed is cracking the whip for the best band you ever heard and getting them to play better than they think they need to.  It might be “The Melody Shop” or just Mike Gallehue’s “ragged” arrangement of “Salvation is Created.”  It sounds glorious.  Play the snot out of it, Ed.