About Craig Dabelstein

Craig Dabelstein, BAMus, BMus, GDTL, GradCertEdPub is the saxophone teacher and a band conductor at Brisbane Girls Grammar School. He is a regular reviewer for Music Forum magazine and a research associate for the series of books Teaching Music Through Performance In Band.

Army Band Open Day

Sat­urday 19 March 2011, 10.00am

After the huge suc­cess of last years Open Day con­duc­ted by the Aus­tralian Army Band Bris­bane at Gal­lipoli Bar­racks, Enog­gera, Sat­urday 19 March 2011 from 10.00am till 1.00pm, has been ‘locked in’ for another Open Day this year. It is hoped that this year’s event can be even big­ger and bet­ter than before!

Regis­tra­tion is essen­tial
Tel: 07 3332 5905 or 13 19 01
Wmail: aab.brisbane@defence.gov.au

Regis­tra­tions close: 11 March 2011
Min­imum musical stand­ard is 5th Grade AMEB and above.

Thank you

A R Pil­grim (Alan)Sergeant
Open Day Coordin­ator
Recruit­ing Cell
Aus­tralian Army Band Bris­bane
Tel: (07) 3332 5934
Mobile: 0406 451645
Fax: (07) 3332 5928
alan.pilgrim@defence.gov,au

Building a Better Band

ABODA QLD will be host­ing a Pro­fes­sional Devel­op­ment day on Sat­urday 28 May from 9am to 4pm with guest presenter Dr. Mark Fonder from Ithaca Col­lege USA. The day will be explor­ing Build­ing Bet­ter Bands through rep­er­toire choices, pro­gram­ming tips and rehearsal tech­niques for bands work­ing with lit­er­at­ure from grades 1 to 4. There will also be oppor­tun­it­ies for some par­ti­cipants to be coached using a live school band on tech­niques such as breath­ing, uni­fy­ing rhythmic feel, band tone devel­op­ment, inton­a­tion and artic­u­la­tion devel­op­ment. Primary rep­er­toire for the day will be:

Chor­ale from Jupiter (Holst/arr. Murtha, Gr. 1, 2:30, Hal Leonard)
Battle Pavane (Susato/arr. Margolis, Gr. 2, 5:00, Manhattan Beach)
Deep River (Traditional/arr. Moss, Gr. 2, 5:00, Hal Leonard)
Cum­ber­land Cross (Carl Strommon, Gr. 2.5, 5:00, Alfred)
Amer­ican River­songs (Pierre La Plante, Gr. 2.5, 7:00, Daehn)
Abra­dacabra (Frank Ticheli, Gr. 3, 6:00, Manhattan Beach)

Cost

$50.00 for ABODA Mem­bers
$65.00 for Non-ABODA Mem­bers
$15.00 for Stu­dent ABODA Mem­bers
$25.00 for Stu­dent Non-ABODA Members

Book Online

Altern­at­ively, down­load this regis­tra­tion form and mail with your payment.

Pro­fes­sional Devel­op­ment Cer­ti­fic­ates will be dis­trib­uted on the day to cover 7 hours of pro­fes­sional development.

Down­load the Build­ing a Bet­ter Band flyer.

Music Tech PD

Futura Music Edu­ca­tion are offer­ing pro­fes­sional devel­op­ment for both instru­mental and classroom music teach­ers  in the use of music technology, with a focus on present and future tech­no­lo­gies that can be incor­por­ated into classrooms for today’s stu­dents. The work­shops are run by prac­tising teach­ers using meth­ods that have proved suc­cess­ful in real teach­ing situations.

Three work­shops will be offered in Semester 1, 2011. Work­shop 1, ‘Devel­op­ing your jazz pro­gram through tech­no­logy’ is designed pre­dom­in­ately for instru­mental music teach­ers while work­shops  2, ‘Intro­duc­tion to Music Tech­no­logy in the Classroom’ and 3  ‘Elec­tronic, Dance & Remix Music for the Classroom Teacher’ are more spe­cific for classroom music teachers.  A regis­tra­tion form is attached for your con­veni­ence. You can down­load a regis­tra­tion form here. For more detailed inform­a­tion please go to http://www.futuramusiceducation.com.au/Home.html

Mark Fonder QLD visit

Dr. Mark Fonder will be in Bris­bane dur­ing May and June and will be avail­able for work­shops with school and com­munity ensembles. If you would like to book a ses­sion for your ensemble please con­tact the ABODA QLD sec­ret­ary, Alisa Jones, on 0412 016 509 to secure your place.

Click here to down­load the flyer with details of costs and dates.

Mark Fonder, pro­fessor of music, is the con­ductor of the Ithaca Col­lege Con­cert Band and has been teach­ing con­duct­ing and instru­mental music edu­ca­tion courses at Ithaca Col­lege since 1989. From 1994 to 2003, he was the Chair­man of the Music Edu­ca­tion Depart­ment. He is act­ive as a guest con­ductor, adju­dic­ator, school music con­sult­ant, and clini­cian and has served in these capa­cit­ies through­out the United States. Inter­na­tion­ally, he has guest con­duc­ted, given research present­a­tions or adju­dic­ated bands in Aus­tria, Japan, Canada, China, Singa­pore, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Dr. Fonder, a gradu­ate of and twice a fel­low­ship recip­i­ent at the Uni­ver­sity of Illinois, was dir­ector of bands at Park Falls (Wis­con­sin) High School and was on the fac­ulties of the Uni­ver­sity of Wisconsin-Green Bay and Uni­ver­sity of Texas-San Ant­o­nio prior to com­ing to New York. He has also served on the fac­ulties of The Uni­ver­sity of Wash­ing­ton, Vander­Cook Col­lege and the East­man School of Music. Dr. Fonder’s research has been pub­lished in vari­ous journ­als includ­ing the Music Edu­cat­ors Journal, Band Dir­ect­ors Guide, Instru­ment­al­ist, Journal of Band Research, Coun­cil for Research in Music Edu­ca­tion and the Journal of Research in Music Edu­ca­tion. He was chair of the Music Edu­cat­ors Journal Edit­or­ial Com­mit­tee from 1998–2002 and is cur­rently the editor of the Journal of His­tor­ical Research in Music Edu­ca­tion.

Dr. Fonder has played prin­cipal trom­bone with the Green Bay (Wis­con­sin) Sym­phony, the Green Bay Packer Band, and the San Ant­o­nio Brass, and for such enter­tain­ers as Robert Goulet, Rich Little, and Rita Moreno. In 1987, Dr. Fonder was awar­ded the National Band Association-Wisconsin Chapter Cita­tion of Excel­lence, in 1998, the Ithaca Col­lege President’s Recog­ni­tion Award and has been the recip­i­ent of a Uni­ver­sity of Wis­con­sin teach­ing fel­low­ship. He has been elec­ted to Phi Delta Kappa, an hon­or­ary edu­ca­tion fra­tern­ity, Phi Kappa Phi, an hon­or­ary schol­ars fra­tern­ity, Pi Kappa Lambda, an hon­or­ary music fra­tern­ity and the pres­ti­gi­ous Amer­ican Band­mas­ters Association.

The Path of the Artist

Allan McMur­ray
Dis­tin­guished Pro­fessor
Robert and Judy Charles Pro­fessor of Con­duct­ing
Uni­ver­sity of Col­or­ado – Boulder

I have had the oppor­tun­ity to work with instru­mental ensembles through­out the United States.  It has been a joy­ous exper­i­ence meet­ing and mak­ing music with stu­dents who love being together in pur­pose and in per­form­ance, but I have con­stantly been reminded of the dif­fer­ent levels of com­mit­ment that can be found.

The com­mon level of com­mit­ment is that of the par­ti­cipant.  The music par­ti­cipant enjoys the exper­i­ence of get­ting together with friends and enga­ging in the events.  The par­ti­cipant is con­scien­tious about rehearsal times, works to learn the music in rehearsal and is inter­ested in being a good sec­tion mem­ber.  The par­ti­cipant likes music with a good beat.

The next level is that of a player (or singer).  The player/singer is a per­son who loves music because it gives him/her a chance to play.  The player wants to play a lot and prac­tices to achieve range and tech­nique that can rep­res­ent a great sound whenever the player plays.  The player arrives early to prac­tice his “licks” and wants great parts to play.  In fact, the player judges music based on her part.  If it’s a good part, it is a good piece of music, if it’s a bad part, it is a bad piece of music.  The player likes solos, and strives to be heard.  The player loves his instru­ment and enjoys get­ting together with other “play­ers”.  The player will learn his/her part out­side of rehears­als to he/she can sound good in rehearsals.

The third level is that of the musi­cian.  The musi­cian plays his instru­ment well and shows up to rehears­als with his part mastered.  The musi­cian loves cham­ber music and ensemble because of the oppor­tun­ity for musical col­lab­or­a­tion. The musi­cian does not come to rehearsal to learn her/his own part; the musi­cian comes to a rehearsal to learn every­one else’s part.  In that way, the musi­cian I learn­ing how to play together by con­cen­trat­ing on inton­a­tion, artic­u­la­tion, phras­ing, blend, bal­ance and style.  The musi­cian is about listen­ing, learn­ing and col­lab­or­at­ing with other musi­cians.  The musi­cian eval­u­ates whether a piece of music is good or not by the sounds that are cre­ated by every­one and enjoys listen­ing as much as play­ing.  The musi­cian likes being a con­trib­ut­ing part of every rehearsal through collaboration.

The fourth level is that of the artist.  The artist has all the skills of the player and the musi­cian, but the artist is also a cre­ator.  The artist comes to every rehearsal pre­pared in every way, and leaves every rehearsal with new goals.  The artist loves great music mak­ing and loves to bring expres­sion and inspir­a­tion to the per­form­ance.  The artist has ima­gin­a­tion that is fueled by oppor­tun­ity.  That oppor­tun­ity might come in a solo pas­sage or in an approach to style that amp­li­fies the intent of the piece.  The artist is a col­lab­or­ator with the other mem­bers of the ensemble, with the con­ductor, and with the com­poser.  The artist is intu­it­ive and ori­ginal, but only uses those skills in pur­suit of the most beau­ti­ful per­form­ance pos­sible.  The artist eval­u­ates whether a piece of music is good or not by how it is com­posed and what it expresses.  The artist has the poten­tial to elev­ate the listener’s per­cep­tion of an aver­age piece through an extraordin­ary per­form­ance.  The artist loves music because music fuels his/her soul.

If it were only about choos­ing a level then all per­formers would be artists.  But it is not about choos­ing it is about grow­ing, listen­ing, and sur­round­ing one­self with great music, great books, great art and great people.  It is about informed intu­ition.  It is about learn­ing the­ory, so the archi­tec­ture and har­monic lan­guage can be heard in every melody.  It is about know­ing per­form­ance prac­tice and style of music of all peri­ods.  It is about listen­ing to chal­len­ging pieces by ima­gin­at­ive and ori­ginal com­posers and push­ing the envel­ope of per­sonal pref­er­ence.  It is about reflec­tion on life, death, pain, cel­eb­ra­tion, pas­sion, grief, and nature to under­stand and exper­i­ence those things that inspire mean­ing in art.  It is about learn­ing to be at home in solitude and seek­ing it out.  It is about beauty and spon­taneity and ima­gin­a­tion and spir­itu­al­ity.  It is attempt­ing to approach every sound and every silence every day as if it mat­ters, because it does.  It is recog­niz­ing that the pur­suit of per­fec­tion is a lifelong goal and that it is unat­tain­able.  It is know­ing that the artist’s life is not about a des­tin­a­tion, it is about the journey.

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Big Band Reading Day

Allans Music + Billy Hyde are present­ing a Big Band Read­ing Day on Sunday 13 Feb­ru­ary, 1.00pm to 4.00pm. This is a great opportin­ity to hear new jazz rep­er­toire, get great advice on rehears­ing your jazz ensemble, and meet up with other dir­ect­ors. A range of music for con­cert band, orches­tra and jazz band will be on dis­play. See the flyer for more information.

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Rapid Reading Day 2011

Get the year off to a great start by attend­ing the Queens­land Con­ser­vat­orium of Music’s Rapid Read­ing Day.

When: 27 Feb­ru­ary 2011
Where: Queens­land Con­ser­vat­orium, Grif­fith Uni­ver­sity, South Bank
Cost: $5 at the door
10:30am–Registration/Trade Dis­plays
11:00am–Session 1 — Strings (Opera Space), Band (Basil Jones Orches­tral Hall)
12:30pm–Lunch in Foyer/ Trade Dis­plays
1:30pm–Session 2 — Strings (Opera Space), Band (Basil Jones Orches­tral Hall)
4:00pm–Wine, Cheese and Trade Dis­plays
5:00pm–Conclusion

For fur­ther inform­a­tion con­tact:
Jason Budge, Pro­ject Officer
Ph. 3735 6306
Fax 3735 6366
Email: open-conservatorium@griffith.edu.au

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A Concise History of the Wind Band

Whether used for per­sonal ref­er­ence or as a text for a class in the his­tory of the wind band this book is the most com­pre­hens­ive single-volume his­tory of the wind band ever writ­ten. This volume draws on the author’s multi-volume His­tory and Lit­er­at­ure of the Wind Band and fol­lows the devel­op­ment of the wind band through the civic, court, church and mil­it­ary per­form­ances of the Ancient World through the nine­teenth cen­tury. Writ­ten by Dr. David Whit­well and edited by Craig Dabelstein.

Dr. David Whit­well is a gradu­ate (‘with dis­tinc­tion’) of the Uni­ver­sity of Michigan and the Cath­olic Uni­ver­sity of Amer­ica, Wash­ing­ton DC (PhD, Musi­co­logy, Dis­tin­guished Alumni Award, 2000) and has done post-graduate study at the Uni­ver­sity of Vienna and has stud­ied con­duct­ing with Eugene Ormandy and at the Akademie fur Musik, Vienna. Prior to com­ing to North­ridge, Dr. Whit­well par­ti­cip­ated in con­certs through­out the United States and Asia as Asso­ci­ate First Horn in the USAF Band and Orches­tra in Wash­ing­ton DC, and in recit­als through­out South Amer­ica in cooper­a­tion with the United States State Depart­ment. David Whit­well stud­ied con­duct­ing at the Akademie für Musik, Vienna, with Hans Swarowsky, and with Eugene Ormandy. He has con­duc­ted res­id­ent ensembles in Aus­tria, Switzer­land, Israel, Japan, Wales, Eng­land, Ger­many, The Neth­er­lands, Bolivia, Peru, Korea, Taiwan, Rus­sia and the United States, among them the Phil­adelphia Orches­tra, Seattle Sym­phony Orches­tra, the Czech Radio Orches­tras of Brno and Brat­is­lava, and The National Youth Orches­tra of Israel.

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Sydney Music Education Conference

To All Musical Directors/Band Organisers/Music Teachers

Regis­tra­tions are still being accep­ted for the SBF Sydney Music Edu­ca­tion Con­fer­ence to be held at St Mary’s Cathed­ral Col­lege Sydney on 19–21 Janu­ary 2011. Be part of an excit­ing new devel­op­ment in Sydney’s music scene.

Presenters to include:
Dr Randy Nav­arre (Pres­id­ent, North­east­ern Music Pub­lic­a­tions, USA)
Shaun Dor­ney Fel­low of the Uni­ver­sity of South­ern Queens­land
Peter Ward­robe Edu­ca­tion Man­ager — Sibelius Aus­tralia and NZ
Ger­ald Stein­mann Pro­fes­sional per­cus­sion­ist
David Coit Lead Trum­pet Navy Band Sydney Detachment

Click on the link below for an online regis­tra­tion:
https://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?hl=en&formkey=dGl3UUZUaUNpYTl5RlhUZ2lYSVBlTHc6MQ#gid=0

Click here to down­load a flyer: 2010 Flyer

www.schoolbandfestival.org.au

Funding for Hubs

The ABODA QLD Man­age­ment Com­mit­tee has set aside a $1500.00 allow­ance to sup­port activ­it­ies in each of the ABODA QLD Hubs.

To access this fund­ing exist­ing Hubs just need to sub­mit a pro­posed PD ses­sion to the Man­age­ment Com­mit­tee  – as per the Hub guidelines – and stip­u­late the use of some or all of the allow­ance in the budget. We envis­age that this fund­ing will sup­port events that lead to an increase in ABODA QLD mem­ber­ship in the hub area.

Don’t have a hub in your region – then start one! Click here for Hub Guidelines. This fund­ing can also be used to fund PD events that serve to launch new hubs.

We’re look­ing for­ward to your receiv­ing your proposals.

Lewes Ped­dell

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