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The University of Notre
Dame Concert Band
Kenneth Dye, conductor
Carnegie Hall
May 11, 2010
To the great
pleasure of the joyous audience attending this Carnegie Hall
concert, the ninety-three members of The University of Notre
Dame Concert Band made a mighty sound. And the word concert
alone does not fully describe this event, as it assumed, at
different times, aspects of a concert, a college reunion, a pep
rally. Let it be said at the outset that The University of Notre
Dame Concert Band is a virtuoso ensemble. The technical skill
and ensemble cohesiveness of these young players is mind
boggling. The thirteen flutes in unison play as one, as do the
fourteen clarinets. The forty-one member brass choir sounds
great at all dynamic levels, when playing both solemn
chorale-like passages and wild jazzy riffs. It was an evening of
sonic splendor.
We began with
the world premier of Joseph Turinn’s “Fanfare and Prelude.”
Director of Bands Kenneth Dye conducted this and three other
works on the concert. Five assistant conductors, Larry Dwyer,
Sam Sanchez, Matt Merten, Emmett O’Leary and Alison Thigpen
shared the remaining nine works. “Fanfare and Prelude,” the
following work, Clifton Williams’ “Dramatic Essay,” and
“Fandango,” another work by Mr. Turrin, all seemed to have
similar sonic structures. All had a fast brassy beginning, a
softer lyric middle section with prominent woodwinds, a loud and
fast ending. Both of Mr. Turinn’s works also had an uplifting
brass choral-like passage towards the end, one which would not
have been out of place in a movie score. They also shared a
similar harmonic and rhythmic vocabulary. The dissonances were
fairly painless, the lyric melodies pop-tune-like, the
beginnings and endings jazzy.
“Dramatic
Essay” featured fine playing by guest artist, trumpeter Philip
Smith. But with all the excellent trumpeters in the band, I’m
not sure why they had to go out and get a star. (Mr. Smith is
principal trumpet of the New York Philharmonic.) In “Fandango,”
Mr. Smith was joined by the Notre Dame Concert Band’s principal
trombone, Anthony Parish. Mr. Parish more than held his own. In
fact, his was the most impressive solo playing of the evening –
warm, expressive, beautifully phrased. I loved his judicious use
of vibrato.
On the first
half we heard both arrangements and easy listening works written
in the twenty and twenty-first centuries. There was a sameness
about much of this music. For me, the concert came to life three
works into the second half, with the Notre Dame New Orleans
Brass Band’s electrifying performance of conductor Matt Merton’s
arrangements of What a Friend We Have in Jesus and I’ll Fly
Away. The band entered from the rear of the hall and marched
down the aisle. What visceral excitement, what authenticity! I
did feel there was no reason for the members of the concert band
to join in after the marchers reached the stage, for it only
watered down the unique sound we had been hearing.
The concert
band morphed into a very good and very large “big band” with
stylistically impeccable performances of Larry Dwyer’s
transcription of Harold Arlen’s “When the Sun Comes Out” and
Kenneth Dyes tribute to Benny Goodman’s 1938 Carnegie Hall
Concert, “Benny Goodman in Concert.”
The entire
audience then rose to their feet for the Notre Dame Alma Mater.
And how else could this concert end, but with a rip-roaring
rendition of the great “Notre Dame Victory March”? It was
conducted by TV personality and Notre Dame Alumnus Regis
Philbin.
-Harry Saltzman
for New York
Concert Review; New York, NY
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