Remember.. Three Parts of a note Attack (Beginning) Sustain
(Middle) Release (End) Match each part of the note for the perfect
sound
Slide 6
Remember.. No fluffy!
Slide 7
Remember.. Low notes reach for high notes
Slide 8
Remember.. Discipline is always
Slide 9
Remember.. Articulation is your friend!
Slide 10
TThis will be our reply to violence: to make music more
intensely, more beautifully, more devotedly than ever before.
-Leonard Bernstein
Slide 11
Without music life would be a mistake. Friedrich Wilhelm
Nietzsche
Slide 12
TTo achieve great things, two things are necessary; a plan, and
not quite enough time. -Leonard Bernstein
Slide 13
TThe key to the mystery of a great artist is that for reasons
unknown, he will give away his energies and his life just to make
sure that one note follows another... and leaves us with the
feeling that something is right in the world. --Leonard
Bernstein
Slide 14
MMusic washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.
~Berthold Auerbach
Slide 15
AA painter paints pictures on canvas. But musicians paint their
pictures on silence. ~Leopold Stokowski
Slide 16
LLess is more CContent dictates form GGod is in the details
--Stephen Sondehim
Slide 17
MMusic is your own experience, your thoughts, your wisdom. If
you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn. --Charlie
Parker
Slide 18
TThe second fiddle. I can get plenty of first violinists, but
to find someone who can play the second fiddle with
enthusiasm-that's a problem. And if we have no second fiddle, we
have no harmony. -Leonard Bernstein
Slide 19
MMusic can name the unnameable and communicate the unknowable.
--Leonard Bernstein
Slide 20
OOrder DDesign TTension CComposition BBalance LLight HHarmony
TTaken from "Sunday in the Park with George" Book by James Lapine,
Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Slide 21
Music never stays in one place You cant make 100 notes sound
beautiful until you can make 1 note sound beautiful Your instrument
can not make a mistake, only the mind makes mistakes Articulation
is your friend Low notes are drawn to High Notes Short notes are
drawn to long notes Music does not need to be hard to be
good...
Slide 22
Congratulations to Meagan Parker Drum Major of the 2014
Marching Bobcats!
Slide 23
I. DEFINITION Being dependable in carrying out obligations and
duties. Showing reliability and consistency in words and conduct.
Being accountable for your own actions. Being committed to active
involvement in your school and community. II. QUOTES Hold yourself
responsible for a higher standard than anybody expects of you.
Never excuse yourself. (Henry Ward Beecher) III.
DISCUSSIONS/QUESTIONS How do you interpret this quote? February
7
Slide 24
I. DEFINITION Being dependable in carrying out obligations and
duties. Showing reliability and consistency in words and conduct.
Being accountable for your own actions. Being committed to active
involvement in your school and community. II. QUOTE Well done is
better than well said. (Benjamin Franklin) III.
DISCUSSIONS/QUESTIONS What are the benefits when we expect more of
ourselves than others? February 18
Slide 25
I. DEFINITION Being dependable in carrying out obligations and
duties. Showing reliability and consistency in words and conduct.
Being accountable for your own actions. Being committed to active
involvement in your school and community. II. QUOTES Hold yourself
responsible for a higher standard than anybody expects of you.
Never excuse yourself. (Henry Ward Beecher) We are what we
repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.
(Aristotle) Well done is better than well said. (Benjamin Franklin)
III. DISCUSSIONS/QUESTIONS * How do you interpret each quote? * How
do you set a good example for others? * What are the benefits when
we expect more of ourselves than others? February 24 Review
Slide 26
All Study Guides are due Friday March 21 st !
Slide 27
Every Tuesday 4-5 All are welcome!
Slide 28
Tuesday April 29 Brass Ensemble, Flute Choir 6:30 PM
Slide 29
Thursday May 1 Jazz Band-6:00 Percussion Ensembles-6:45 Wind
Ensemble-7:30
Slide 30
Check the Missed Rehearsal sheet to see what you missed! Items
on the list can be made up on the next Theory/Make-up Day
Slide 31
March 20 April 10 4:00-6:00 Parent Meeting after rehearsal
March 20 th 6:00-6:30
Slide 32
The following students owe for Candy Money. Ashley Haithcock
$120 DeShaun McDonald $60 Ishmael Strickland $60 Jasmine Allen $66
David Foggin $60 Eniledy Morales $60 Isaac Rodrigues $60 Kara
Roseboro-Laboy $60 Hunter Sapp $60 Brandon Delapp $60 Luis Sanchez
$60 McKayla Teague $120
Slide 33
The following students owe for the Beach Trip. Isaiah
Butler-Johnson $69.55 Chase Smith $117.50 JB Hurley $60 Meagan
Parker $45 Cole Brown $200 Brandon Delapp $175
Slide 34
Slide 35
" Georgia on My Mind " is a song by Hoagy Carmichael and Stuart
Gorrell, closely associated with the cover version by Ray Charles,
a native of Georgia, who recorded it for his 1960 album The Genius
Hits the Road. It became the official state song of the State of
Georgia in 1979.
Slide 36
Written in 1930 by Hoagy Carmichael (music) and Stuart Gorrell
(lyrics). Gorrell wrote the lyrics for Carmichael's sister, Georgia
Carmichael. However, the lyrics of the song are ambiguous enough to
refer either to the state or to a woman named "Georgia".
Carmichael's 1965 autobiography, Sometimes I Wonder, records the
origin: a friend, saxophonist and bandleader Frankie Trumbauer,
suggested: "Why don't you write a song called 'Georgia'? Nobody
lost much writing about the South." Thus, the song is universally
believed to have been written about the state.
Slide 37
The song was first recorded on September 15, 1930, in New York
by Hoagy Carmichael and His Orchestra with Bix Beiderbecke on muted
cornet and Hoagy Carmichael on vocals. It featured Eddie Lang on
guitar. The recording was part of Beiderbecke's last recording
session. [ The recording was released as Victor 23013 with "One
Night in Havana". In 2014, the recording was inducted in the Grammy
Hall of Fame.
Slide 38
Georgia, Georgia The whole day through (the whole day through)
Just an old sweet song Keeps Georgia on my mind (Georgia on my
mind) I'm say Georgia, Georgia A song of you (a song of you) Comes
as sweet and clear As moonlight through the pines
Slide 39
Other arms reach out to me Other eyes smile tenderly Still in
peaceful dreams I see The road leads back to you I said Georgia, oh
Georgia No peace I find (peace I find) Just an old sweet song Keeps
Georgia on my mind (Georgia on my mind)
Slide 40
In the Mood was written by Joe Garland and made famous by The
Glenn Miller Orchestra Written and recorded in the 1930s and
1940s
Slide 41
Who's the lovin' daddy with the beautiful eyes What a pair o'
lips, I'd like to try 'em for size I'll just tell him, "Baby, won't
you swing it with me" Hope he tells me maybe, what a wing it will
be So, I said politely "Darlin' may I intrude" He said "Don't keep
me waitin' when I'm in the mood"
Slide 42
First I held him lightly and we started to dance Then I held
him tightly what a dreamy romance And I said "Hey, baby, it's a
quarter to three There's a mess of moonlight, won't-cha share it
with me" "Well" he answered "Baby, don't-cha know that it's rude To
keep my two lips waitin' when they're in the mood"
Slide 43
In the mood, that's what he told me In the mood, and when he
told me In the mood, my heart was skippin' It didn't take me long
to say "I'm in the mood now" In the mood for all his kissin' In the
mood his crazy lovin' In the mood what I was missin' It didn't take
me long to say "I'm in the mood now"
Slide 44
" Monday, Monday " is a 1966 song written by John Phillips and
recorded by The Mamas & the Papas for their 1966 album If You
Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears. It was the group's only number one
hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. Phillips said that he wrote the
song quickly, in about 20 minutes. This song includes a false
ending, when there is a pause before the coda of the song, and goes
up a half note for the bridges and refrains of the song. It was the
second consecutive number one hit song in the U.S. to contain a
false ending, succeedingGood Lovin' by the Young Rascals.
Slide 45
Monday Monday, so good to me, Monday Monday, it was all I hoped
it would be Oh Monday morning, Monday morning couldn't guarantee
That Monday evening you would still be here with me. Monday Monday,
can't trust that day, Monday Monday, sometimes it just turns out
that way Oh Monday morning, you gave me no warning of what was to
be Oh Monday Monday, how yould cou leave and not take me. Every
other day, every other day, Every other day of the week is fine,
yeah But whenever Monday comes, but whenever Monday comes You can
find me cryin' all of the time
Slide 46
" When the Saints Go Marching In ", often referred to as " The
Saints ", is an American gospel hymn. The precise origins of the
song are not known. Though it originated as a Christian hymn, it is
often played by jazz bands. The song is sometimes confused with a
similarly titled composition "When the Saints are Marching In" from
1896 by Katharine Purvis (lyrics) and James Milton Black
(music).