Horn Ensemble Photo
Wednesday, January 16th, 2008
Thanks to Professor Massinon who submitted this great photo of the APSU Horn Ensemble after their recent concert!

Thanks to Professor Massinon who submitted this great photo of the APSU Horn Ensemble after their recent concert!
(from left to right: Composer Anthony Plog, flugelhorn soloist Professor Richard Steffen, Director of Bands Dr. Gregory Wolynec, and composer Dr. Jeffrey Wood)
The Wind Ensemble concert last Tuesday evening, under the direction of Dr. Gregory Wolynec, was a truly special event for the Department of Music. Two moving premieres, including a piece by Austin Peay Professor of Music Dr. Jeffrey Wood, were juxtaposed by a special surprise in honor of Professor Richard Steffen’s 25 years of service at Austin Peay.
The program opened with Canzona duodecimi toni by Giovanni Gabrieli, performed antiphonally from the balconies by the brass. Following this performance, the wind ensemble joined soloist Professor Richard Steffen for the premiere of Contemplations for Flugelhorn and Wind Ensemble by Anthony Plog. Several days earlier, Plog traveled from Germany to Clarksville to work with the ensemble in rehearsal and to attend this concert. While Professor Steffen knew that he was giving the premiere performance of this piece, he did know that the piece was dedicated to him and was commissioned by Austin Peay alumni and by University Bands in his honor.
Following the performance, Steffen was presented with the dedication, and many alumni enthusiastically acknowledged his service and contributions from the audience. Backstage, a phone call was waiting for him—his former teacher John Haynie, Professor Emeritus at the University of North Texas, was waiting to congratulate him.
The second half of the concert began with Suite francaise by Darius Milhaud and concluded with Dr. Wood’s Freylekhs and Fugue. This electrifying work is described by the composer in his program notes as, “a kind of ‘structured fantasy,’ in the spirit of klezmer.” Three melodies/gestures are used throughout the work and come together to bring the piece to a dramatic close. Several wind players enjoyed virtuosic solos that highlight the klezmer style of the piece.
Congratulations to everyone who made this landmark event possible!
As we near the end of the semester, many evening concerts feature a variety of instrumental studios here at Austin Peay. Concerts over the last couple of weeks have included mixed brass ensembles, trumpet ensemble, horn choir, flute choir, clarinet choir, and double reed ensemble. Upcoming concerts will feature string ensembles, guitar ensemble, and jazz combo.
The concert last Tuesday marked the inaugural performance of the APSU Double Reed Ensemble, which I direct. It was a lot of fun to prepare for our concert and to perform for such a receptive audience. Our program included a variety of Renaissance pieces as well as an arrangement of a ragtime piece by Scott Joplin. Pictured below are the members of the first ever APSU Bassoon Quartet (from left to right: myself (Dr. Nora Lewis, director) Jessica Alter, Kedric Hill, and A.J. Burger.

Congratulations to the Governors Own Marching Band on an outstanding season! Yesterday marked the last home football game of the season, and the GOMB gave an exciting performance. I took this picture from the fifty-yard line during halftime, and Mario Kee is the soloist in the foreground. Throughout this season, the GOMB performed for a wonderful crowd, enthusiastic about Austin Peay’s return to the Ohio Valley Conference.
In addition to performing at all of the home games and traveling to Samson for an away game, GOMB hosted the annual Mid South Marching Invitational at Austin Peay on October 27. Thirty high school bands participated, and it was a great opportunity for Austin Peay faculty members to visit with Austin Peay alumni who are now band directors and who brought their own bands to compete. Austin Peay was also one of the locations for the Bands of America Regional Championships on October 6. GOMB volunteers helped to keep the event running smoothly and performed twice, in exhibition performances.
Undergraduate students of all majors are selected by audition to participate in GOMB. Every member receives some tuition assistance for participation. The GOMB is directed by Andrea E. Brown, and Andrew Gaskill, Chris Gee, and Sarah Turner were the drum majors for the 2007-2008 season.
Following the Dimensions concert last night, art song composer Lori Laitman gave a master class for APSU voice students this morning. Sopranos Lindsey Claytor, Amanda Lowery, Rachel McNamara, and Jordan Stewart and tenor Christopher Bailey each performed a different song by Laitman. Anne Glass, Dr. Mabry, and Laitman were pianists for the class. After each performance, Laitman offered interpretive insight into performance of her songs, and several themes emerged.
Laitman emphasized the inherent flexibility of each song, and she showed how her music has enormous capacity for expressive freedom, particularly at the ends of phrases. She showed how the performer can become the speaker of the poem to capture the sweeping musical gestures and nuance that can’t be included in the score. The audience also learned how Laitman uses a confluence of sounds in her settings. She is concerned both with the meaning of the text as well as the sounds and colors of the actual words.
To end the class, Laitman shared a preview of a work in progress.