Laguna band stand
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Barbara Diamond
The Laguna Beach Community Concert Band was a pipe dream in 1998.
“We had eight members and our audience was family and really good
friends,” said Carol Reynolds, one of the founders.
Today, there are 50 members, including the original eight:
founders Theresa Marino, William Nicholls and Reynolds; Niko Theris,
Kathryn Sanders, Dennis White, Hunter Cook and Allen Cohen.
“To see this group now from the way they were makes me cry,” fan
Sande St. John said.
The audience stretches from one end of Orange County to the other.
This month alone the band has scheduled two performances at the
Sawdust Festival and one at the Nixon Library. In July, the band
played concerts in San Clemente, at all three Laguna summer art
festivals and at Concordia University.
The band is booked for a return engagement at the Sawdust in
September, and is organizing a revival of the Oktoberfest tradition
in Laguna.
“We have hired an oom-pah-pah band, and invited the Orange
Community Band and Golden West Pops from Huntington Beach to play in
a concert with us on Oct. 24 at Tivoli Too,” Reynolds said.
Reynolds hadn’t touched a French horn in 25 years when she hatched
the community band with Marino and Nicholls.
Not that Reynolds ever lost touch with music. She played piano,
still does, and taught junior high school choir before retiring to
Laguna Beach.
Marino hadn’t picked up a flute in 20-plus years when they
launched the band.
Band member Ken Hansen, vice president of A. G. Edwards & Sons
Inc. brokerage house, played the stock market, not the bass trombone
since graduating from college.
“I hadn’t touched a clarinet in 48 years,” said Sheryl Caverly
trumping the others.
Does she love it? Caverly was on the bandstand for the Aug. 10
Sawdust concert, just two weeks after open heart surgery.
“The band has succeed beyond my wildest dreams,” Reynolds said. “A
lot of the credit goes to Bill Nicholls and his wonderful attitude.”
Nicholls conducts and plays trombone. He shares the podium with Ed
Peterson, with whom he attended college.
“We played together at Cal State Long Beach,” said Peterson, also
a trombonist.
Peterson went on to earn a master’s degree. Nicholls has a
doctorate in music.
Besides, conducting and performing, Nicholls sprinkles little
tidbits of musical lore throughout the concerts.
“John Phillip Sousa commemorated events, people and things in his
marches,” Nicholls told a Sawdust audience at the band’s most recent
performance. “The Washington Post [newspaper] bears the name of one
of his most well-know marches.”
The Laguna Beach band performs a wide variety of music: marches,
of course; concert band classics composed by Rossini,
Vaughhan-Williams and others; show tunes from Broadway musicals;
Dixieland and Big Band selections.
A repertoire of patriotic music captured a Memorial Day audience
at Main Beach that included Pacific Symphony Maestro Carl St. Clair.
Nicholls and Peterson drop their batons and pick up trombones to
perform with the Swing Set, along with Bill Graves and Theris, one of
the original eight band members, to bring back the sounds of Tommy
Dorsey and Glenn Miller. The brass section includes trumpeters Mike
Anzis, Tony Brunning, Bill Foster, Ray Lowery, Bill Sharpe and David
Stucker, saxophonists Don Atkinson, Carol Sporleder, Brian Cameron,
Dave Williams, Jack Delora, Sebastian Vela and Cohen; bass player
Bobbette Cameron, guitarist Tony Steller, percussionist Paul Meese
and pianist and singer Linda Hughes.
On any given night guests vocalists might include Arts Commission
member Pat Kollenda, who can give “All That Jazz” a sexy twist even
dressed demurely in blazer; or 12-year-old Sophia Tupy with a pure
soprano rendition of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”
The youngster is carrying on in her mother’s tradition. Beverly
Tupy was a choir student of Reynolds in 1972.
There was a time when every school had a choir and a band.
Community bands were a treasured tradition.
Before phonographs and radios, folks listened to live music or no
music. Bandstands were the centerpieces of parks across the country.
Kids played tag and young couples surreptitiously held hands while
their elders raptly listened to the music, enthusiastically, if not
perfectly played. Think “Music Man.”
Originally sponsored by the city Recreation Department, and still
the recipient of Business Improvement District and Community
Assistance grants from the city, the Laguna Beach Community Concert
Band is now part of the Irvine Valley College Emeritus program.
Grants have also been received from the Festival of Arts and the
Laguna Beach Rotary Club.
Private donations also are appreciated. Many of the band members
are donors. Categories are named for musical legends Sousa, $1,000
and up; Miller, $500 to $999; Irving Berlin, $250 to $499; Count
Basie, $100 to $249; Duke Ellington, $50 to $99; Meredith Wilson, $25
to $49; and Louis Armstrong, $5 to $24 -- a span of talent almost as
diverse as the band and the music it plays.
The band will play next at 6 p.m., Monday and again at 10 a.m.,
Sept. 5, at the Sawdust Festival, 935 Laguna Canyon Road.
For more information about the band or to explore possible
participation, call Reynolds at (949) 497-0986 or Marino at (949)
497-7308.
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