UCF’s Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band present a celebration of lively new music for winds and percussion.

The UCF Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band, the premiere ensembles in the UCF Bands Area, present Songs & Dances for Wind Orchestra, a celebration of lively new music for winds and percussion. Included on the program will be Burn, Concerto for Clarinet and Wind Ensemble, by Peter Meechan, featuring guest soloist and UCF Professor of Clarinet, Keith Koons; Wooden Dimes Ballet Suite, by James Stephenson; and the premiere of the new SOUL Suite, by Marie Douglas.

 

Student tickets: $10 with code ARTS4KNIGHTS24, valid UCF or student ID required

UCF Wind Ensemble & Symphonic Band Concert

 

Symphonic Band

 

Through the Looking Glass (2008), by Jess Langston Turner (b. 1983)

Burn, Concerto for Clarinet & Wind Ensemble (2022), by Peter Meechan (b. 1980)
Keith Koons, Soloist

Shenandoah (2019), by Omar Thomas (b. 1982)

There Are No Words (2015), by Jim Stephenson (b. 1969)

 

Wind Ensemble

 

Zoom (2021), by Scott Boerma (b. 1964)

Wooden Dimes Ballet Suite (2021), by Jim Stephenson (b. 1969)

SOUL Suite No. 1 (2023), by Marie Douglas (b. 1987)
-premiere-

 

Zoom (2021), by Scott Boerma (b. 1964) 

Scott Boerma explains of Zoom, “The word ‘zoom’ took on a new meaning during the pandemic [that started in 2020]. Meetings, classes, social gatherings, and holiday celebrations took the form of online video conferences and were generically called ‘zooms.’ Those of us in the musical profession often had to resort to makeshift, substitute forms of ensemble performances that often resembled these gatherings. One upside for me was a weekly zoom hang that developed with four of my closest friends (all university band conductors) from across the country. One of those friends is Jamie Nix, for whom I was commissioned by his former graduate students to write this piece, in celebration of his tenth year as director of wind ensembles at Columbus State University. A common theme in our weekly chats was our unbridled enthusiasm (and impatience) to get back to what we love: making live music with our students. All of us have felt like we’ve been feverishly revving our engines behind the starting line, breathlessly waiting to see the green flag fly, knowing that the checkered flag awaits on the other side. Well, start your engines … because here we go … full speed ahead!” 

 

Wooden Dimes Ballet Suite (2021), by Jim Stephenson (b. 1969) 

Wooden Dimes is Jim Stephenson’s first ballet, composed for the San Francisco Ballet. Once the original score was completed, Colonel Jason Fettig and “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band commissioned the Stephenson to create a concert suite for wind ensemble that would capture the most essential musical moments from the ballet, while still preserving the arc of the story. The original ballet was choreographed by Danielle Rowe, based on a period tale of a stage performer and her beloved from the early part of the twentieth century – Wooden Dimes: The Story of Betty Fine and Robert Alder. “Don’t take any wooden dimes” -- a saying used often in the 1920s, meaning: “Don’t be naïve,” or “don’t be fooled.” Betty and Robert have a love that they think they know and that they think will last forever, but situations, circumstance, and their evolution as people inevitably change their relationship and therefore their love, and it ends up being nothing like they’d predicted. 

 

SOUL Suite No. 1 (2023), by Marie Douglas (b. 1987)
Premiere Performance

Composer, Marie Douglas, explains that “the words ‘soul suite’ are an expression that I have used to describe the hip-hop production technique called the ‘beat switch,’ where the producer or DJ switches the beat from the current feel to another, within the same track or song. The new feel can be unrelated or related. The transition can be subtle and smoothly executed or jolting and unexpected. Justification for how the switch may occur and what it contains can range from a stylistic preference to something as fickle as how the composer feels that day. The soul suite is also what I have come to call my own compositional technique. Throughout Soul Suite No. 1, you will encounter figures that are idiomatic of many musical settings, from the western classical music realm, the southern hip-hop production scene, spirituals, as well as elements of gospel and r&b. Specifically from the production side, you will hear moments of distortion, reverb, timpani as 808 drums, trap hi-hats, and even a trombone soli in the style of a rap verse. This piece serves as the first installment in a series of compositions which I will create and dedicate to regions of the world honoring cultural staples and historical phenomena within the African diaspora. Overall, Soul Suite No. 1 is a piece that showcases the bricolage-like nature of genres such as neo-soul, hip-hop and, r&b and the experimental tendencies of these genres. It seeks to capture and celebrate the essence of many of the luminaries of these styles, making it a must-listen for fans of artists such as Jill Scott, Erykah Badu, Travis Scott, and OutKast. 

 


SYMPHONIC BAND ROSTER

*Principal

Flute

Logan Gryzbowski*
Abigail Johnson
Madison Mahaffey
Miriam Soto
Armaan Gandhi (piccolo)

Oboe

Christina Taylor*
Lauren Graves

Bassoon

Vera Fodor*
Lance Harmon
Teagan Ferrin

Clarinet

Ryan Jayne*
Jose Ojeda
Josh Lee
Jacob DaRocha
Taylor Windish
Deniel Lopez
Gwendolyn Greening

Bass Clarinet

Laura Diaz

Alto Saxophone

Gabriel Yeakey*
Aidan Schatteman

Tenor Saxophone

Natalie Bullock

Baritone Saxophone

Rachel Dieckmann

Trumpet

Adam Zapf*
Jose Matamoros
Dyaln O’Shea
Frankie Ruiz
Skyler Chittaluru
Kevin Love
Adam Hunt

Horn

Austin Jones*
Christopher Wagner
Alexys Jacobsen
Allyson Stocker
Kayla Herrmann

Trombone

Tate Hostetler*
Alexis Lau
Leila Owens

Bass Trombone

Martin Miranda

Euphonium

Hazel Fitzpatrick*
John La Cognata

Tuba

Joseph Negron*
Lauren Banta

Piano

Ally Day

Percussion

Nathaniel Woodall*
Jenson Smyle
Grace Singh
Caleb Schmaus
Samantha Matter
Emmaline Kealoha

WIND ENSEMBLE ROSTER

*Principal

Flute

Amanda Wiebelt*
Amelia Grant
Emily Mack (piccolo)
Jacob High
Emma Forrester

Oboe

Evan Psarakis*
Jonathan Meyers
Isabel Rivera (english horn)

Bassoon

Hazell Alonso*
Carmen Flint
Brenna Hellhake

Clarinet

Rim Benhadda*
Victor Acuna
Jaden Crawford
Katherine Nilaj
Victoria Rivera
Kevin Jimenez
Allison Rookey

Bass Clarinet

Peter Butlako

Alto Saxophone

Joanna Lung*
Kaia Leavitt

Tenor Saxophone

Samuel Soliz

Baritone Saxophone

Tanner Hollway

Trumpet

Kaley Rodriguez*
Luis Burke
Jacob Johnson
Phebe Nipper
Ayden Perez
John Penrod

Horn

Joshua Sanchez*
Ignacio Souchet
Cassidy Phillips
Blake Gassman
Grace Halula

Trombone

Miguel Fantin*
Jacob Stewart
Tristan Mahady

Bass Trombone

Ryan Polk

Euphonium

Kaitlin Oresky*
Jethro Tajan

Tuba

Andre Tran*
Blake Roberson

String Bass

Sebastian Rivera

Percussion

Christian Snedeker*
Ethan Nasypany
Michael Colbassani
Evan Carville
Logan Ruch
Zack Hoening

Piano

Lenny Green

Piano

Sasha O’Kane

Logos for UCF and Dr. Phillips Center
We extend particular gratitude to the staff and administration of Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts for their partnership over the past ten years.

Thank You to Our Supporters

Logos for LIFE at UCF, OUC The Reliable One, Florida Arts and Culture, Downtown Orlando, Rockley Family Foundation, and Sigma Alpha Iota Philanthropies Inc.

Sponsored in part by the State of Florida through the 
Division of Arts and Culture and the National Endowment for the Arts.

  • The Judith and David Albertson Endowment in the Arts
  • Cartwright Family Humanities & Arts Endowment
  • Phil and Jane Easterling
  • LIFE at UCF
  • Orlando Downtown Development Board
  • OUC – The Reliable One
  • Women’s Club at UCF, Inc.

Thank You to Our Festival Partners

  • Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts
  • National Young Composers Challenge
  • Orlando Family Stage
  • Orlando Shakes
  • Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra
  • UCF College of Health Professions and Sciences
  • UCF Global Perspectives and International Initiatives
  • UCF Rosen College of Hospitality Management
  • Winter Park Institute
  • WUCF