Tag: houlton maine music

  • Check Out The Trombone Player…Try To Sit Still And Not Have The Music Move You.

    Grading The Music, ME State Level Jazz Judges.
    Hard Job To Determine The Winner When Judging The Maine State Jazz Festival Musical Performances.

    Sunday after church in Maine, my Dad would crank up the big band sound.

    On the stereo in the front room with the Sunday weekend paper or while reading a classic. He played the clarinet in a band with Rod Palmer who was the leader in a lot of local musical groups. Folks danced, enjoyed music and the World War Two era band sound really hit me during the Maine State Jazz Festival in Houlton Maine recently.

    Check out the trombone player in the video linked above.

    When you see, hear, feel the music being made it is a neat experience. His face contorts, expressions pour out. His body moves to the groove, locks on the beat. His feet can not stay planted on the floor. One leg lifts, flares sideways as he works the slide. Leans, bobs, weaves and tilts to find just the right note. Blast off. He has left the room. The judges notice his spark, his talent.

    Maine State Jazz Festival Finals Video, Houlton ME

    Not just playing any old note but finding a certain sound.

    The Maine school jazz players in their tight knit groups are not just dead pan creating the notes. No no… all having over the top fun making the music. That kind of musical entertainment is memorable, lasts and you want more. And it is not one way, because the audience responds. Feeds, coaxes, teases the players just as much as the other way around. They need each other. Go together like peas in a pod. Just like momma always said. Along with other wisdom, something to do with a box of chocolates.

    Music or anything made in life with passion, it is what practice does and sheer love for music can create for others to enjoy.

    These 1940’s songs in particular hit me during the recent state musical competition. Because had heard the tunes before. A lot. Just not recently. But bang. Saturated, infested in a good infectious way inside the four walls all comes back. The entire household affected with it growing up on a Maine farm. So this week have dialed in on XM the big band sound. Have a renewed interest in that genre for now. All due to working the jazz festival with a slew of other music boosters last weekend.

    Television took its strangle hold. And move over. The couch and clicker became more popular than dance music. The time spent cutting the rug on the dance floor with live music and the big band sound and your favorite gal not the norm any more. There was always a dance some where close to hit. And as a kid remember the parents, grown ups and family that got together every Sunday afternoon talking. Me listening as a little grasshopper when they took turns on who’s house to visit this weekend.

    Family arriving with car loads of laughing, animated kids with imaginations. And sometimes the parents if you could get close enough to eavesdrop with tales, pretty wild stories about dances. Ones up country, over the border into Canada. Out to Nickerson Lake.

    There was always a dance some place if you could drop everything and say sure, let’s go when the call from your friends came in on the party line.

    People danced to live music. Boy is it fun. And good exercise inside and out. The songs keep playing. In the shower you do your version humming, singing and hey no one’s looking right? A little dancing. Because you can not help it. When the intensity of the songs that get turned up high, loud enough. To cause the sway, movement, stir. Can’t help it. Why would you want to try to contain it? It opens up all the windows and doors inside. You let go. The sun shines brightly, goes in the eyes and ears. Then radiates outward like true joy.

    Nickerson Lake had a pavilion. A big resort building called Crescent Park with a bowling alley, concessions, and dances. A fun spot where some folks leaped from the second floor into the lake because I guess the music just got too hot. To cool off from all that tuneage and dancing. Laughing, enjoying the music that was made from scratch from local musicians. Not “B 7” clicked on the Wurlitzer or Seaberg juke box. And stacks of wax. Playing what you’re saying for golden oldies.

    Music was everywhere.

    Someone in your group knew how to play at least one instrument according to my parents. Just a given. There were also cottages, camps for vacation week rentals around the Pavilion at Crescent Park in New Limerick Maine. The building a place now just in memories but long gone, torn down that was on the gravelly north shore of Nickerson Lake. Wonder where there is a dance tonight with live music?

    Maine, big state, less people, more natural and simple.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers, ME Broker
    207.532.6573
    info@mooersrealty.com

  • Maine State Jazz Show Choir Festival Music Competition In Houlton ME A Big Success!

    Not Just Singing, Expressing, Feeling The Music, Doing It With Dance.
    Not Just Singing, Expressing, Feeling The Music, Doing It With Dance As A Group.

    For the second year, Houlton Maine was the host town for 39 high school music programs competing in the Jazz Show Choir festival.

    Houlton Maine’s music director Joe Fagnant says it takes hundreds of workers and he has them in the local music boosters program, past students, parents, other teachers. Here is a video splash of just a taste of the event with schools performing from all over the state of Maine’s music programs on the middle and high school level.

    The talents of these Maine music programs and students is so great and the productions so tight, that I still find myself singing, humming songs on from the event.

    The singers, dancing so vibrant, full of energy that to have that kind of quality right in our own backyard is impressive, special, a source of Maine home town pride.

    Performing before a crowd, being part of group and learning the fine art of singing, dancing and competing helps shape the citizens of tomorrow. A group that will appreciate, fund and keep fine arts alive for the next generation of Mainers. Here is a recap of last year’s performance to that was just as electric, sharp, memorable. Roll the Maine music video Jimmy.

    Outdoor concerts will be starting soon at my home town’s amphitheatre. And the gift of music, the appearance of it in our every day life in Southern Aroostook County is evident in this McGill’s Band music performance video.

    We are lucky to live in Maine. Music is one more reason.

    I’m Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

    207.532.6573

    info@mooersrealty.com

  • Waterville, Ellsworth, Mount Desert, Lawrence, Hampden, Houlton Maine Show Choirs Compete.

    35 Maine High Schools Compete For Vocal Music Title In Houlton Maine
    35 Maine High Schools Compete For Vocal Music Title In Houlton Maine
    Imagine 35 Maine schools including Stearn/Schneck, Falmouth, Woodland, Mt Blue, Caribou, the ones in the headline and many many more converging on Aroostook County over the weekend.

    Houlton Maine the venue for the festival that determined the division one and two middle and high school jazz show choir top two schools. Mount Desert and Houlton the top two in this video I was lucky to capture while MC’ing the afternoon competition. Maine has talented high schools whether it is sports, band, music or academics.
    Watch the Maine State High School Music Show Choir Video

    Maine..hear her whispering your name? Get here as quick as you can.

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers

  • Maine Vocal State Jazz Music Festival In Houlton Maine.

    Music Is A Big Part Of Day To Day Life In Houlton Maine.
    Music Is A Big Part Of Day To Day Life In Houlton Maine.

    The local Houlton Maine motels are busy, area restaurants and diners will be hopping.    And over 35 Maine music programs will compete in the Maine State Vocal Jazz Music Festival in Houlton this weekend which requires lots of local volunteer support to coordinate.  The local facility in Houlton is undergoing a major expansion with the new Houlton Community Arts Center building project. Ground breaking for the project starts May 1st, 2009.

    Meanwhile, McGill’s Community Band has been practicing through out March and the area looks forward to outdoor concerts at the Houlton Amphitheatre behind Cary Library thru out the summer and fall.

    Maine REALTOR Andrew Mooers