Archive for November 10th, 2008

Numbers Plummet In Beverly Elementary Band Program

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Elementary students, it seems, are less interested in playing the clarinet than they were last year.

And the trumpet. And the flute. And any other instrument that forms the foundation of the Beverly High School band. The number of fifth graders in the band program has dropped from nearly 80 students last year to 32 this year after the district eliminated the full time band instructor position due to budget cuts.

Students who play an instrument in elementary school tend to go on to play in the middle and high school bands.

“I’d like to say we’ve consistently been one of the best bands on the North Shore,” said high school band director Ray Novack.

So he and middle school band director Adam Costa are a little worried about the future if their feeder program fizzles out.

“I’m not ready to push the panic button yet, because I’m thinking it’s a transitional year, and it will improve,” Novack said.

“Right now, Ray and I are just racking our brains to figure out why this has just plummeted,” Costa said.

The elementary strings program, which was just expanded into the third grade and is still taught by a full-time teacher during the day, has nearly 100 kids.

The band program, on the other hand, focuses on wind and percussion instruments. Students at each elementary school get one lesson a week, the same as last year.

On Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Costa goes to Cove, Centerville and Ayers. On Tuesday and Thursday, Novack goes to Hannah and North Beverly. Then they both teach at their respective middle and high schools during the day, and often after school.

“We agreed to do this knowing it would keep things afloat, but I think the way Ray and I see it, it’s a Band-Aid,” Costa said.

Yet Novack said he’s also thankful for the district’s support.

“We’re lucky we still have it in the schools,” he said. “Because of budget crises, music is usually first on the chopping block.”

Indeed, in early spring the elementary music program was a proposed budget cut, said Assistant Superintendent Marie Galinski.

“This is something we wanted to try this year, because we wanted to save the program,” she said. The new structure of the band program is less expensive than last year, but it still costs more than what it’s making.

“It’s not a wash,” Galinski said.

She said she’s also not sure why participation is half what it was last year.

“I think it might pick up again after people see how it’s run this year,” she said. However, the district may send out a survey to get a better sense of what the problem is.

“We have to evaluate it this year,” she said.

The theory was echoed by parents who have fifth-graders in the band program.

“You’ve got to get the feedback,” said Brian Miller, whose son Luke plays the saxophone at Centerville. He walks to school or Miller drives him, so taking the bus isn’t an issue.

“It’s important to find out if that really is the reason,” he said. “It could just be that this year there aren’t as many kids that are musically inclined.”

Parent Julie Rowe’s son Daniel plays the trumpet. He normally takes the bus, but she drives him to Cove Monday mornings for the music lesson.

“For other people, that might be a burden,” she said.

Yet the silver lining could be the students who do practice at 7:30 a.m. are committed. Many kids who start an instrument in fifth grade go on to play in the high school band but not all.

“If they show more dedication to begin with, they’re more likely to stick with it,” Miller said. “You’re not going to lose as many.”

By the same token, Rowe said she knows a lot of kids who are taking private lessons or learning an instrument at a private elementary school.

“I’m hopeful they’re going to wind up in the band in the high school,” she said.

Even if the feeder program doesn’t bounce back, Rowe said she thinks it will all work out.

“I’m optimistic and hopeful even if we have half the numbers, we’ll have a good band,” she said.

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Raiding The Lost Verve

Monday, November 10th, 2008

I listened to James Taylor’s new album, called “Covers,” not long before I watched Steven Spielberg’s “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.” I came to the same conclusion about both of these regrettable projects: What a shame that these two vastly talented men have been spinning their wheels in the same lucrative rut for so long.

Mr. Taylor’s album is, as the title states, a collection of other people’s hits, redone in his mellow, laid-back style. With the exception of “Wichita Lineman,” none of the songs are appreciable improvements over the originals. The overriding impression listening to it is that it promises high yield in a commercial sense while posing a very low risk to a star who has been much too firmly fixed at the same point on the horizon for far too long.

There is always the impression that the mere obviousness of its huge budget will atone for a multiplicity of other deficiencies.

Harrison Ford, charming half-smile intact, is reprising a character last seen on screens nearly 20 years ago. Mr. Ford tries hard not to seem as embarrassed by the knuckleheaded proceedings as Pierce Brosnan did in “Mamma Mia!” He, generally, succeeds on chutzpah alone. And, if the older Indy sports a few more facial lines and a slightly thicker waistline, he will always be up to the hair-raising acrobatics as long as there are testosterone rich stuntmen available.

The more familiar Indiana Jones-ish character in “Crystal Skull” is Mutt Williams, an attitudinal young man whose paternal origin will come as no surprise to anyone who has seen “The Empire Strikes Back.” Mutt is played by Shia LaBeouf, actor and occasional bad boy, whose much-heralded great future in Hollywood is not any more apparent here than it was in the god-awful “Transformers.”

The real casualty of “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” is Spielberg himself. The dazzling expectations occasioned by “Duel,” and “Jaws” were ultimately undone by “E.T.,” “Raiders,” and “Jurassic Park.” Their phenomenal successes beckoned, like a veiled temptress, to the director to “come away with me.”

The fact that the creature at the climax of “Crystal Skull” was reminiscent of the alien in “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” was probably calculated. I was only reminded of the promise abandoned.

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Fall Sparkler

Monday, November 10th, 2008

The promise of floral fireworks, paired with a wowsa wine taste and chocolate, my sweet, had 400 avant gardeners sipping, grazing and touring our twinkling Victorian crystal palace in Schenley Park at Wednesday’s splendid Wines Under Glass Sparkler.

Chamber music wafted over the celestial ambiance as we wended down through the Tropical Forest and into the party spaces that opened to the outdoor terrace on the balmy eve. There were frissons of excitement over exquisite Tiffany bijoux that were captured by several lucky key buyers, but it was the mountains of lordy-I’ve-met-my-maker Sarris Chocolates that created the most buzz.

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