Heritage Band and Chorus - SJO Daily https://sjodaily.com Tue, 29 Oct 2019 16:34:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://sjodaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-sjo-daily-logo-32x32.png Heritage Band and Chorus - SJO Daily https://sjodaily.com 32 32 Heritage Marching Band finishes season with great memories https://sjodaily.com/2019/10/29/heritage-marching-band-finishes-season-with-great-memories/ Tue, 29 Oct 2019 16:34:10 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=5381 BY DANI TIETZ dani@mahometnews.com The 2019 Heritage High School Marching band season provided students with a “suitcase of memories.” The show titled “Time After Time” landed the Hawks first place at the Danville Viking Invitational and the Effingham Invitational. The group also captured Outstanding Percussion and Outstanding Visual honors in […]

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BY DANI TIETZ
dani@mahometnews.com

The 2019 Heritage High School Marching band season provided students with a “suitcase of memories.”

The show titled “Time After Time” landed the Hawks first place at the Danville Viking Invitational and the Effingham Invitational. The group also captured Outstanding Percussion and Outstanding Visual honors in Danville and Oustanding Music in Effingham.

From the moment students stepped onto the field for band camp in August, they bought into Director Justin Lee’s vision.

“I loved our show this year,” Drum Major Jada Davis said. “I loved the “Time After Time” theme, and from the beginning, I knew it was a show that would fit our group well.”

In her first year as drum major, Davis had her sights set on a first-place trophy, but even more, she wanted her band to experience the same environment that she did as an underclassmen.

Setting down her flute after seven years, Davis said, “It was the position where I thought I could have the most impact.”

Coming out of band camp, the Hawks had their music memorized and about two-thirds of their drill in place.

The Hawks were scheduled to perform at Monticello on Sept. 14, but Lee pulled them out early to add the final details before the competition.

“I didn’t feel we were at our best,” Lee said. “It wasn’t because they lacked effort; it was because I had taken their enthusiasm and pushed too much on them too early.”

Instead of throwing the group into the competition, Lee called the band to the practice field where they tightened up their performance in preparation for Danville the next weekend.

The group saw their efforts pay off quickly.

“The highlight of the season for me was the first performance at Danville in September,” Davis said.

“Coming off the field, I knew that we just had the best run of the show so far in the season. Standing on the field during awards the nerves were hitting me and I wasn’t sure if we were going to pull it off.

“When they announced ‘first place goes to Heritage High School,’ it was the best feeling.”

Lee said the win helped the performers get into the “we’ve got this” mindset.

“At that point, we considered the ‘bones’ of the show to be in place, and every rehearsal became about making each section have the maximum impact possible,” Lee said.

The Hawks went back to work. Lee shared the original judge feedback with their music in the background with his students.

“Some tapes have one or two things we can use, others are eight minutes of gold, and this year we had a few of those,” Lee said.

Together, they go line-by-line, looking for one or two improvements they can make that fufill their long-term vision for the show.

“Every judge looks for different things,” Lee said. “We need to find that common idea that gives it clarity and can also be taught in the little time we have.”

Lee said that by the time the Hawks got to Effingham in October, the show was “second-nature, and had a really energetic, sharp feel to it.”

Davis said that as her time with the Heritage Marching band comes to an end, she knows she was part of something special.

“(Marching band) isn’t your typical sport or club,” Davis said.

“In marching band, you get to do a little bit of everything — using both your mental and physical strength.

“As I leave my last marching band season, I’ll miss all the crazy memories at band camp, the insane bus rides to competitions, and all the inside jokes from rehearsals.

“But most of all, I’ll miss being part of something big in a small school. Our band makes up 25-percent of our student body and that is something pretty incredible to be a part of in a small school.”

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Heritage High School Marching Band prepares for competition season https://sjodaily.com/2019/08/13/heritage-high-school-marching-band-prepares-for-competition-season/ Tue, 13 Aug 2019 13:25:24 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=4606 BY DANI TIETZ dani@sjodaily.com Broadlands, Ill. – After five hours of band camp for five nights last week, the Heritage High School Marching Band is in a good place. With its first competition performance on Sept 14 at Monticello High School, the band of 35 has about 50 percent of […]

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BY DANI TIETZ
dani@sjodaily.com

Broadlands, Ill. – After five hours of band camp for five nights last week, the Heritage High School Marching Band is in a good place.

With its first competition performance on Sept 14 at Monticello High School, the band of 35 has about 50 percent of its music and about 70 percent of its charts memorized.

Music Director Justin Lee said the progress is because of the great staff, the compassionate seniors and a good group of musicians who worked hard.

“This group has a great group of seniors as leaders — they don’t assert their age, they really do a good job of using their experience to help younger players,” Lee said.

Joining Lee’s team is first-year color guard instructor Sarah Friedel from SIU-E, Michael Olson from the San Francisco Conservatory, in his third year helping the low brass, Illinois Wesleyan graduate and Armstrong-Potomac Band Director Beau Biedscheid continues in his third year with the woodwinds and Heritage alum and Eastern Illinois University graduate Abigail Stites will work with the percussion.

Lee looks to have all of the students ready to pass their playing tests by Labor Day.

“Each night is a mix of music rehearsals, marching fundamentals, and learning the show,” Lee said. “We rely heavily on peer teaching and modeling, and for years that has worked well.”

Heritage High School’s 2019 Competition Show titled “Time After Time” was arranged by Luke McMillan, a marching band show design studio based in Texas. The show includes “Clocks” by Coldplay and “Time After Time” by Cyndi Lauper.

“I want them to approach the music with the same passion and intensity as the composers,” Lee said.

Lee also said the music fits the 2019 marching band’s experience and skill level well.

The Heritage community rallied around the students and staff each night, providing a large dinner for the performers.

“That is essential bonding time, and as the week goes on, we see the benefit of that time,” Lee said.

But the fun did not end there.

Lee said the group also ate way too much ice cream each night, and the week ended with a pool party at Miller’s Aquatics.

Heritage will perform on Sept. 14 in Monticello, Sept. 28 at Danville and on Oct. 19, the competition season ends in Effingham.

As always, the marching band will perform its show at the Meet the Player night at Heritage High School in November.

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