Wow, what an extraordinary experience! I sang two songs with the Grand Junction Symphony Orchestra during their annual Wells Fargo Evening Under the Stars free concert in Lincoln Park in Grand Junction Saturday evening. I'm still pinching myself to make sure it wasn't a dream.
The symphony kicks off each season with the free pops-type concert. Lucky for me, they included some vintage swing arrangements this year, and invited me to sing with them!
There is nothing like being surrounded by strings, brass, woodwinds, percussion played by wonderful musicians and friends. I still can't believe I got to sing with them!
We are so blessed to have such dedicated musicians who come together as a symphony orchestra in our community. I'm looking forward to the upcoming symphony season! The first concert is in September! Here is a link to the Grand Junction Symphony's website:
http://gjsymphony.org/
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Avalon Theatre is the ballpark of our cultural community
Colorado ranks fifth in the nation for concentration of
creative talent. Only New York, California, Massachusetts and Vermont place
higher, according to a State of Colorado’s Creative Economy report by the
Alliance for Creative Advantage (based in South Carolina).
So significant are the creative enterprises that they
comprise the fifth-largest employment sector in Colorado’s economy.
Our cultural amenities are increasingly attracting innovators,
businesses and tourists — and they all bring dollars and jobs to our state’s
cultural arts destinations. But Mesa County isn’t as high on that list as it
could and should be. That’s despite our burgeoning wine country, nationally renowned
Art on the Corner program and world-class outdoor adventure opportunities.
How do we engage, capitalize on and ride the Colorado
creative wave?
The Grand Junction City Council’s recent decision to add
$3 million to the Downtown Development Authority’s $3 million to fund a $14
million renovation of the Avalon Theatre is a bold move in that direction.
Harry Weiss, director of Grand Junction’s DDA, told me
back in May that...
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
The piano, basic walls and floor of my little music video cafe

I started out with the idea of a living room in a house where the pianist (Mike), sax-man (Warren), and I (vocalist) are rehearsing, but when I saw the little black and white tile squares for only $2.40 per square foot at Home Depot, I knew it had to be a small cafe instead of a living room. That tile just screamed cafe to me. And knowing I only needed six of those tile squares because the whole thing is only 3' wide by 2' deep, how could I resist?
I cut the three walls from old Grand Valley Magazine cover posters (felt strange cutting them up like that); my husband sprayed them with wall texture stuff and painted them yellow. I have no idea what color cafe walls are supposed to be, but yellow paint is what we had, so this cafe's walls are yellow.
The table cloths were cut from...
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Those frivolous nonessential arts
Ever wonder why the arts are the first to see their funding cut during unstable times? Ever wonder where the idea that arts are “nonessential services” comes from? I used to wonder that too.
The movie The Sound of Music had a profound effect on me as a child. I was too young certainly to understand its climate of politics and war and all that (I was only five or six), but what did take hold of me was the undeniable power of music as a survival tool. For all their...
The movie The Sound of Music had a profound effect on me as a child. I was too young certainly to understand its climate of politics and war and all that (I was only five or six), but what did take hold of me was the undeniable power of music as a survival tool. For all their...
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