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AHS concert to feature world premiere
Bernotas, who holds a Bachelor of Music degree from William Paterson University, has been an instrumental music teacher at Mountain Lakes High School in Mountain Lakes for many years. When he took the helm of the AHS Symphonic Band class on Oct. 28, many of the 64 students couldn't stop talking about how similar his and Santoro's teaching styles are. The two band directors worked together for three years at Mountain Lakes High School and were happy about collaborating again for the benefit of the AHS Symphonic Band.
"Listen around you and see if you can match it," he told the students as the room swelled with sound. "Everything else is relative to that."
Bernotas told each student to know the role they are supposed to play with their instruments in each composition. "Make these decisions and don't wait for someone to tell you," he said. One of his suggestions for learning their roles was to play while thinking of pictures that describe the music. For example, he described one section as a rubber ball bouncing erratically around the room. Beyond playing the right notes, musicians have to concentrate on articulating their sound to fully capture an audience, according to Bernotas. To generate the sound of a train curving around a bend, Bernotas told students to slur their notes. "Slurs in music create a subrhythm," he said.
Freshman Madison Schubert, who will play second trumpet on the piece, said she liked hearing Bernotas' take on the piece that the band has been working on since the beginning of the school year. "It definitely helps when you get different opinions about the music," she said. "And, he wrote it and knows how it is supposed to sound." Santoro noted that student musicians rarely have the opportunity to connect with the person behind the music they learn to play. "It has been a really great experience having a composer write something special for them," Santoro said. Bernotas said Santoro was very generous to bring him in to work with the students.
The composer said the symphonic band sounds very confident about "Ride On" and exceeded his expectations. "They were very well prepared," he said. "You can tell that they grasp the concepts by the looks on their faces and their changes in sound." Bernotas has served as an arranger for a number of bands and drum corps through- out New Jersey and New York. He has also adjudicated for Drum Corps International, Bands of America and several state marching band championships throughout the United States. He served as president and vice president of the North Jersey Area Band (NJAB) and conductor of the NJAB Symphonic Band in 2006. He has also served on the executive board for the New Jersey School Music Association Region I and as manager of the New Jersey All-State Band. Playing an instrument in a band provides many life lessons, according to Bernotas. "These students may not play for the rest of their lives, but they will learn to work with others and to be part of a team," he said. "They also learn how to make important decisions working in an ensemble." He also said music is an important aspect of life. "Music helps people communicate and express emotion," he said. "Music puts us in touch with something bigger than all of us." |
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