SONG OF THE WEEK – OUTSIDE OF A SMALL CIRCLE OF FRIENDS

This week I would like to recognize six people who have been selected to the Arvada West High School Hall of Fame (in Arvada, Colorado).  It would seem that “Outside of a Small Circle of Friends” is a song that has nothing to do with that subject, so a brief explanation is in order.

Phil Ochs wrote this song in 1966, inspired (if that is an appropriate word) by the murder of a woman named Kitty Genovese in Queens, New York, on March 13, 1964.  Ms. Genovese was attacked by a stranger in the parking lot of her apartment complex when she came home from work in the early morning hours.  The attacker stabbed her, but left the scene when a neighbor yelled for him to leave.  Ms. Genovese was seriously injured, but crawled across the parking lot.  She was unable to open the locked door to the apartment building, and that permitted her killer to return a few minutes later and resume his attack.  It was reported that as many as 50 people saw some portion of those events or heard her cries for help.  Most of them did not comprehend the gravity of the situation, and apparently only one called the police.  Their inaction has become a symbol of the perceived apathy of people.

Phil Ochs’ song begins by looking at those events, and then presenting other situations in which action is called for, but the response is merely indifference because “it probably wouldn’t interest anyone outside of a small circle of friends.”  The real strength of the song lies in the irony between its serious message and its upbeat, honky-tonk arrangement.  As  thus presented, societal apathy seems even more egregious.

[This note is added on April 5, 2016:  The man who killed Kitty Genovese was one Winston Moseley. He was convicted and imprisoned for his actions.  Shortly after his conviction he escaped from a hospital, raped another woman and held hostages at gunpoint before he was recaptured and returned to prison.  Moseley died last week, still in prison where he had been for nearly 50 years.]

Turning now to the Hall of Fame:  Arvada West High School opened its doors in Arvada, Colorado in the Fall of 1963.  Since then, more than 25,000 students have graduated and moved ahead with their lives.  Many of them have accomplished good, or even great, things, and are a credit to the education they received.  In 2013, the Arvada West High School Foundation, a Colorado nonprofit corporation, decided to recognize some of those people by establishing a Hall of Fame.  To date, fourteen outstanding individuals have been inducted into that Hall of Fame.  Six more will be recognized at a ceremony on October 15, 2015.

Now, six inductees may sound like a large number, but none were recognized for more than 50 years, so there is some catching up to do.

To tie the Hall of Fame ceremony into Phi Ochs’ song, two points seem important.

First, although I don’t know whether any of the people being honored have ever witnessed a crime or called the police, I can tell you that none of them are apathetic.  Each has taken action to improve our society and make this a better world for the rest of us.  The characters in “Outside of a Small Circle of Friends” may be an apt stereotype for some portion of the population, but these Hall of Famers are representative of what I think is a larger portion – those whose lives are lived with purpose and compassion.

Secondly, the ceremony on Thursday is going to be attended by 100 or so people.  Of that number, 65-70 will be the inductees and their families and close friends.  Most, but not all, of the Foundation Board members will attend, as will the school principal and assistant principal and three of four former faculty members.  It appears that no students or current faculty of staff (aside from the administrators) will be there; and almost no members of the general public  Thus, we conclude that, at least in this context, recognition of exemplary people (who do not happen to be celebrities) is another thing that “doesn’t interest anyone outside of a small circle of friends.”

I am being facetious, of course.  Most people have an interest in other, good human beings; so I will recognize the Hall of Fame inductees here, for cyber-posterity.  They are:

Dale Anderson (Class of 1965):  Dale was Head Boy during his senior year at AWHS. Then he received B.A. and M.A. degrees from the University of Colorado, and spent his career as an educator and administrator in Jefferson County, Colorado. For many years, he was a high school principal, including serving as principal at AWHS for five years. He is now retired.

Ralph W. “Bill” Ashton:  Bill – or Mr. Ashton, as we all knew him – was the Chemistry teacher at Arvada West the first year it opened.  He continued teaching at the school for 23 more years.  He is an active member of the community, being a former president of the Arvada Historical Society and has been honored as Arvada’s “Man of the Year.”

Kendra Ball Fleischman (Class of 1982):  Kendra is an artist and sculptor who has completed and installed works for private, corporate and public art collections throughout the United States. Her works are displayed at the Arvada Center, Lakewood Cultural Center, Anschutz Medical Campus, Benson Sculpture Park in Loveland, Fountain Hills Community Center in Arizona, Western Kentucky University, North Central Michigan College and other locations. She has taught in Jefferson County schools and at Denver School of the Arts through the Denver Public Schools.

Barbara Dorough Gablehouse (Class of 1969):  Barbara is a physician specializing in pediatric medicine. I learned from my wife, Cathy, who is a nurse, that Barb is one of only a few local doctors who are willing to treat low income Medicaid patients. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Colorado, married in 1973 and began raising her family before receiving her M.D. in 1987. She opened her practice at Lutheran Medical campus in 1990 and opened an additional office in Winter Park in 2003. She is an Assistant Clinical Professor at the University of Colorado and on the medical board of Children’s Hospital Denver. She is author of The Potty Project.

Jayne Gibson McHugh (Class of 1978):  Jayne was an All-American volleyball player at University of the Pacific and a member of the 1988 Olympic volleyball team. She later coached for 17 years at University of the Pacific. She is now volleyball coach at Saint Mary’s High School in California, coaches at Pacific Coast Volleyball Club and is an educator at Annunciation School in California.

Gary Ramstetter (Class of 1964):  Gary taught at Alamosa High School in Colorado for 31 years and has served as the school’s wrestling coach for more than 34 years. His teams have won nine state championships. He was named Colorado Coach of the Year in 1992, 1995, 1998 and 2006 and national Region 6 Coach of the year in 1996 and 2006. The National Wrestling Hall of Fame awarded him a Lifetime Service Award in 2012. Earlier, he was captain of the wrestling team at San Jose State University and participated in the NCAA Division I wrestling tournament.

If anyone living in the Denver Metro area should read this post before October 15th, think about attending the celebration and congratulating these very impressive people in person.  Festivities begin at 6:30 p.m. in the clubhouse of the Indian Tree Golf Course in Arvada.  More information is available on the Arvada West High School Foundation website.

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SONG OF THE WEEK – BLACKBERRY WINTER (I)

This week’s Song of the Week is a little different than previous selections.  It has no words.  What I have chosen is the first movement of a work called “Blackberry Winter” that was composed by Conni Ellisor and performed by the Nashville Chamber Orchestra.  It is a very interesting piece of music written for mountain dulcimer, Tennessee music box (a cigar box with a hole and strings) and strings.  It is very pleasant and evokes memories of the best of Aaron Copland’s compositions.

There are other songs called “Blackberry Winter.”  One, in fact, sold a million records as the the “B” side of Mitch Miller’s “Yellow Rose of Texas.”  This one sounds much better than Mitch Miller’s.

The term “Blackberry Winter” refers to a cold spell that occurs in the late Spring when trees or bushes, such as the blackberry, are already in bloom.  There was a best-selling novel of that name by Sarah Jio in 2012, and it was also the title of an autobiography by anthropologist Margaret Mead.

Conni Ellisor is an amazing, but little-known, musician and composer.  She is from Arvada, Colorado, and graduated from Arvada West High School five years after I did.  I became aware of her work when I was chairing a committee of choose the initial members of the Arvada West High School Hall of Fame.

She received her formal training at Juilliard and has been a member of the Denver Symphony Orchestra, concertmaster of the Boulder Philharmonic, first violin in the Athena Quartet and soloist in the Nashville Chamber Orchestra. She is also an in demand session violinist and arranger.  Her compositions have been performed in international venues by the London Philharmonic, the Hamburg Radio orchestra, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, the London Symphony, Denver Brass, New York Treble Singers and many other groups. Her ballet, “The Bell Witch,” was premiered by the Nashville Ballet in 2005. Her works have been featured nationally on NPR.  Conni has also been successful as a contemporary jazz recording artist. Her “Night at the Museum” album reached #13 on Billboard’s Adult Alternative chart, and all four of her albums have been critically acclaimed.  Conni has lectured at various colleges and universities and was composer-in-residence for Northwestern Louisiana State University in 2008 and for the Nashville Chamber Orchestra from 1999 through 2002.

She has written for and played with performers ranging from Don Henley to Ray Stevens.  She toured and played with Lynyrd Skynyrd – sort of.  As you probably know, three members of  Lynyrd Skynyrd were killed in a plane crash in 1977, at the height of their popularity.  The surviving members have reunited from time to time, and they did so in 2004 for the so-called Vicious Cycle Tour – which featured a rock band with a rocking string section.  Conni arranged the music, conducted the string section and played on that tour.

I wanted to bring Conni’s work to everyone’s attention now because next month – on May 9 and 10, 2015 – her latest work is going to be performed by the Colorado Symphony Orchestra.  The piece is entitled “The Bass Whisperer – Concerto for Electric Bass and Orchestra.”  It was co-written by Victor Wooten, who will appear as the soloist.

Wooten has received several Grammy Awards.  He is best known as the bass player for Béla Fleck and the Flecktones.  If you are not familiar with his work, you can click here to enjoy a really interesting version of “Amazing Grace.”

The performance by the Colorado Symphony is essentially a world premiere (though the piece has been done by the Nashville Symphony) so I can’t include any part of the new concerto here.  Ticket information for the performance is available at this link.  The Arvada West High School Foundation may be organizing a group to attend – and you can check its website by clicking here.

For the present, we have the first movement of “Blackberry Winter”:

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DAY 17 – RUBBING SHOULDERS WITH GIANTS

March 26, 2013

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Rubbing Shoulders with Giants

“If I have seen further than others, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants” is a quotation usually attributed to Isaac Newton.  Newton did write something like that in a letter to fellow scientist Robert Hooke, but the phrase and the concept were very old and well known, even by the 17th Century.  Similar language is found, for instance, in a 12th Century manuscript by a philosopher known as John of Salisbury, and he attributed the saying to an even earlier time.

It is fitting that Newton should have borrowed the phrase for he was stating that the advances he made in the scientific world were possible only because he could build on the many hundreds of years of thoughts and writings of great men who had preceded him.  That is true for all of us, though our accomplishments may not be as illustrious as Newton’s.

The recognition that Newton was “standing on the shoulders of giants” does not imply that he was merely a dwarf seeing the world from a good vantage point.  Isaac Newton was certainly one of the towering giants of human intellect, and most of the scientific advances of the past 300 years have been made by someone “standing on his shoulders.”

Giant and creative intellects remain among us today, and I feel privileged to have known some of them.  Continue reading

DAY NINE – SPORTS

March 18, 2013

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SPORTS

I recently heard that we are approaching the 30th anniversary of the release of the Sports album by Huey Lewis and the News.  As exciting as that may be, I am writing here about something completely different.  Here the word “sports” has its traditional meaning of engaging in athletic activity that requires some skill and involves competition.

Sports were always important in our family, largely because my father was a great fan.  When my brothers and I were growing up, we did not have the many youth sports programs that are ubiquitous today.  Arvada did have “little league” teams (though not associated with the international Little League – in capital letters – organization), organized by age group, that competed with other Jefferson County communities.  There was no youth football or basketball or soccer or lacrosse, etc.

As soon as I was old enough – I believe it was 8 years old at that time – I began playing.  For a few years, I really loved baseball.  I was not a great athlete.  I played outfield sometimes and third base at other times.  Some years I was a fairly good hitter while in others I struggled to get my bat near the ball.  Once when I was 11 or perhaps 12, I managed to hit a home run, a triple, a double and a single all in one game.  More than half a century later, I always think back to that game whenever I pass the field on West Colfax where it was played. Continue reading

DAY FOUR – WHERE WERE WE IN ’63?

March 13, 2013

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WHERE WERE WE IN ’63?

I was a student throughout the 1960s – first elementary school, then junior high, then high school and finally college.  I got my bachelor’s degree at the end of the 1969-70 school year.  In many ways, the ‘60s seem to have started for me when I started high school.  I seem to meet a number of people these days who grew up attending Catholic schools.  I never really wanted to do that, but my parents thought, for some reason, that I should try it.  Regis Jesuit High School was the closest Catholic high school to our house – though it was still more than 10 miles away – and it had an excellent academic reputation.  I took the entrance exam and was accepted and I attended Regis during the 1962-63 school year.  Besides being far away, the tuition was expensive and all of my childhood friends were still going to public schools.  I mentioned to my parents that although it was interesting to have spent my freshman year receiving a Jesuit education, I would rather go back to a public school and save them some money.  As luck would have it, a brand new high school was set to open for my sophomore year, and it was only a couple of miles from home.  I could walk there if necessary (which I did that several times), and my parents agreed that I should transfer.

Although I still think of it as a “new” school, Arvada West High School (Go, Wildcats!) is preparing to celebrate its 50th Anniversary.  The first school year for Arvada West began on September 3, 1963.  Continue reading