Category Archives: A&E

Orchestra rocks alternate set list

By Cody Repine

All of the orchestras present at the concert including all HHMS orchestras and FC orchestras stand for the final song of the concert, "Hey Jude."

On Tuesday, Oct. 18, the FC orchestra held a special treat for fans of rock and fine arts alike.

The more than 300 musicians of the combined FC and Highland Hill Middle School orchestra departments performed classic rock tunes from Queen, Led Zeppelin, Kansas, The Beatles, and more. Seven orchestras of varied skill levels played for a packed house in the gym. Performances ranged from the simple and repetitive for the less experienced musicians to the downright virtuosic solos of seniors Anna Patterson, Hannah Henderson, Quinn Klarer, Sydney Shelton, juniors Josh Druin and Gannon Yeaton, as well as freshmen Chelsea Balmer and Madison Eickholtz.

At the start of the show, orchestra director Doug Elmore explained the proper Orchestra Rocks! etiquette: yelling, whistling, and whooping were all appropriate, even encouraged, unlike at other orchestra events. The first piece was a mass tune “We Will Rock You” that showcased all of the students while symphony orchestra took care of the heavy lifting.

Symphony orchestra’s first feature, “Carry on My Wayward Son,” garnered applause from the audience as soon as Elmore announced the name of the band, Kansas.  The song was the best suited for an orchestra. Essentially, it was set up like a fugue, with its layered voices.  Resonance coming from the running sixteenth notes could literally be felt, and awestruck onlookers thundered with applause.

In “Kashmir,” a floating melody on the violins graced an underlay of chromatic motion on the cellos, accented by basses every other measure.  Klarer  performed an edgy electric cello solo, an obvious crowd favorite, as part of it was eclipsed by overzealous applause.  Perhaps the most compelling visual element of the evening was the way the musicians moved as one unit during this piece. The next selection, “Renegade” by Styx, began with a haunting cello chorale that exploded into the fitful, jagged character of the song, punctuated by a tempestuous solo from Henderson on the electric cello.

“Fat Bottom Girls” was loaded with  complex rhythms that would boggle any performer’s mind and featured both an electric violin solo and duet. Yeaton entertained in his solo with his rocker attitude, wide-eyed and smiling, with his tongue between his teeth, he finished with an ascending slide. The tune ended with a bang as Shelton and Eickholtz played a fiery duet in harmonic fifths.

“Stairway to Heaven” started with a dulcet, arpeggiated harp solo by Balmer, and gradually gathered energy from each section, coming to a pause on soft chords. The second phase picked up with a soulful, lilting violin solo from Druin.  Syncopated, driving rhythms carried “Stairway to Heaven” to the end when Patterson, on an acoustic cello, finished the last iconic lyric.

The concert ended softly with “Hey Jude” for the finale. By far the most interactive song, it had the audience clapping and singing along with the familiar “na-na-na…na-na-na-na…na-na-na-na…Hey Jude.”

This  captivating orchestral experience will soon be available on CD and DVD for those who missed it, and for those who wish to relive it.

Taylor Swift tour enchants audience

Photo by Alyssa Book

By Alyssa Book

Since the cancellation in July, Kentuckiana has been anxiously awaiting country superstar Taylor Swift to come back to a rescheduled performance at the KFC Yum! Center on Oct. 10.

Miss Swift had to reschedule her Speak Now concert in Louisville because she was feeling ill the morning of the performance. Tears and cow girl boots exited the Yum! Center that night, but it only created two more months of excitement to fester inside the prized ticket holders.

The moment the red curtain pulled back, the sold out crowd was up on their feet clapping and awing in the presence of a Grammy award-winning artist.

Wearing a flashy gold dress and her signature cow girl boots, Taylor opened with the track Sparks Fly, and as the chorus set in, fireworks erupted out from stage and that set the bar for the rest of the show.

Swift’s concert stage was set up with a balcony and a winding staircase, which was covered at every point in the show by her and her back up dancers. Her band being dressed in black made her multiple dresses, which all included sparkles and red lips, stick out and exude the look of a true superstar.

Songs had fans screaming in excitement, and dancing was inevitable as songs like Better Than Revenge and Mean had every girl in the house feeling like Taylor’s songs were written specifically for their lives.

My favorite part of the concert was when Enchanted played and Swift sang along with violins and glitter poured out  into the mesmerized audience. Her voice was flawless and the ballerinas swaying across the stage made it feel like a complete fairytale.

The concert ended with an encore performance of her hit ; Love Story.  As she flew over the crowd in a hanging balcony piece, you realized this was way more than a concert. It was a country musical. The set, dancers, and wardrobe brought you inside the imagination of Taylor Swift.

The Speak Now tour was everything I imagined it to be and more. It left me wishing  every night could be filled with fireworks and girl empowering anthems. Taylor Swift  left her crowd “Enchanted” and the standing ovation at the end confirmed why she is the leading lady of country music.

Weekly Playlist: Covers

By Marah Harbison, Nathan Hemminger, Chase Gosman, Alyssa Book, and Allison Werner

This weeks A&E playlist is all about covers. No, silly! Not the kind on your bed. These covers are new
spins on old classics.

1. “Farewell Angelina” by John Mellencamp, originally by Bob Dylan

2. “Crazy for You” by New Found Glory, originally by Madonna

3. “Love Song” by Anberlin, originally by The Cure

4. “Beat It” by Fall Out Boy, originally by Michael Jackson

5.”Rolling in the Deep” by Mike Posner ,originally by Adele

6. “Umbrella” by Taylor Swift, originally by Rihanna

7. “Meet Me in the City” by Black Keys, originally by Junior Kimbrough

8. “Darling Nikki” by Foo Fighters, originally by Prince

9.”You Ain’t Woman Enough” by Paramore, originally by Loretta Lynn

Hoban’s ‘Willow’ cuts to the chase

By Lauren Holstner

“It’s hard to keep a secret when it’s written all over your body.”

This quote lives on the cover of Willow by Julia Hoban. It adds suspense and makes you want to read it. Willow by Hoban is a dark and serious book with a hint of romance and humor.  It is about a girl named Willow who believes she is a murderer and killed her parents.

She can no longer go back to her home and lives with her brother, his wife and their child.  She is also a cutter.  This has caused her to lead a secret life no one knows about, until he comes along.  He is Guy, who finds out about Willow’s cutting and turns her world upside down by trying to save her from cutting and making her fall in love with him.
Readers who like stories where nothing seems to go right with a hint of romance and a pinch of pain will enjoy this novel.
Willow lives in a world of pain and sorrow that many readers might relate to. Those who do not connect may see what friends could be going through because we never know everything and this book just shows how little we know about each other.
This story helps readers view the world in an entirely new perspective, often overlooked.  Willow could relate to a number of lives and show us how some people live.

Willow helps us learn things readers never thought we would.  Willow is a great story for readers wanting to experience something new and realistic, and sometimes horrifyingly real.

Weekly Playlist: Boy Band Hits

By Marah Harbison, Chase Gosman, Allison Werner, Nathan Hemminger, and Alyssa Book

Break out your coolest dance moves and get ready to party with the best mix of old and new boy band hits. 

1. “Just Got Paid” by *NSYNC

2. “Blame It on September” by Allstar Weekend

3. “Tonight, Tonight” by Hot Chelle Rae

4. “The Perfect Love Song” by Boyz II Men

5. “Halfway There” by Big Time Rush

6. “Back Here” by BBMak

7. “This I Promise You” by *NSYNC

8. “End of the Road” by Boyz II Men