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Archive for the ‘Event in the Great Auditorium’ Category

Audience arriving for the the concert. All photos by Paul Goldfinger

Audience arriving for the the concert. All photos by Paul Goldfinger. Click left for enlarged views

The TOGETHER fundraisers were wearing their uniforms and greeting the audience. They were also recognized on stage.

The TOGETHER fundraisers were wearing their uniforms and greeting the audience. They were also recognized on stage.

Dr. Dale Whilden, CMA President greeted visitors. He appears to have been exposed to rays from outer space.

Dr. Dale Whilden, CMA President greeted visitors and ordered bite wings on 40 people.

Outside in Auditorium Square Park, people were setting up chairs for the lawn seats.

Outside in Auditorium Square Park, people were setting up chairs for the lawn seats, while ticket holders began to line up, and a grown man rode a scooter.

By Paul Goldfinger, Editor  @Blogfinger

This was an unusual event last night in the Grove. The concert was really eclectic in the variety of musical forms that were presented, but the design of the event did attract a good crowd of perhaps 2,000 people who wanted to help the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association raise money to “raise the roof ” of the Great Auditorium.  In a video that was shown before the concert began, dramatic aerial shots showed  that 30% of the roof had been badly damaged. It was more extensive than I had thought.  In one view you could be inside and look up to see daylight shining through.

The show opened with Michael W. Smith who is a world famous contemporary Christian singer. He performed while playing the piano.  The only other person on  stage was his long-standing  (actually sitting for this concert)  synthesizer player.  It turns out that a large segment of the audience was there to hear him.  He is a soft-spoken singer with a very pleasing voice. There were many of his fans  present who knew the lyrics and were singing along. He did some traditional hymns such as “Amazing Grace” along with other songs that I did not recognize.  The general tone of his segment was subdued, but emotional.   You couldn’t call it “roof raising” in the musical definition of that term, but much of the concert had a similar feel.

The Mattison Hillbillies. I wasn't allowed to get closer, so I took this shot while hanging from the ceiling of the GA

The Mattison Hillbillies. I wasn’t allowed to get closer, so I took this shot while hanging from the ceiling of the GA

Glen Burtnik and the Mattison Avenue Hillbillies are hardly hillbillies.  They are a group of 4 male musicians and a choral ensemble of 5 young women in white dresses who perform lined up on stage in a row.  These hillbillies are from New Jersey except for  one singer from England.    Mr. Burtnik is a skilled musician and vocalist, and his repertoire was quite interesting. It was basically country music including accordion and steel guitar parts, but some of it was more like choral singing.  I especially liked the acapella choir singing with multiple harmonic parts by the girls in the white dresses. It was sweet and quite beautiful.  Burtnik  was gracious in talking about how much it meant to him to play in the Great Auditorium, as he mentioned some of the greats who have stood on that stage including Enrico Caruso, Tony Bennett and other famous performers.

Maureen McGovern was on stage with her pianist, but she did get to perform one song with Peter and Paul, and that was a special treat.  Ms. McGovern joked with the audience and, of course, sang her signature song “The Morning After” which won an Oscar from the “Poseidon Adventure.”  She admitted that she would soon be 64 years old, but her voice is in excellent shape as she took on some difficult arrangements. She was dressed in black tights with a orange low cut shirt and, on top of that,  she wore a loose  jacket -sweater  with a wide cinched belt.  She looked very lovely.  (Fashion commentary by Eileen Goldfinger)

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Finally Peter and Paul,  (performing now as Peter Yarrow and Noel Paul Stookey)  appearing with two other musicians, playing some of their greatest hits.  Mary Travers had died four years ago, and  the group had an agreement not to replace her after she passed, The contrast of her voice was missed. The audience enjoyed their performance.  They have been famous for nearly 50 years, so there was plenty of nostalgic emotion in the room.   Peter said that “Puff the Magic Dragon” was never about drugs.  Here it is by Peter, Paul and Mary (below)

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JULY 4, 2012.  Photo by Paul Goldfinger Ocean Grove, New Jersey.  Left click to make him taller.

JULY 4, 2012. Photo by Paul Goldfinger
Ocean Grove, New Jersey. Left click to make him taller.

Ocean Grove Celebrates Independence Day, Thursday July 4, 2013

10:30 AM − Ocean Grove’s Annual Independence Day Parade

“Best Fourth of July Parade in America”

7:30 PM – “I Love New York Brass” – Great Auditorium

All-Star Brass Ensemble Representing the NY Philharmonic, the MET Opera,

West Point Band, and Broadway, directed by Philip Smith

With marching bands, floats, community groups, civic organizations, local politicians, businesses and thousands of onlookers, Ocean Grove’s annual Independence Day Parade will kick off at 10:30 am on Thursday, July 4, 2013. The parade begins on Whitefield Avenue and turns east along Main Avenue to Central Avenue; then turns north towards Ocean Pathway, then east again ending along Ocean Avenue.

Ocean Grove’s parade is a community, township, county, and state-wide event. Some of the parade bands have been an active part of the Ocean Grove parade for decades. Among this year’s musical participants are: The Ocean Grove Summer Band, Neptune High School Marching Band; Monmouth County Police and Fire Pipes and Drums; Pipes and Drums of the Jersey Shore Shillelaghs, and legendary Bagpiper Joe Simmons.

This year’s parade will honor Calvary Chapel Relief as the Grand Marshals.

The Ocean Grove Parade has been recognized by the Asbury Park Press as “one of the best parades in the Garden State.” The Star Ledger says the annual Independence Day parade “remains a civic extravaganza of fire trucks, marching bands and volunteer group floats. It has an official motto – “The Best Fourth of July parade in America” – and is the daytime star of the weekend. The evening star is the Great Auditorium concert.”

The Great Auditorium is located at Pilgrim and Ocean Pathways in Ocean Grove, NJ. Tickets are $15.00 (plus applicable fees) Call 800-590-4064 or order online at www.oceangrove.org. For more information, visit www.oceangrove.org or call 732-775-0035.

Come and enjoy a magnificent day and night of recreation in God’s Square Mile on the Jersey Shore!

U.S. Marine Corps Band with a selection from their NOT SOUSA album: “Colonel Bogey March”

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Phillip Smith.  Photo by Chris Lee

Phillip Smith. Photo by Chris Lee

By Paul Goldfinger, Editor  @Blogfinger

Phillip Smith is no ordinary musician.  He is known world wide as one of the finest  classical trumpet players anywhere. When he isn’t performing as the principal trumpet for the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, he plays in a variety of brass ensembles, such as the Imperial Brass with whom he appeared in July 2011 at the Great Auditorium in Ocean Grove, New Jersey.*  Phillip has performed with the greatest orchestras, brass bands and wind ensembles all over the world.  He is on the faculty at Juilliard and the Manhattan School of Music.

Mr. Smith is good friends with Dr. Gordon Turk, who is the organist for our 11,000 pipe Hope-Jones organ and who is the producer of the incredible Summer Stars series held every July in the Great Auditorium.

Thanks to this relationship, as well as Phillip’s long history as a summer visitor and now part-time resident in Ocean Grove, we are going to have a unique opportunity to enjoy a Summer Stars concert organized by Mr. Smith for July 4.

In an interview this past week with Mr. Smith, we were able to discuss some special questions with him.  Phil (we are now on a first name basis) has been coming to the Grove since childhood for the summer fun, and in 2005,  he “took the plunge” and bought an OG cottage which he visits year-round with his wife, the soprano Sheila Smith. His other home is in north Jersey.   He recalls playing in summer rock bands at Convention Hall in Asbury Park when he was a youngster in the Grove.

Phil describes himself as a Christian, and his faith has energized his artistry as well as some of his musical choices such as playing with the  Salvation Army’s staff bands worldwide. During that 2011 concert in OG, he told the audience that there is “joy in Ocean Grove” and that being here “refreshes our spiritual souls.” He fondly recalls a musical moment when he stood in the far highest reaches of the Great Auditorium with Gordon Turk below on organ, and they played Bach’s  “Jesu Joy of Man’s Desiring.”  Phil says that the sound was “other worldly.”

According to Phil, the Great Auditorium is a “fabulous building,” and the acclaim for its acoustics is well deserved. Phil looks forward to playing in the GA, although he admits that the heat can sometimes be a big issue for performers, especially those with delicate instruments whose tuning can be easily compromised.

The July 4 concert is called “I Love NY Brass Concert.” Phil is bringing some of the finest New York musicians  (see below) for this celebration of America and its music.  Phil said that he chose “people that I like and respect.”  The group consists of seven brass players (plus Dr. Turk on organ)  who will present a  mixture of classical pieces, Americana, Broadway and Disney selections, marches, and patriotic tunes including a tribute to the armed forces. There will be some special treats including a trumpet solo by Phil Smith where you can hear his exquisite sound,  as well as a two pieces where the brass and the Hope-Jones organ, with Dr. Turk on the console,  join together—you can imagine what that will sound like. I can’t wait.

Phillip Smith played Gershwin’s “Someone to Watch Over Me.” when he performed here in 2011. That arrangement was written for Mr. Smith by his friend and colleague Joseph Turrin.  Phil is not known as a performer of jazz, but this song was very special to him because it reminds him of “his faith” and is a tribute to his father, Derek Smith, a renowned cornet soloist,  who was his first teacher.  Phil said that many performers wanted to use the arrangement, but the Gershwin family wouldn’t allow it to be published.  Below is a recording of Mr. Smith playing that arrangement with Mr. Turrin on piano.

PHILLIP SMITH  (trumpet) and  JOSEPH TURRIN (piano and arranger.)  Instrumental version of  George  (music) and Ira Gershwin’s  (lyrics) “Someone to Watch Over Me.”  From the musical “Oh Kay” (1926)

The concert on Thursday, July 4, begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Great Auditorium . Tickets are $15.00 each at 800-590 4064  or WWW.oceangrove.org.

Here is a link* to the Blogfinger article about that 2011 concert in the GA  including a video of Phillip performing Gershwin’s “Someone to Watch Over Me.”  But the audio above is better quality.

Phil Smith performs  in OG

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