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Archive for the ‘Ocean Grove Musical Event’ Category

Ronald Naldi performing in the Youth Temple, Ocean Grove, NJ 7/26/15 Paul Goldfinger photo © Click to enlarge.

Ronald Naldi performing in the Youth Temple, Ocean Grove, NJ.  7/26/15.  Paul Goldfinger photo © Click to enlarge.

By Paul Goldfinger, MD,  Editor, Blogfinger.net. Ocean Grove, NJ ,USA

The concert, which was to start at 3:30 pm on Sunday, was a much anticipated recital for serious music lovers in the Grove. Ronald Naldi, who has been tenor-in-residence for 42 years in Ocean Grove, was going to present one hour of musical magic to a full house.

He would appear alone on the elevated stage of the Youth Temple, except for his young piano accompanist Sean Gough.

At 3:30 pm, soprano Monica Ziglar walked on the stage and tapped the microphone with her finger tips. Nothing happened.   She tapped it a few more times, smiled a bit, and then gave up.

Next the audio man came out and tapped on the microphone a few times, but nothing happened.

Finally, with the audience squirming a bit, desperate times call for desperate measures, so out came Maestro Jason Tramm who tapped on the microphone, but even he could not make it happen.

Jason Tramm taps on the mike as Ronald Naldi enters right. Blogfinger.net ©

Jason Tramm taps on the mike as Ronald Naldi enters stage left. Blogfinger.net ©

Finally Ronald Naldi came on stage, glancing over at Tramm and then he shrugged; after all, his magnificent tenor voice doesn’t require a microphone. I heard him sing the Star Spangled Banner in the Great Auditorium without a mike. Tony Bennett walked out after that and wondered aloud how he could follow Ronald Naldi.

So the recital began. If anyone in the audience was expecting Verdi, or Puccini or even Sigmund Romberg, that wasn’t going to happen. Instead, Ronald Naldi treated us to a program of short songs, each of which told a story, and, except for Rachmaninoff, none were by composers that most of us would recognize.

It didn’t matter. Ron (I guess Grovers can call him that; after all, this is a guy who lives in a tent) could have sung Al Jolson in blackface and received roaring shouts and applause.

His stories in song were about the coming of spring, love is blind, beautiful women, happiness, lost love, and lilacs. In one song, two young women go to fetch water, but someone is watching them from behind a tree. Ron liked this song—his facial expression broke into a smile.

I thought, “He’s been there, or something like that.”

He stood  straight like the great tenor which he is, projecting his voice as he was trained to do. But his lavender jacket, white pants and bright tie told a story about how happy he felt performing on a warm summer day in the Grove.

Of course, Ron’s voice was magnificent.   He sang, “Spring; your kisses melted the ice, now bring me love.”   But Ron, it’s July.

He enjoyed that—singing in Italian, but he made sure that we had a translation so we could know why he was having such a good time.

Sean Gough played some Cole Porter for us while Ron rested, and I knew in 10 seconds that Sean is a marvelous jazz pianist. But as an accompanist, he has radar and passion, and you can see why Ron likes to work with him.

At the end of the hour, Ron had a surprise for us. He gathered a song from another corner of the musical world and treated this audience to a 1962 popular tune by Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh called “When in Rome I Do What the Roman’s Do.”

Ron seemed to enjoy this departure from his usual repertoire as he smiled while singing, with I think, a twinkle in his eye, ” ‘Cept now and then in Rome, I get that old yen in Rome, and naturally when in Rome, I do what the Romans do.”

Maybe some of you who have experienced a “yen” in Rome know why Ron picked this song.

Ronald Naldi, a treasure in OG and across famous concert halls around the world, did his thing: providing musical magic for his audience,  and everyone in the room was grateful.

A VIDEO SCRAPBOOK OF RON NALDI PERFORMING IN THE GROVE:

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Source: “Ocean Grove 2018 Summer Program Guide.”

 

Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger.   Shaboom, Shaboom.

The Doo Wops used to usher in the summer season in OG and then return in September with a different lineup. But in the last couple of years, the CMA has eliminated most pop concerts from the summer schedule—except for the Beach Boys.

But now, in a surprise announcement, the CMA has taken seriously the adage “See You in September” with a “Doo Wop Extravaganza” on September one in the Great Auditorium.  The program contains all excellent choices, so this concert should not be missed if you like the music from that era.

There is magic associated with the Doo Wops in Ocean Grove, because every year a large crowd would assemble, and they always seemed to be the same age year after year, never getting older than old enough.

This Doo Wop concert is one of two secular pop  musical shows this season.  The other is The Beach Boys on August 18.

 

JAY AND THE AMERICANS:   “Come a Little Bit Closer”

 

THE DRIFTERS:

 

 

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Andrew Robertson, the animated uke teacher in motion has an out-of-body experience  while singing and naming the chords. 6/27/18  Paul Goldfinger photograph ©

Daniel Hickman, on the left in the video, proprietor of “Don’t Fret Music” at the Jersey Shore Arts Center in Ocean Grove, is known for his technical work including repairing and support for all sorts of stringed instruments.   He is officially known as a luthier.   But he also offers lessons in his shop including his popular BYO uke classes.

He held such a class on June 27, attended by about 10 students.  Dan lives in Ocean Grove as does the instructor for the class Andrew Robinson.  Andrew is a professional musician who seems to get a kick out of teaching uke players of all ages and with all degrees of experience including beginners, like me and Jean from the Blogfinger staff.

Andrew was determined to entertain the class, so he taught the chords for a Queen song “Crazy Little Thing Called Love,” and he sang while he called out chord changes.  Most of the class seemed to have no problem keeping up with Andrew, although at least two of us were having trouble finding the right strings and fingers.    There were more laughs than gaffes.

Dan served some  snacks, and  you can see the group in action in the video above.

For more information, call Dan at 732 361 5060

Here is a link to our 2017 article about Daniel:

Dan the luthier

Here is a link to his site:

www.dontfretnj.com/

And here is Queen * with their song “Crazy Little Thing Called Love.”

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In the choir loft with Jean Bredin. 675 voices participated this year.

In the choir loft with Jean Bredin. BF staff. 675 voices participated this year.

 

According to attendees, the Choir Festival was a huge success.  Charles and Marcy, from New York City, attended and told us that they felt elated after being present for the event.  Others commended the variety of music including a lively gospel piece led by a jazz pianist, soprano Monica Ziegler and Mezzo Martha Bartz.

Gordon Turk commanded the Hope-Jones organ, and Jason Tramm presided over the chorus, orchestra and soloists.

The event concluded with a large caravan of automobiles moving slowly westward on Main Avenue.  My goodness, where did they all park?  Somehow it works out every year.  —-PG

JOSLIN GROVE CHORAL SOCIETY:

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Perry Young. Sept. 4, 2016. Ocean Grove near the boardwalk. Paul Goldfinger photo. . © Perry Young. Sept. 4, 2016. Labor Day weekend.    Ocean Grove near the boardwalk. Paul Goldfinger photo.  ©

 

Paul Goldfinger,  Editor Blogfinger.net  2016 original post:

 

I struck up a conversation with Perry when I spotted his Planotones shirt. We chatted near the large American flag.   Perry is from Milton,  New Hampshire.  Originally he was from Queens, NY, but he left there in 2003.

Perry was at the World Trade Center on 9-11, and in his words, “I was fortunate to escape the falling north tower.”   Perry was a member of the Painters Union.

Perry Young has been visiting Ocean Grove for nearly 40 years.  He says that it is a very special place for him and he  is drawn to it and loves to come here each summer. His favorite hotel is the Shawmont. He knows a lot about the town and this area.

Perry and his daughter Christine are Blogfinger fans. In a subsequent  email he said, “I along with my daughter Christine will always be following Blogfinger.net.  I enjoyed looking at all the photos you have posted on your website.  I also thought your history in the medical field was awesome.   Your friend, Perry.”

We became fast friends, and Perry asked me to pose for a picture, but I agreed only after he said I could take his picture in the Planotone shirt. We sent a copy of the photo to Christine, and she was thrilled.

We talked about Kenny Vance and his marvelous falsetto and close harmonies with his group.  I should have asked Perry to do the Planotone walk.  Maybe next time we could find two porkpie hats and some shades to do a video.

We agreed that one of Kenny’s most evocative  songs was “Gloria”—–a beautiful and sad love song  that all the fans of that era know to be the gold standard for excellence from that musical genre.

 

Perry confided that his favorite Planotone song is “Oceans of Time.”  I never heard that song before, but you can appreciate why Perry favors it:

 

NOTE:  This past June, 2022,  Perry returned once again to the Grove.   He stays at OG hotels.    Perry is a creature of habit as you can see from his history of returning here every year.

After the June visit he sent me a note:  “For my last night I went to Brando’s for linguine Sinatra.   Since I went home I went to the supermarket  and bought all the ingredients for that dish: scallops, shrimps, clams, Greek olives, and capers.  That for dinner tonight.

 Find enclosed tickets from 2009 when I saw Kenny Vance and the Planotones in the Doo Wop show in the GA.  I will miss those shows.”

All the best,  Perry.

2023 Perry Young update: Perry has remained a fan of the Grove and of Blogfinger. We keep in touch and try to get together when he visits here.  This season Perry came with 12 relatives and they had a wonderful time.

He got to celebrate his birthday in the Grove,  and I just heard from him by phone about the birth of his first great-grandson Henry Huggins.  Perry says that we should do lunch next year, and I promised him to repost this piece along with some of those  Kenny Vance songs which he still loves.

Kenny is now 78 years old and still tours with the Planotones.  In December he will be at the Count Basie in Red Bank.

And here is a Kenny Vance medley from his recent album: Lost and Found Vol 2.

 

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The Great Auditorium. Paul Goldfinger photo. 12/13/14. ©

The Great Auditorium. Paul Goldfinger photo. 12/13/14. ©

 

SHE and HIM:    “The Christmas Waltz.”   From the album A Very She and Him Christmas.   In three quarter time.

 

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Phil Smith played "You Made Me Love You" with the Imperial Brass

Phil Smith played “You Made Me Love You” with the Imperial Brass. Paul Goldfinger photo ©  Click to enlarge.

 

By Paul Goldfinger.  Editor Blogfinger.net. March 1,2023:

This is another example of the sort of programming that creates good will for the CMA. This concert was part of the Summer Stars series which the CMA is continuing .  They need to return to that travelled road that helps make the CMA popular with the majority secular resident community as well as with visitors who come to town not for religious reasons but because they love to visit the Grove, stroll  our neighborhoods, walk on the boards, photograph our restored historic homes and tents, and chat with our citizens who are friendly to outsiders as they relax on their porches.

In fact porch concerts, as occur in Asbury Park, should be done here as we shift gears to a more hospitable small town secular atmosphere while supporting the CMA to be successful here as well.   That is a better plan for the future of the CMA rather than the “no win” idea of a predominant  Christian Seashore town a la 1869.

The concert last night was brilliant.  There were about 25 wonderful brass musicians on stage.  Imagine an ensemble with 5 flugelhorns?

The pieces chosen for the event were varied—some obscure (at least to me), some complex, and some familiar, but they were all performed with a high degree of professionalism, emotion and care.  Despite some problems with clarity of the microphone, it only affected speech.

The music, performed with  exquisite clarity and musicianship, was unamplified and enhanced by the great skill and respect afforded it by these musicians.

Phil Smith, of Ocean Grove, former principal trumpet with the New York Philharmonic, not only played, but he conducted as well, although not simultaneously.

His gorgeous  tone resonated with the wooden interior of the Great Auditorium.  That refers to the famous acoustics in the GA—loved by musicians and audiences alike.   His technique was superb, and he got to show it off along with cornetist Mitch Brodsky in an intricate rendition of the “Cornet Duet” by Peter Graham.

This concert, the first of the 2015 Summer Stars series of classical music in the Great Auditorium, was well attended.

The Summer Stars recitals occur on Thursday nights at 7:30 pm. On July 9 is Yun-Chin Zhou, an acclaimed pianist; on July 16  Maksim Shirykov and Misuzu Tanaka—clarinet and piano duo; and on July 23, is the Solisti String Ensemble.

On July 30 will be a very special event:  Gordon Turk, organist and Jason Tramm conducting the Summer Stars Festival Orchestra with “Grand Orchestra and the Great Organ.”

 

PHIL SMITH:   A recording of  “Someone to Watch Over Me”.  Phil has played this Gershwin masterpiece live in the Great Auditorium on a number of occasions in the past

 

 

 

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Paul Goldfinger photo. © Blogfinger.net

Paul Goldfinger photo.The Great Auditorium.  Ocean Grove.  September 11, 2011. Blogfinger.net  Click to enlarge.

 

 

U.S. MARINE BAND.  “Colonel Bogey”   from an album called “Great Marches Not by Sousa.”

 

 

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Small town America---Ocean Grove, New Jersey 2013. Independence Day and proud of it. Click left to enlarge Blogfinger photo © Small town America—Ocean Grove, New Jersey 10 years ago, Independence Day and proud of it. Click left to enlarge Blogfinger photo ©

Paul Goldfinger photographs:  Blogfinger.net

Click on the music and then click on any one photo and then follow the arrows.   All photos by Paul Goldfinger ©.  Reproduce with permission only.

These are scenes from the famous Ocean Grove Independence Day Parade sponsored by the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association. The Grand Marshalls were the Calvary Chapel organization honored for their selfless volunteer effort in town after the super-storm Sandy hit on October 29, 2012.

THE BEATLES:

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Ronald Naldi about to leave for a concert in Ocean Grove. 2015. Paul Goldfinger portrait.

Ronald Naldi about to leave his tent  for a concert in Ocean Grove. 2015. Paul Goldfinger portrait.

We first posted this shot of the great tenor Ronald Naldi one year ago.  Here is a link which tells about this photo and offers a recording of Ron performing on one of his albums of Italian music.  But meanwhile,  here are the Chiffons offering a tribute of their own.

https://blogfinger.net/2015/07/26/a-musical-riddle-on-blogfinger/

THE CHIFFONS:

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Cello soloist in the OG Great Auditorium. Photo by Paul Goldfinger

Cello soloist in the OG Great Auditorium. Photograph by Paul Goldfinger. 2017.   Click to enlarge.

 

* Quote from Radar O’Reilly in the TV series “M.A.S.H.”

 

MSTISLAV ROSTROPOVICH:   BACH’S CELLO SUITE #1 in G major, prélude:

 

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Some of my neighbors way back in the GA where original wooden seats are located and where the view is grand. Paul Goldfinger photo ©

Some of my neighbors way back in the GA where original wooden seats are located and where the view is grand. Paul Goldfinger photo ©

 

By Paul Goldfinger, MD, Editor, Blogfinger.net   Re-post on Easter Sunday, April 17, 2022.

 

If you have never witnessed an Ocean Grove choir festival, it is an experience. I attended last night, but it was not a first for me. A large crowd was there to hear the huge massed choir  of about 1000 voices from 125  different churches, professional soloists, the Hope-Jones organ aired out from top to bottom, a number of skilled conductors, a brass ensemble, and a varied program consisting of Christian music. The only composer I recognized was Franz Josef Haydn who wrote the opening anthem, “The Heavens are Telling.”

But even if you don’t know this music and even if you are not Christian, this musical event is astonishing to see.

The Choir Festival is not a typical concert, because, as a number of speakers explained, this program is about prayer through music. As it says in Psalm 95:1 “Oh come, let us sing to the Lord.”  The program, in fact, stresses the words rather than the music. On the cover it says, “Wonderful Words of Life.”

Among the words offered last night was a prayer by the Camp Meeting Association COO JP Gradone who reminded us that living in the northeast was a challenge for those who promote religious principles to guide our lives. He hoped that our country could reconnect with the “values of America’s founders.”

But you can, as I did, attend to enjoy a marvelous musical event, while appreciating its religious significance. I like to sit way in the back, where the moms with infants locate along with others who enjoy the broad expanse of the unique sound and  visuals.

The soloists, with their trained voices, project out and can be clearly heard all the way in the back. They included Ronald Naldi, Monica Zigler, Martha Bartz, and Justin Beck. Plus, of course, there are the Director of Music Dr. Jason C Tramm  and our own Dr. Gordon Turk presiding over those 11,000 pipes.

Below is a sample of what the Choir Festival sounds like.   It is from “How Shall a King Come?” conducted by Dr. Cindy Bell and with soloists Monica Ziglar and Ronald Naldi.

 

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Great Auditorium. Music of the Spirit concert. August 26, 2018. Paul Goldfinger photograph ©  Click to enlarge.

 

By Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger.net   Crank up the volume for the video below.

 

The video below is from the final part of this 6 part composition—Songs of Faith.   It is called “Where Moses Stood.” This section includes choir, organ, brass and percussion.  The words from the last two stanzas are:

“Oh, Mary, oh Mary, oh Mary. No! No! No! No! No! No!

“Don’t you weep and don’t you mourn.

“If I could, I surely would stand on the rock where Moses stood.

“Pharaoh’s army got drownded, oh, Mary, don’t you weep, don’t you mourn.”

 

 

 

August 26, 2018.  Ocean Grove, New Jersey.  Concert Review:

 

The Songs of Faith is like an exciting 6 chapter short-story book that unfolds with beauty, grace, emotions, unexpected plot twists, and wonderful melodies.  Each part captures your mind  in a way that as each one draws to a close, you wish it would stay a bit longer but you also anticipate the next surprise.

Composer Gwyneth Walker borrows from time-worn hymns and gospel tunes while punctuating them with lively and modern hooks and tempos.

It is a great privilege for the audience last night that this piece was performed in the Great Auditorium of Ocean Grove, and the OG Camp Meeting Association deserves high praise for their willingness to sponsor such an original commission, in association with the Summit Music Festival in Summit, New Jersey.  And to present this production at no cost is remarkable indeed.

The presentation included the 120 voice OG Choir, the MidAtlantic Brass Ensemble with percussion, Gordon Turk on the Hope-Jones Organ, and soloists including Monica Ziglar (soprano) Katherine Pracht (Mezzo-Soprano,) Justin Beck (Baritone Soloist) and Ronald Naldi  (Tenor Soloist.)

Jason Tramm conducting.

They were all marvelous, and JoAnnn Lamolino (trumpet soloist in Part 4) was so good with her rendition of “Were You There” performed with Gordon Turk that she received an expansive round of applause–well worth the acclaim.

After the concert, I bumped into soloists Ronald Naldi and Justin Beck walking briskly outside, on the dark tent side of the Auditorium.  Beck was already in shorts, while Naldi had loosened his tie.  They were chatting amiably and smiling as they downed some well-earned soft drinks.

As they breezed by I  told them that their concert was terrific, but their smiles and pace indicated that they knew the event was a success—and so it was.

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