Symphonic Pops
OFFERINGS
1. Family/Educational Concert
Vitamin Alphabet - audience participation with sign language and guess-along rhymes: “Vitamin G comes from Grandparents, who tuck you in snug; vitamin H is what you get when they give you a....HUG!”
Nocturnal - audience participation, using hand motions and soft sounds of nocturnal animals. Imagine the audience orchestra snapping their fingers quickly for 10 seconds to create... crickets.
Happy Accident - the story of 4 wonderfully successful inventions that started out as no-so-happy accidents.
Eyes Wide Open - audience participation with a simple refrain and hand motion; a song inviting folks to remain open to miracles at any moment.
What Kind of Cat are You?! - sing-along and guess-along game song, and a guaranteed audience pleaser: “What kind of cat has the first name Tom?.... TOM CAT. And what kind of cat is connected to the engine of your car?.... CATALYTIC CONVERTER.”
Some Houses - an exquisite example of audience orchestration. Four different instruments are created from the materials in the immediate environs of each audience member; they learn their parts as the song progresses.
Old St. Helen - audience participation, singing and hand motions on the chorus. Teaches the history of the 1980 eruption of Mt. St. Helen.
‘Wake Up’ Suite: Gotta Get Up, Two Minute Shower, Eat Something, Brush Your Teeth, Totally Ready to Go - a 5 song mini-operetta, tracing the trials and tribulations of a young persons’ morning rituals.
2. Pops Concert
Joy (based on Bach's "Jesu Joy") - audience participation singing on the chorale section. Billy's version preserves the original along with the chorale in English, and adds a fun personal twist by weaving new lyrics around those of the chorale, telling the story of a speeding ticket, and a moral quandry....
Let You Love Me - a song for opening the heart.
Into the Water - with heavy percussion: What happens when one receives the gift of encountering their greatest fear?
Holy Ground - a polyrhythmically robust invocation and invitation to consider the concept of Holy Ground and our perceived alienation from it. Includes baritone marimba and special handbells played by Billy and his ensemble.
Bolero 2.0 - music by Ravel, lyrics by Billy Jonas. Billy’s lyrics serve as a musicological explication of the piece, and of Ravel’s life. The arrangement ends with a surprise audience sing-along and then kazoo-along. Happy Accidents, Some Houses, Eyes Wide Open, What Kind of Cat are You?!, Old St. Helen, see descriptions above.
3. Holiday Concert (multifaith)
The Turkey That Got Away - the story of a Thanksgiving turkey that escapes, and, in its subsequent journey from house to house, observes multiple holiday traditions (Hanukkah, Solstice, Christmas, Kwanzaa, and Diwali - the Hindu festival of lights).
Let There Be Light - alternately a song of re-emergence from places of personal challenge, of being proactive in the face of adversity, of the birth of the cosmos, and a celebration of all festivals of light (Hannukah, Solstice, Christmas, Kwaanza, Diwali).
Christmas Medley - a flexibile array of songs including Silent Night, Good King Wenseslas, Oh Tannenbaum, and Oh Holy Night. Other traditional Chrismas songs can be swapped in as well, and any of the pieces can be done individually.
Hanukkah, Oh Hanukkah - traditional. A happy sing-along in a minor key -- imagine that!
Ocho Kandelikas (Eight Little Candles) - by Flory Jagoda. A beautiful “Ladino” song (Judeo-Spanish), celebrating the candles lit during the eight days of Hanukkah.
What Wondrous Love Is This/Arabic song/Hebrew song - traditional, arranged by Linda Metzner. Three emotional, heartfelt songs of peace and hope from Islam, Christianity, and Judaism that weave together.
Sanctuary - by Randy Scruggs and John W. Thompson. A simple two-line sing-along that invokes the real reason for the season: "Love prepare me to be a sanctuary, pure and holy, tried and true; with thanksgiving, I'll be a living sanctuary for you."
You are Not Alone, Eyes Wide Open, Joy, Holy Ground - see descriptions above.
- Liza Grossman, Conductor and Music Director, Contemporary Youth Orchestra, Cleveland OH