World Photo by Lou Sennick
The Oregon Coast Lab Band performs Friday evening on the Coos Bay Boardwalk under the direction of Stacy Tate. Mike Turner, who teaches at Southwestern Oregon Community College, has been named the new musical director for the Lab Band group.
World Photo by Lou Sennick
The man in red arrived Friday evening on the Coos Bay Boardwalk for the lighting of the city’s Christmas tree. After the Oregon Coast Lab Band performed a few songs and Santa arrived aboard the towboat Coos Bay, Santa helped Coos Bay Mayor Jeff McKeown and all those gathered to light the tree.
COOS BAY - When Stacy Tate first performed with the Lab Band Program Association, he was blowing on his alto saxophone. That was several years ago.
The Marshfield graduate had a somewhat different experience Friday night as the group performed at Coos Bay’s Christmas tree-lighting ceremony.
He was directing.
“Stepping in front of a crowd as a conductor is definitely a challenge and definitely exciting,” he said, while his charges took a break to rest their chops before going into another round of Christmas carols.
Tate volunteered to help out after the group’s founder and longtime music director resigned this past summer.
“When they needed a musical director, I said I was available,” Tate said.
He isn’t the only one who stepped forward to lend a hand.
Mike Turner, head of Southwestern Oregon Community College’s music department, agreed to direct the organization’s advanced group, Evolution, as well as serve as the musical director. Tate leads the Lab Band’s junior and senior ensembles. Neither man is being paid.
“He’s very talented musically,” Tate said of Turner. “Lab Band is lucky to have him.”
Turner served as an interim director following former director Greg Young’s resignation in August. It was Turner’s handling of the group at the Medford Jazz Jubilee that helped convince the Lab Band’s directors to have him take over the group, said Ray Sanford, the group’s president.
“We felt like he had the most to offer, and he helped us out right from the start,” he said.
Turner initially got involved with the youth band last spring, at the end of his first year at Southwestern, when he arranged for students in Evolution to get college credit.
“I didn’t want to see that fail,” he said.
Then, when he took over as an interim director, the students told him they wanted him to stay on.
“I said, ‘OK, I’m going to do it for you guys,’” Turner said. “I really wanted the kids to have this program.”
Turner has agreed to lead the Lab Band for a year, to see if he can juggle his work at the college with the youth group demands.
“Directing Lab Band, it’s almost a full-time job, too,” he said.
That’s why he’s glad to have Tate in the fold, as well as two band members, Gary LeBrun and Jolene Slagle, who serve as assistant student directors. They will get to conduct a few numbers at a concert Tuesday at Southwestern, Turner said.
“It’s important to have someone else helping with the kids, to have a mix of people working with them,” he said.
Sanford said getting Tate to come back also is in keeping with the group’s slogan: Passing it on.
“It’s about passing on the idea of Big Band music from one generation to the next,” he said. “And Stacy is very good at teaching the basics of music training.”
Tate has been playing music for 13 years, and conducting for about the past two or three, he said.
“I’m a music education major, so I like having the opportunity to learn how to teach and how to learn with students,” Tate said.
As for Turner, who has taught in Oregon colleges for much of the past two decades, he understood he would have a challenge replacing a director who many of the students had played under for years.
“I’ve been very careful not to be the previous director,” he said. “My primary concern was that they wanted to continue to play good music.”
Sanford said a few members have left the group following Young’s departure, though not many. He said Evolution lost two of its 22 members, but both were coming up from Bandon, so travel expenses may have played a role. He also noted that there have been some kids joining the beginning band since Young’s departure.
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Disappointed continued wrote on Dec 7, 2008 1:59 PM:
Also, Tate was never an actual member of the program. He has participated intermittently over the last 2 or 3 years, sometimes as a fill in when needed. To call him a Lab Band success story is nothing more than spin to make him look good. Everyone seems quick to forget the other young man who was doing the exact same job as Stacy Tate not so long ago. Paul Vandervort was the Assistant Director under Greg Young for over a year and one of the first former students to actually return after an extended time. He was also one of the first to volunteer to help out when problems arose, having left the band last February due to private matters. Why he was never contacted or even communicated with after he volunteered is something I would very much like to know.
He has in fact been a part of the organization as a sit in on several occasions over the last 6 to 7 years. Another fact is that he does have his high school deploma I graduated with him in 06. And he was approched by a few different board members independantly after only volunteering as a sub, never as a perminate director.
However the point remains that the board made their decision if you have a problem the board is who you would pitition as they gave him his position. Or with the board elections coming up try to get on the board yourself instead of gripping about it.
the board didnt ask him to volunteer...read the article...he volunteered himself, and also told mike turner that he had been in the program before, which he hasnt. In The Know seems to be right on the money with their comment.
Even more to the point, Stacy is taking classes on line to finish his education to obtain a music degree. Is there any reason to throw stones? or make odd implications that he is not qualified to do what he is shown doing?
"In the Know" Your comment does not seem well wishing. The Musical leadership is comming from Mike Turner, who is very well qualified. Stacy is a gifted musician and more then competent in directing the beginning bands. If you were in the know, you would know that Stacy is a Lab Band success story on many levels.
Once again, The World prints before checking facts. While Tate did get a good solid music education at MHS, he is not a graduate of MHS. Never graduated. Tate is not a Music Major - hasn't taken a music class from ANY school for over a year. Tate is ex-employee of Greg Young. I do, however, wish the Lab Band Program all of the luck in the world. It is a great opportunity for kids - it just needs someone who is more competent and experienced as it's leadership.
The World welcomes your comments about stories, and we encourage a robust dialogue on this site. All comments must meet reasonable standards of decency and civility.
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