Document 6472901
Transcription
Document 6472901
MEMBERS OF PROBE AND THE BARBERSHOP HARMONY SOCIETY North Georgia Barbershop Singers Jan 2014 Vol. 7, No. 1 Editor/publisher Jack Martin 678-777-5013 Lake Lanier, Georgia Chapter <> SPEBSQSA, INC Meets Tuesday evenings, 7:00 pm, Christ the King Lutheran Church 1125 Bettis-Tribble Gap Road, Cumming GA, 30040 Dan Sullivan, President, Tel 770 770--377 377--1294 Steve Dorn, Music Dir. Tel 678 678--595 595--4340 Picture provided by Kelly Starling I decided to do something different this month with my article for the bulletin. I would like to tell you about my grandson. Numerous times he has come through when it matters the most. I share this story to say that if we as a chorus can apply some of the same thoughts to our rehearsals and to our lives, it could help in learning to sing effectively and also to live a creative, productive and inspired life in general. This past summer and fall, my grandson and his team had a fantastic season. They reached the championship finals--to be played as best of three games. In game one of the finals, he is the closing pitcher. He comes into the game with two innings left and his team has a comfortable lead 5-1. But now the nightmare begins. Here he is in a challenging situation and after a lot of great attempts, things are going downhill. His pitches are not the consistent strikes as we have been accustomed to seeing. The game is suddenly tied 5-5. And worse, after another unintentional walk, the bases are loaded. Can you imagine the pressure? The coach pulls my grandson. It’s a decision any good coach would make and my grandson knew it. How would you feel? Would you feel you have let down your team? Would you feel rejected? His teammate in the bottom of the last inning hits a fantastic walk off home run and we win game one. Fast forward to game two and he is the starting pitcher. He has prepared, but things don’t go well. In the third inning, he is replaced and we are down 1-7. So again, how would you feel? Would you start thinking in the line of “I’ve been doing well all season, and now when it matters the most I fail”? The team is down 4-8 but fight back to tie it 8-8. They fall behind again 812 and come back to tie it 12-12. Starting the last inning, they are batting first and are down 1213. His batting hasn’t worked either. He has struck out twice, which has never happened before. What’s wrong? Can you imagine the frustration? He’s playing his worst game of the season when it matters the most. So here we are. We are down 12-13, a runner on second and my grandson is up to bat. He swings, and the ball flies above the outfielder and almost goes to the fence. He gets to second base, and the runner ties the game! It’s not only the most important, but probably his best hit ever. He then steals third base. His teammate hits a single, my grandson runs home to take the lead. The other team bats last and still has a chance to score. My grandson now plays third base. With two outs and a runner on first base, the batter hits a fly ball. It sails beyond third base towards the side fence to go foul. But my grandson runs like crazy, 1 and right before the ball is about to hit the fence, he makes the catch of the season for the win! They were now champions. You can imagine the celebration. So what’s the lesson here? Talk about coming through when it matters the most. What do you think my grandson will remember? The bad start or the unbelievably successful finish? What if he had given up? What if he had started thinking that he wouldn’t hit that ball today, that it was a horrible day, or given up on trying to catch that last ball? The feeling of success naturally becomes even greater because of the prior struggles in our lives. And it’s not about victory over the other team really. It’s about victory over ourselves. Many times when we falter, we want to just quit or to blame something or somebody. Most of us are knocked down, replaced and rejected at some point. Some use this as fuel to become better and find ways to experience success, while others make the determination to give up and never do it again. What we must remember is that successful people are those who have failed the most. I thought about quitting a few months back. I want you to understand that I am not going to let my hearing deficiencies keep me from making the most of the time I have singing barbershop. What is in your life that is holding you back? It is far too common that when things don’t go well we blame outside circumstances whether it is the government, the economy, the music industry, or the umpire. The bottom line is that no matter how badly things seem to go, there is always an opportunity to learn and grow. There is always an opportunity to be a role model for others. There is always a possibility that something wonderful can come out of struggle. I’d like to stress one thing: To be able to be resourceful when things aren’t going well is much more than having a positive mindset and believing. To learn effectively from every experience includes every chorus rehearsal and performance. Let us make this the best year ever for the North Georgia Barbershop Singers. H ey Guys,, We have but a few short weeks (6 to be exact) to get our act together for our Singing Valentine Program. Duane Hunter will be heading up the schedule for our quartets and putting together the flyers for advertising. We have had great success for the past several years with this program and it has been a good fund raiser for our chapter. But maybe more important, it has been great fun for our quartets and certainly very pleasing to those recipients of our Singing Valentines. The below picture is the 6 guys that were first to participate in the Singing Valentine program back in 2007.They are: (from left to right) Rich Pilch, Jerry Frank, Jack Martin, Joe Weiner, Dave Haas and Will Dunne. More on the 2014 Singing Valentine program later in the bulletin. 2 Sound Decision This is for my very good friend, SAM the GOOD OLE BARBERSHOP MAN!!!! By Dan Sullivan S am Franchiser is a long time singer of barbershop music and has been a member of several different barbershop chapters in Florida, Mississippi, and Georgia and possibly another state or two. Sam has been battling with some health issues and is having to be away while he is recuperating. With the Good Lord’s help, Sam is going to win the war. On December 28th, eight of Sam’s former members for his old Florida chapter, The Big Orange, drove up for a visit and Nancy said that Sam got a really big dose of “special medicine” from that visit. Sam was just overwhelmed as they had a great time catching up and doing a little singing. Pat, Bill, Tommy, John, Jack, and Dan drove us from Jacksonville, with Pat bringing oranges and tangelos that he grew himself back down if Florida. Kenny and Mark, two other former members, drove up from Atlanta. Nancy said there were just no words to describe the good that they had done---that kind of medicine that can’t be bought. It all made for a very wonderful Christmas for Sam and Nancy. Sam our thoughts and prayers are always with you!!! False Alarm Sweet Tea As you might have suspected Sam Frankhouser was a very active quartet man. Shortly after Sam joined the NGBS he became active in a quartet called Sound Decision. As with many quartets they lost their lead. This was the end of Sound Decision. Sam soon started singing bari with the False Alarm Quartet. With the disolvement of The North Georgia Gentlemen quartet Sam also joined the Sweat Tea quartet singing the Baritone part. When Sam’s health began to fail he dropped from quarteting with Fred Kanel filling the bari part in the Sweat Tea, False Alarm and Up Town. 3 Seventh Chords and "those minor chords" W e start every chorus practice and board meeting by singing The Old Songs, and in the second line we sing about how we "love to hear those minor chords." Yet there aren't any minor chords in the song, and in fact, most barbershop music contains mostly the happy sounds of major chords and few of the sadder sounds of minor chords. So why does this song call out the sound of minor chords when it doesn't have any? The answer requires that we know something about a chord that's characteristic of barbershop music – the seventh chord. Seventh chords Seventh chords are named for one particular note they contain – the seventh note. Think of the place on the musical staff where a chord starts as position 1 or the primary note or root or the chord. If you count up the lines and spaces on the staff to position 8 the note there is an octave higher than the primary note. If you only go up to position 7 on the staff that note is called the seventh, and the presence of that note in a chord is what gives it the name seventh chord. A simple seventh chord contains the notes in the first, third, and fifth staff positions (called a major triad) plus the note in the seventh position. The first figure shows a C-seventh (C7) chord on a music staff with the key signature of F. It contains the major triad middle-C, E, and G and the seventh note B♭. Of course a B♮ is also on the seventh staff position, and a chord containing that note would have a different sound from the one with the B♭. The interval from the primary C up to B♮ is slightly larger than the interval from the C to the B♭, and consequently the larger interval is called the major seventh and the chord containing it is a major seventh chord. The smaller interval to the B♭ is called the minor seventh. A major seventh chord has a dissonant, unpleasing sound and is seldom used in barbershop music. (The second figure shows an example of a C major seventh chord containing a B♮.) A good example of a major seventh chord in popular music occurs in Burt Bacharach's Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head. In the first phrase the word "head" is accompanied by an F major seventh chord that is held for a full measure. It provides a transition to a more usual F dominant seventh chord (see below) that accompanies the entire next measure starting with the word "just." The chord containing the minor seventh – the B♭ in this example – is called the major-minor seventh or dominant seventh. Unlike the major seventh, the dominant seventh chord is used constantly in barbershop so much so that it has acquired the name barbershop seventh. (When skillful singers sing a barbershop seventh they tune the chord to slightly different notes from those on a piano or pitch pipe to get the sweetest sound. (The reasons for this are outside the scope of this short article.) The seventh chord is so important to the barbershop style that there are strict contest requirements about how much of a song's duration must be comprised of seventh chords. So what about the "minor chords" in The Old Songs? Musicians today understand clearly what a minor chord is but a century ago barbershop singers understood it in a different way. As pointed out by Gage Averill in Four Parts, No Waiting: A Social History of American Barbershop Harmony (Oxford University Press, 2003) the minor chords referred to in songs such as Mr. Jefferson, Lord Play that Barbershop Chord (1910) were the dominant seventh chords containing the minor seventh interval that we now call barbershop sevenths. (continued on page 4) 4 Now we can understand the words in The Old Songs, which was written in 1921. The "minor chords" it refers to aren't minor chords in the music-theory sense – they're the barbershop sevenths that are in all our songs. So if The Old Songs doesn't have any minor chords in the modern sense, how many minor chords in the old barbershop sense (i.e., barbershop sevenths) does it have? In the music below for The Old Songs I've marked all the seventh chords. It can be seen that of the 23 chords in the song, 12 are the "minor" (i.e., seventh) chords that the lyrics speak about. In addition, they are comprised of seventh chords based on seven different notes – a veritable banquet of seventh chords in a song about seventh chords! Next month I'll discuss a special kind of seventh chord - the Chinese seventh – and we'll see how many there are in the songs of our current repertoire. T he featured quartet singing “The Old Songs” is the Springfield Music Company. These guys were from the Springfield, Missouri area in the Central States District. This quartet was one of the great comedic groups of their times as well as being accomplished singers. I am not sure how many contest they won but I can assure you, they won over many audiences well beyond the boundaries of the midwest with their zany music and clever antics. I am proud to call them personal friends! editor Daryl Clyde 5 Paul Jimmy H A P P Y T he NGBS Music Committee has just rolled out our first new song for 2014! We will be working on "When I Fall in Love" to perform in contest this spring. The chart hard copies were distributed along with learning tracks (both electronic and CDs).This committee agrees that this is going to be a challenging tune, but we feel the chorus is up to the task as long as everyone put in the personal time on their parts. Our director has proposed a different (to this chorus) method of learning for this song...one section at a time. We will also be incorporating a few sectionals during the rehearsal portions of our chapter meeting in the next few weeks to solidify our parts. On a more personal note...I want to thank all members of the 2013 NGBS Music Committee for their input and support which made my job as Music VP easier and smoother. I am looking forward to serving in this position for another year and am excited to see where our director will be taking us in 2014! Stay tuned for more great adventures... Thanks Gang, For Your Article Submissions O f the 14 guys I contacted for submitting bulletin articles, 8 responded. We all owe a debt of thanks to those 8 people for making our bulletin one that is enjoyed by many through out our Chapter, District and Society. The making of a great bulletin, is that everyone participates. Are You Listening? 6 F N E W Y E A R alse Alarm Quartet (FAQ) has been trying to get a practice schedule in place but is finding it a difficult task given the holidays, winter illnesses, and family/personal events. This seems to be one of the many challenges of being in a quartet, but every struggle is worth it in the end and things always seems to work out...eventually. FAQ was slated to perform "Mary Had a Baby" for the NGBS Christmas show in December; however, a few days prior to this event, Andy (lead) came down with a bad case of bronchitis! Not only was he supposed to sing in the quartet, he also had a solo in one of the other chorus Christmas songs. Fortunately through the wisdom of our chorus director Steve Dorn, there were back-up soloists in place who had been practicing for weeks. But, what about "Mary"? Long story short, Steve filled in for Andy and did a fine job at that! On December 22nd, FAQ had the pleasure of singing at Northside Hospital Forsyth for Andy's mother who was to have major surgery the next day...she thoroughly enjoyed that! The nurses and doctors got to hear a couple more songs at the nurses' station. It was great, heads kept popping out of hospital rooms as we sang on. Smiles abounded...there's nothing like lifting holiday spirits through barbershop singing! We continue to enjoy performing because we know it is a contribution to keeping the whole world singing! We now have a presence on the internet:falsealarmquartet.com and also on facebook (False Alarm Quartet). Six Steps to Better Singing Through Better Listening We Get Letters T o Jack and all NGBS members. I have been a member since may 2013. I must say this experience has been more rewarding than I expected. I have been well received by everyone. I want to thank all for your support in my first year. I hope I can contribute more and more as this new year progresses. I look forward to new challenges this year. Continued teamwork will take us to greater heights. Written by Mel Knight – Found in the Concho Capers, San Angelo TX, Paul White, editor, who Found it in the Canyon Chords, Montrose, Colorado. Bill Sutton, editor W hile working with a chorus not long ago, I reacquainted myself with how often we ignore a very important factor in singing: LISTENING. The ears are a special part of the total musical apparatus, whether singing or playing an instrument. Ears can be used to enjoy the performance of others. And it should be a highly sophisticated part of your own performance. First of all, we need to be able to ignore certain sounds that are distracting to our musical experience, whether it is squeaky risers, the whirring of a fan or a passing car outside. Shutting out noise is a part of focusing on the singing task at hand. Second, we need to listen to ourselves in a critical way, within the context of the total ensemble. Am I on the right notes? In learning new music, do I just bull my way through the notes and words or do I try to check my accuracy against others around me? When singing along with a learning track, do I often loudly drown out the track's notes? Ease up. Listen. You might even learn more accurately! Third, and of great importance, am I singing in tune with everyone else? This applies not only to the tonality of the song, but of the accuracy of pitch within my section. In a quartet, am I conscious of the other three parts and the intonation of the total group? The more you listen, the more likely you are to increase your ability to recognize minute differences in pitch. Fourth, do I listen to match vowel sounds with my fellow singers? Does my ear tell me to adjust in order to match others? The same thing applies to attacks and releases. Do I begin and end with others in the ensemble? If not, could it be we're not listening closely enough? Fifth, how is my balance with the other parts? Am I too loud? Blending in? Are there some notes in the chord that might require more or less volume? You're not likely to know the answers to these questions if you aren't listening! Finally, what do I sound like by myself? Am I happy with my vocal production? Am I listening critically for improvements when given specific instructions? If you will let good, critical listening skills develop, you will have a lot more fun singing… and everyone around you will too! Happy listening! Sincerely, Neill Harris I got a nice note from Jerry Wood telling me of his recent rotator cuff operations, and the activities and limitations that he is (has) suffered in the recent past. I am reluctant to repeat the exact wording, but I can assure it was it was quite humorous and life like. Thanks Jerry and here’s hoping for your early recovery. Sincerely Jerry Wood T hank You Kevin Seidule. Kevin covered our Christmas Performance quite adequately by sending me a passel of pictures and videos he took during our show. “That’s What I Call a Pal” Hummmm! A great barbershop song available to all of us. H i Jack, Thank you so much for sharing your excellent bulletin with us. On behalf of the Fullerton Chapter, California we wish you and yours a terrific Christmas and New Year’s Holiday. In harmony, Spence Graves, Past President of the Fullerton Chapter, CA PS: Keep up the good work! T hanks Spence, I get considerable enjoyment knowing that you are enjoying our Chapter Bulletin. jack 7 editorial First Harmony of the 2014 Year I T t is already January 6, 2014 and we will be Singing Valentine’s on February 14, 2014. Tomorrow night you will be given materials to help you sell an average of 2 Singing Valentines each. Doing this will assure a successful SINGING VALENTINE’S EVENT. Yes I’m calling it an EVENT because the people who receive this gift of love remember the EVENT forever. Click on the link below to see the article published in CummingHome.com today. he chapter seems to off to a good start! Our First meeting in 2014 came off as a fun and productive time! After taking a couple weeks off over the holidays most every one came out in 20 degree weather on the 7th of Jan to get their harmony hunger satisfied. Also fellowship was in abundance! We got started on some new music, with our new musical director (no more interim) and reviewed several other songs as well as doing some pick-up quartet singing and tag teaching/ learning. Jerry Wood also gave a brief testimonial about his enjoyment since belonging to the NGBS. I especially had a good time as my December activities was curtailed due to family health problems. Oh yes, I also won the 50/50 :-) Funny how winning the 50/50 can enhance your enjoyment! http://cumminghome.com/north-georgia-barbershopsingers-singing-valentines%E2%80%8B/ North Georgia Barbershop Singers “Singing Valentines” --By Staff Writer on -SINGING VALENTINES will be delivered locally and personally by a Barbershop Quartet. If you think your spouse or loved one deserves a very special Valentine this year, this will really surprise and impress a lot longer than a box of candy or flowers from the grocery store. Cumming Playhouse Performance, a Financial Success. Just call 770-609-9853 to schedule four talented Barbershop singers to surprise and delight at the work place, your home, a restaurant or another location of your choosing. These men will sing two love songs in perfect Barbershop harmony; leave a beautiful rose and a personalized Valentine card from you. The NORTH GEORGIA BARBERSHOP SINGERS offer this very affordable and special gift from you on Friday, Feb. 14th. O ur chapter received a handsome payment recently for our presentation of our Christmas Show on the 19th of December, in the popular Cumming Playhouse. We truly had a full house in attendance, with folks trying to obtain tickets right up to the opening of the first song. Thank you, Chet Burdick for your expert chairmanship, and a big thank you to every performer in the production. Only a limited number of Singing Valentines are available so call 770-609-9853 between 9AM and 8PM, to get the details and insure your Singing Valentine will be delivered. 8 R-E-S-P-E-C-T Penned by Tom (noise Abatement Engineer) Riggle R emember that song from 1967 as done by Aretha Franklin? I have been thinking about that song recently and thought that the beginning of a new year would be a good time for us to re-focus and remind ourselves of a couple basic points about our decorum during rehearsals. Most of you have heard this before but the newer members may not have considered this. Some of us longer-term members could also use a reminder. Jerry Wood has been a BHS member for 31 years and recently made the comment that, in all his years of experience, in several choruses, he finds that our chapter has the best blend of having fun and learning new songs while striving to sing better. That’s quite a compliment! We need to maintain that balance. Now, Steve Dorn has just been made our official Director with no qualifiers before or after that title. So, I make this timely suggestion that we all take a look at ourselves and ask that we conduct ourselves with respect for the Director and our fellow chorus members. I know we all like Steve and what he is doing for us. But, as Jack Martin told us once, when the singing stops, that is not a signal for you to start talking. Have some respect for the Director, or whoever is standing up front. Most often that would be Steve, Rich, Jerry Wood, Chuck or Dan. The person standing before the chorus has the floor. That is the time to listen and learn. Steve has been very patient with us but he, appointed and we, have had to endure too much chatter beas Full Time Musical tween songs. There should be little or no joking or laughing or one on one discussion between songs. Director of the NGBS It is also not your place to try to make corrections in the singing of other’s during rehearsal time. That is the director’s job. Save it for break time or before and after rehearsal or a sectional session. You need to realize that when you talk between songs, it’s not just you that will miss what the director is saying. It’s also the person you are talking to, and anyone else within earshot. You might think you are having a private and productive conversation by talking with your neighbor about the music between songs. You are not, because of the unintended impact you are having on others while the man with the floor is talking! We are off to a great start for 2014 and I look forward to every Tuesday night. This is a wonderful chapter with good balance so let’s maintain that and proceed with R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Steve Dorn “Damn-it, this is my Happy Face!” 9 singing with folks who know whereof they sing. The kind of hours that send you to bed with goosebumps that won’t go away until maybe two days later, when you’re flyin’ home… Oh, yeah: there’s golf on Thursday and Friday mornings, if ya just gotta “spoil a good walk.” Sing a song on every tee. But ya gotta sign-up ahead of time, to be sure we’ve got enough tee times… You can find details on the BQPA/ P i o n e e r s w e b s i t e : www.bqpa.com. Check out the “Events” page. (If you get there on Wednesday, there’s even a spaghetti and meatball dinner, with quartets – see the details on the website…) Specifically, we’ll be at the Embassy Suites, 4400 South Rural Road, Tempe, AZ 85282. Their phone number is 480-897-7444, and t h e i r w e b s i t e a d d r e s s is www.embassysuitestempe.com. (If you’re reserving a room, make sure you tell ’em you’re with the barbershoppers, or that you’ll be attending the BQPA gathering, so you get the festival room rate – VERY attractive.) Hope to see you there! Look me up, and sing a tag or a song with me! BQPA/Pioneers Spring Festival – Tempe, AZ – April 9 - 12, 2014 This is to let you know that the next festival organized by the Barbershop Quartet Preservation Association / Pioneers is scheduled for th April 9 through the 12th, in T e mpe , Ar izona. Why should you be interested? Because our gettogethers are nothing more or less than three or four days of do-it-yerself quarteting, in the old style. While we do have a “luck-of-the-draw” quartet contest on the Friday evening, almost all of the remaining time is occupied by informal quarteting. No assignments, no requirements. You sing what you know: old arrangements, old songs. Find three other parts and belt one! (Or finesse one, if you prefer ballads.) Find three other singers and teach ‘em a tag! Or get together with someone who’ll teach a tag to you! Woodshedders are welcome, but that’s not all we do; we sing old songs, tags, familiar arrangements from the 40s through the 90s – you name it. In quartets, that form and melt away, and re-form, on and on. From morning ‘til the wee hours… It ain’t just sour old folks getting together to mumble to each other about “the olden days.” We all SING. And I myself have had a number of really, really intense hours at our festivals, Barily yours, T o m N o b le , BQPA/Pioneers Pr e s ide n t School closer in Cumming, Ga ! 10 The Chinese Seventh By Jerry (Engineer of Music) Frank A while back, I asked someone or anyone to explain the Chinese Seventh to me. In the vacuum of response, I have decided to search out a possible source of this chord and the strange moniker. Let’s assume that the Chinese part of the name is because it denotes something foreign and unusual that doesn’t really belong where it is found so it must be titled such that we recognize the strangeness. Since the key of C is simplest to type and since something true in C is true in any other major key, let me use it to start my search. As with all keys, the Major chord is the place to start. This would be C,E,G, and in barbershop C again but an octave higher. To get any other chord, we mangle the Major chord in some way by flatting (dropping down a half tone) or augmenting (raising by a half tone) one or more of these fine notes of this stellar chord. As the music world would have it, each of these chords would then have a name. To simplify, I’m going to ignore all the various twisting and turning of tones except the seventh chords. If we flat the higher octave C, we arrive at C,E,G,B which is named the “C Major 7th” which is the neat barbershop seventh chord having the root, third, fifth and seventh notes of the C scale. If we again flat the seventh (B), we arrive at the Dominant 7th of C,E,G,Bb. If we also flat the third (E to an Eb), we find that we have the C Minor 7th (C,Eb,G,Bb). While we are fiddling about with the third, we could also augment this note (E to F) and arrive at the “C Dominant 7 Suspended 4th” (C,F,G,Bb). Don’t blame me. I didn’t name it. Check with a music major. I’m just an engineer. Moving right along, we can leave the third alone and mess with the fifth. If we flat the fifth we have a “Dominant 7th flatted fifth” logically enough. That is C,E,Gb,Bb just so you can mark where we are. We can instead augment the fifth to give us the “Dominant 7th Augmented 5th” (C,E,G#,Bb)(no big surprise here). Other variations are achieved by flatting the 3rd and the 5th and double flatting the 7th to give the “Diminished 7th” of C,Eb,Gb,A. By scrunching the Minor 7th noted above by flatting the 5th we get the “Minor 7th Flatted 5th”chord. You work it out. I’m bushed. Ok I have just run out of the officially named 7th chords of the C scale but there is another seventh chord that can be written in the key of C without the use of accidentals (which I was earlier told was not possible) that is called the G dominant 7th chord. The notes are G,D,B,F which is a bit strange since there isn’t any C in it. What is that chord doing in a music piece written in the key of C? Well, we didn’t cheat and use accidentals so it is definitely written in all white keys. It is also a seventh chord if you take G as root, B as 3rd,D, as 5th and of course F is the seventh. This is certainly strange but not strange enough to be called a Chinese seventh. To make it truly strange and unique enough to be called Chinese you have to put the root (G) above the seventh (F) leaving the fifth (D) as the lowest note and the third tucked between the fifth and the seventh. Now it is truly the Chinese seventh. So by observation, a Chinese seventh must be written in the key signature without the use of accidentals, the root of the Chinese seventh will be the fifth of the key signature and the sequence of the chord must be in the order of lowest to highest: 5th,3rd,7th,root. If anyone can come up with a Chinese seventh that violates these observations, please refute my logic and give me a better definition. Remember, according to the many rules of music; if something is true in one major key, it will be true in any major key. All you have to do is remember all the rules when you are plotting out the chords. Good luck with that. As I review this article, I am reminded of an old adage which goes something like this: If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with (something else). 11 Lake Lanier Chapter Board of Directors and Appointees Officers 2014 President Membership VP Secretary Treasury Music & Perf VP Program VP PR & Publicity Member at Large Member at Large Asst Director Dan Sullivan Fred Kanel Tom Riggle Chet Burdick Andy Doetsch Jerry Wood Duane Hunter Neill Harris Bill Liles Rich Pilch Appointee Musical Director Steve Dorn Asst Music Dir Rich Pilch Consultant to Music Dir on Music Issues Jack Martin Bulletin Editor Jack Martin Webmaster Andy Doetsch Music Librarian Terry Gillim Social Director Terry Gillim Chorus Manager Dan Sullivan Historian Bob Biccum Uniform Chairman Rich Pilch 50/50 Dude Chuck Berny Section Leaders Tenor Bob Hitch Lead Tom Riggle Bari Andy Doetsch Bass Chuck Berny County Liaison Rep Dawson County Rich Pilch Forsyth County Duane Hunter Hall County Tom Riggle Lumpkin County TBD Linda Berny ( Chuck’s Wife) Involved in Car Accident Future Events L inda, Sorry to hear of your misfortune, being involved in a pretty serious car accident. Hope your recovery is very soon. NGBS Flight Humor The flight Captain said that, in light of his bad landing, he had a hard time looking the passengers in the eye, thinking that someone would have a smart comment. Finally everyone had gotten off except for a little old lady walking with a cane. She said, "Sir do you mind if I ask you a question?" "Why, no, Ma'am," said the pilot. What is it?" The little old lady said, "Did we land, or were we shot down?" Feb 14 Lake Lanier Chapter Singing Valentine Program. Mar 14-16 International Quartet Prelims and Dixie Chorus Contest. Nashville, Tennessee. CA MUS PRS SNG B Thompson, Geesa Fisk, Miller Lietke, Nau Conover, Ward Late News ill Balser’s wife, Rona remains in rehab from breaking her leg 4 weeks ago. Bill tells me Rona’s progress is slow. Please keep Bill and Rona in your prayers. I have learned that Dick Lord of the Roswell Firehouse Brigade is home recovering from gall bladder removal. Wishing you a quick recovery, Richard. NGBS Lake Lanier Chapter Quartets Happy Birthday January 2 Chet Burdick 12 Jerry Taylor 31 Andy Doetsch February 11 Bill Liles Bob Jerry Tom Duane Fred Terry Tom Rich Fred A J Chuck Fred know when it will strike, . Y oubutnever there comes a moment when you know that you just aren't going to do anything productive for the rest of the day. Bob 12 Andy Rick Fred That’s What I Call a Pal several years in the Jacksonville Florida, Big Orange Barbershop Chapter. Sam was very active and managed to make his mark there. Sam left the “Big Orange” group some time ago to move to the North Georgia area. Sam settled in Cleveland GA. Sam was active in the Blairsville GA chapter for a while and then moved his membership to the Stone Mountain Chorus, prior to joining the NGBS. Sam has been with the NGBS for about 4 years now. As you might expect Sam made a lot of friends in the Big “O” chapter in earlier years as evidenced by those singers in the picture. Yes, eight (8) of Sam’s singing buddies from the Big “O” drove up from Jacksonville to visit Sam in late December. As you can see from the smiles, everyone had a good time. Picture provided by Nancy Frankhouser via Bob Hitch As most of us know, San Frankhouser spent Jan-Feb, 2014 Sunday Monday Sun Mon Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Tue 1 Wed 2 New Years Day 5 6 7 Thu Friday 3 Fri Saturday 4 Lunch at Ippolitos 8 9 1o 11 Chapter Meeting 7:00 PM 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Ground Hog Day 13 Sat