Last Saturday night (Oct. 22) the Concord Band performed the first concert of its 2011/2012 season. The 
band has now developed a strong following, especially for their winter pops concerts and their very 
popular summer concerts at the Fruitlands Museum in Harvard. For those who haven’t heard the band 
in concert at the 51 Walden Street Performing Arts Center, I would strongly encourage you to check out 
their calendar and pick up some tickets. Concert band performances are very enjoyable by listeners of 
all ages and musical interests. Even the more serious pieces of contemporary band music tend to be 
accessible to the casual listener. Band works tend to be shorter than orchestral music, and generally 
very rhythmic and exciting. Saturday night’s performance was no exception. 
The concert opened with “American Overture for Band” by Joseph Jenkins under the baton of James 
O’Dell. This stirring piece opened with a solid and dramatic fanfare very well played by the French horns. 
The piece continued with a pleasing melodic interchange punctuated with staccato elements cleanly 
articulated, especially in the brass sections. Louanne MacKenzie’s oboe “folk tune” solo was especially 
nice.


