Making Learning Irresitable for Over 25 Years. Making Learning Irresitable for Over 25 Years.
Practice Records Due 9/10

Practice records are due Monday for 7th  and 8th grade orchestras only. Click below to save, view and print a copy of the practice records

practice record.doc

posted on: September 08, 2007

Atlanta Symphony Tickets

Dear Friends and Parents,

Would you like an opportunity to hear the ASO and world-renowned conductor Pinchas Zukerman?  Well read on...
_______________________________________________________________________

Enjoy $12 tickets to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra!

Join us for a concert October 11/12/13 at 8pm
Contact Angela White at 404.733.4848 or angela.white@woodruffcenter.org to get the discount. 

GREAT SEATS STILL AVAILABLE!


HAYDN: Symphony No. 83, La Poule
CHAUSSON:  Poeme for violin
RAVEL:  Tzigane, for violin
SAINT-SAENS:  Symphony No. 3, “Organ” 
    Pinchas Zukerman, conductor

asopic

*Offer not valid at box office, subject to availability.
 

posted on: August 29, 2007

Grüß Gott!

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The Doemel's are in Germany for a few weeks. We landed today and have already done so much!. Click on the pictures for a larger view of some castles and scenes. What a fastidiously beautiful country. We will visit Bonn to see Beethoven's house and Vienna, home of so many wonderful musicians. Stay tuned.

posted on: June 17, 2007

Sumer Is Icumen In

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...is a traditional English round, the oldest example of counterpoint, a music composition technique, in existence. The title might be translated as "Summer has come in" or "Summer has arrived",  The language is Middle English, more exactly Wessex dialect.  It is the oldest piece of six-part polyphonic music in existence.  Its composer is anonymous, possibly W. de Wycombe, and it is estimated to date from around 1260.

Thank you to the departing 8th grade students.  Many of you I hope to see regularly at Lassiter.  You helped make this a great three years for me and I have enjoyed working with you.  I’m proud of what we accomplished and hope you are also.

I hope you have a wonderful high school experience.  Please keep in touch.

posted on: June 17, 2007

Practice Record

Here's a copy of the last practice record

Last PR-1.doc'

posted on: May 22, 2007

Congratulations

post film festCongratulations to the Mabry Orchestra iMovie team.  The team's movie, "Music: Our Common Bond" was awarded the "Best Cinematography" award at the 2007 Mabry Film Festival.  The film was nominated in four categories including Best Sound, Best Editing, Best Cinematography and Best Picture.  "Music: Our Common Bond", along with all the other excellent films nominated for Best Picture, can be seen by clicking this link.

posted on: April 29, 2007

Mabry Symphony

The Mabry Symphony will rehearse tomorrow morning at 8 am in the Orchestra room.  DON'T BE LATE!!

posted on: April 18, 2007

Congratulations!

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Congratulations to (from L to R) Ian M., Jessica I., and Katherine J. for being chosen to be part of the 2007 Cobb County Middle School Honor Orchestra.  After auditioning, they were chosen from hundreds of middle school string players to participate.  The performance, at McEachern HS on Saturday, April 14th, was a wonderful example of the wealth of talented musicians being developed in Cobb County.  Jessica and Katherine are 8th graders who will be part of the Lassiter HS Orchestra next year.  Ian is a 7th grader!  Congratulations for this honor that your hard work has brought you!

posted on: April 18, 2007

Practice Records

Practice Records are due next Monday, April 23rd.  Here's a copy.

PR7-1.doc

posted on: April 16, 2007

Mabry Orchestra Spring Concert

On the Concert and Activity Calendar you received in the Fall the date for our Spring Concert was listed as May 3rd. 
For several reasons the date for this concert has been moved to Tuesday, May 15th at 7 p.m..  Please contact me at
Chris.Doemel@Cobbk12.org with any conflicts.

Thursday, May 3rd is the Lassiter Orchestra's "Night At The Movies".  The 8th Grade Orchestra will perform at that event. 
You received a form recently to purchase tickets.  On that form the date was incorrect.  The correct date and time are Thursday,
May 3rd at 7:30 p.m.

posted on: April 16, 2007

$12 tickets to the Atlanta Symphony!

Enjoy $12 tickets to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra!
GREAT TICKETS AVAILABLE!

April 26th, 27th, 28th at 8:00 pm

Atlanta Symphony Hall

PROGRAM:
MAXWELL DAVIES: An Orkney Wedding, with Sunrise
TURNAGE: Three Screaming Popes
MACMILLAN: Britannia
BRITTEN: Sinfonia da Requiem
ELGAR:  Pomp and Circumstance Marches Nos. 1 and 4

Donald Runnicles, conductor 
Scott Long, Highland bagpipes

Mr. Runnicles takes us to his British homeland: the source of Elgar’s popular success, Britten’s deeply felt and universal anti-war ode, and “a trajectory of exuberant fun” from Turnage.  From Scotland comes a loving evocation of a wedding, which ends with a bagpiper greeting the dawn of a new day. 

CONTACT RUSSELL WHEELER AT (404) 733-4807 OR russell.wheeler@woodruffcenter.org to purchase.  Offer not valid at box office.

posted on: April 11, 2007

Mabry Symphony

THE MABRY SYMPHONY will rehearse tomorrow morning at 8am in the orchestra room.

posted on: April 11, 2007

An Atlanta Symphony Season Preview

If you're interested contact Carol Doemel at Carol.Doemel@Cobbk12.org

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posted on: March 30, 2007

URGENT - 8th Grade Spring Trip

PLEASE return the CCSD "Permission To Participate In Overnight Trips" form (IFCB-6), the notarized medical release form (IFCB-5.  Our secretary will notarize it for free) and front/back copy of your insurance card now.

There will be a parent information meeting on Tuesday, April 10th at 7pm in the Mabry Theater regarding our Spring Trip.

posted on: March 28, 2007

8th Grade Orchestra Playing Test

The 8th grade orchestra will have a playing test on Monday, April 9th.  The material is the 2 octave F Major scale and arpeggio, #134,135 in the Essential Techniques III book.

posted on: March 28, 2007

You Should Know This.

Science Daily - A newly published study by Northwestern University researchers suggests that Mom was right when she insisted that you continue music lessons -- even after it was clear that a professional music career was not in your future.

The study, which will appear in the April issue of Nature Neuroscience, is the first to provide concrete evidence that playing a musical instrument significantly enhances the brainstem's sensitivity to speech sounds. This finding has broad implications because it applies to sound encoding skills involved not only in music but also in language.

The findings indicate that experience with music at a young age in effect can "fine-tune" the brain's auditory system. "Increasing music experience appears to benefit all children -- whether musically exceptional or not -- in a wide range of learning activities," says Nina Kraus, director of Northwestern's Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory and senior author of the study.

"Our findings underscore the pervasive impact of musical training on neurological development. Yet music classes are often among the first to be cut when school budgets get tight. That's a mistake," says Kraus, Hugh Knowles Professor of Neurobiology and Physiology and professor of communication sciences and disorders.

"Our study is the first to ask whether enhancing the sound environment -- in this case with musical training -- will positively affect the way an individual encodes sound even at a level as basic as the brainstem," says Patrick Wong, primary author of "Musical Experience Shapes Human Brainstem Encoding of Linguistic Pitch Patterns." An old structure from an evolutionary standpoint, the brainstem once was thought to only play a passive role in auditory processing.

Using a novel experimental design, the researchers presented the Mandarin word "mi" to 20 adults as they watched a movie. Half had at least six years of musical instrument training starting before the age of 12. The other half had minimal (less than 2 years) or no musical training. All were native English speakers with no knowledge of Mandarin, a tone language.

In tone languages, a single word can differ in meaning depending on pitch patterns called "tones." For example, the Mandarin word "mi" delivered in a level tone means "to squint," in a rising tone means "to bewilder," and in a dipping (falling then rising) tone means "rice." English, on the other hand, only uses pitch to reflect intonation (as when rising pitch is used in questions).

As the subjects watched the movie, the researchers used electrophysiological methods to measure and graph the accuracy of their brainstem ability to track the three differently pitched "mi" sounds.

"Even with their attention focused on the movie and though the sounds had no linguistic or musical meaning for them, we found our musically trained subjects were far better at tracking the three different tones than the non-musicians," says Wong, director of Northwestern's Speech Research Laboratory and assistant professor of communication sciences and disorders.

The research by co-authors Wong, Kraus, Erika Skoe, Nicole Russo and Tasha Dees represents a new way of defining the relationship between the brainstem -- a lower order brain structure thought to be unchangeable and uninvolved in complex processing -- and the neocortex, a higher order brain structure associated with music, language and other complex processing.

These findings are in line with previous studies by Wong and his group suggesting that musical experience can improve one's ability to learn tone languages in adulthood and level of musical experience plays a role in the degree of activation in the auditory cortex. Wong also is a faculty member in Northwestern's Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program.

The findings also are consistent with studies by Kraus and her research team that have revealed anomalies in brainstem sound encoding in some children with learning disabilities which can be improved by auditory training.

"We've found that by playing music -- an action thought of as a function of the neocortex -- a person may actually be tuning the brainstem," says Kraus. "This suggests that the relationship between the brainstem and neocortex is a dynamic and reciprocal one and tells us that our basic sensory circuitry is more malleable than we previously thought."

Overall, the findings assist in unfolding new lines of inquiry. The researchers now are looking to find ways to "train" the brain to better encode sound -- work that potentially has far-reaching educational and clinical implications. The study was supported by Northwestern University, grants from the National Institutes of Health and a grant from the National Science Foundation.

posted on: March 20, 2007

What's Mr. Doemel Listening To?

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Right now I'm listening to the Mabry 8th Grade Orchestra performance with Barrage the other night.  And I'm incredibly proud of them.  I hope they realize the skills they have and that they will continue to grow and keep music-making a part of their lives. 

I also listened to Crooked Still and the Wild Band of Snee tonight, because Rushad will be here next Thursday.  He'll be playing 2 'shows'. The first @1:35, the 2nd @ 2:45. 

The shows are

open to the public.  Check in at the front office and come to the theater at the times above. 

posted on: March 13, 2007

As of 3/13 at

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As of 3/13 at 8:56pm, all practice records I have received have been entered into I-Cue (and will show up in I-Parent).

posted on: March 13, 2007

Why is music education vital to our children’s education?

The 2002 federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation names arts education as part of the “core curriculum” for schools, on par with reading, math and science. This legislation underscores research that supports music education as a critical component to the overall educational experience of our youth. By listing the arts among the core academic subjects, NCLB established a goal that all students have the opportunity to achieve in the arts, and reap the benefits of a comprehensive, creative, innovative education.

Even with this policy directive outlining the role of arts and music education in schools, the federal legislation has not made its way to state and local schools. As a result, more than 22 percent of schools surveyed nationally have reduced instructional time for music and art. Parents, employers and community leaders expect schools to prepare children to be creative and successful in the information age, and still, there is a discrepancy in many schools between the curriculum and desired outcomes for student learning, particularly in the areas of arts and music education.

Legislators need to know that their constituents support and believe that music education in schools is vital to ensuring a quality education for all children. As Congress begins to consider reauthorization of No Child Left Behind legislation, we must demonstrate our commitment at the federal, state and local levels to making sure students have the opportunity to learn music and arts in school, and to expand their minds through more creative and innovative education.

By communicating your views to your Member of Congress, you are taking a critical first step to ensuring a commitment to arts education. By demonstrating community support across the country, we can encourage legislators to not only reauthorize NCLB legislation with language that strengthens access to music and arts education, but to also strengthen the federal commitment to ensure that a quality arts curriculum is implemented nationwide.

Please take a moment today to tell your Member of Congress that reauthorization of No Child Left Behind must continue to support and strengthen our national commitment to the arts, both in theory and in practice, in schools across the country.

posted on: March 12, 2007

Next Up...

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Is our trip to the Woodruff Arts Center on Wednesday, March 14th to attend a performance by the Atlanta Symphony.  We need to leave by 9AM to get to Woodruff in time.  Chaperones please be here no later than 8:40.  Check in at the front office and come back to the orchestra room.  Students need to bring $6 or so for lunch at Colony Square.  Casual but nice dress is appropriate.  No shorts, t-shirts or torn clothing.  We'll be back before 2PM.

posted on: March 07, 2007

Barrage

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Below is a link to the newscast about the Barrage event last week.

http://www.11alive.com/news/education/article_education.aspx?storyid=93350

(I could only get it to show the video on Netscape and Internet Explorer, not Safari or Firefox.)

Click on Donna Lowry Reports

You need Windows Media Player to view it, which you can download for free.

Thanks to Emily's Dad for his time and energy in getting this on the air.

Click on the picture above for a larger view.

posted on: March 06, 2007

CODA Festival

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posted on: March 02, 2007

Festival Monday and Tuesday

This went home in a letter dated 2/15 but here it is again.

Mabry Seventh and Eighth Grade Orchestra Students will participate in the Cobb Orchestra Directors Association (C.O.D.A.) Middle School Orchestra Festival at Dodgen Middle School.  The Seventh Grade Orchestra will perform on Monday, March 5th  at 6:25 p.m. and the Eighth Grade Orchestra will perform on Tuesday, March 6th  at 7:15 p.m.

This is an important performance and all students are expected to participate.  The performances are open to the public and you are encouraged to attend.

We will have a pizza dinner at Mabry before we leave for Dodgen.  Dinner will be provided with funds from our fall fundraiser.  We will leave Mabry after dinner and travel by school bus to Dodgen. The Cobb County Board of Education provides school buses free of charge for transportation to festival.

IMPORTANT  There is no return transportation provided.  Please arrange pick-up from Dodgen at 8:30 P.M.  Most of you will be at the performance and will provide transportation home for your child.

IMPORTANT  Students using school-owned instruments must return the instrument to Mabry by 9:00 a.m. the next morning.

IMPORTANT  Students will bring their concert uniform with them to school on festival morning. Concert dress for boys is solid black slacks, long sleeve white dress shirt with long tie, black socks and black or dark dress shoes. Concert dress for the girls is a long (ankle length or longer) solid black skirt or black slacks, long sleeve white dress shirt and black or dark dress shoes.  Please adhere to these guidelines closely.  This is an important performance for these young musicians and they should dress appropriately.

As always, we need
parent chaperones for this field trip.  If you can ride the bus to Dodgen with us, or provide transportation for string basses and cellos please contact me at Chris.Doemel@Cobbk12.org

Your children and the Cobb County Orchestra Directors put tremendous effort into producing this festival. 
Students should be practicing diligently on their festival music.  We hope you will come out and support them at this exciting event.  We look forward to seeing you at our 11th Annual C.O.D.A. Festival.

posted on: March 02, 2007

Mabry Symphony

The Mabry Symphony will perform at the District 12 GMEA Large Group Performance Evaluation (Festival) tomorrow, February 26th at 4:30 at McEachern HS.  Students will leave Mabry at 2:00 and return at 6:30. 

What to Wear?  Students should bring their concert uniform with them to school  Concert dress for boys is solid black slacks, long sleeve white dress shirt with long tie, black socks and black or dark dress shoes. Concert dress for girls is a long (ankle length or longer) solid black skirt or black slacks, long sleeve white dress shirt (3/4 length is ok) and black or dark dress shoes.  Please adhere to these guidelines closely.  This is an important performance for these young musicians and they should dress accordingly.

Charperones:  To date, no parent has indicated they will chaperone this trip.  We must have 2 other adults accompany us on this trip.  If you are able to chaperone, please arrive no later than 1:50, check in at the front and come back to the orchestra room.

posted on: February 25, 2007

Barrage Tickets

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Barrage tickets went home Friday (2/16) with the 6th and 8th grade students who purchased them.  7th graders will be bringing them home on Wednesday (2/21).

posted on: February 17, 2007

Correction

I sent home a letter today with incorrect dates (what a surprise).  Our Festival dates are: Seventh Grade Orchestra, Monday, March 5th and 8th Grade Orchestra, Tuesday, March 6th.    These are the same dates as on the calendar in the orchestra handbook you got at the beginning of the year.  The Seventh Grade Orchestra will play at 6:25 p.m. on Monday and the Eighth Grade orchestra will play at 7:15 on Tuesday.

posted on: February 15, 2007

Here's What's Happening

6th Grade:  We'll be continuing to reinforce the new notes F natural and C natural as well as slurs and string crossings.  You’ve been given 5 of the 9 pieces we will play at String Jamboree (March 22nd).  Don’t wait for a specific assignment to begin working on these pieces.

Use the ‘left hand’ and ‘right hand’ warm-ups we do in class to warm up before you practice at home.  At this stage you can’t over do these important repetitions.

7th Grade:  We’ve made great strides in our festival music (March 5th).  American Folk Trilogy, Iowa Spring and Castle Lore are coming along nicely.

I chose this music because it uses the new skills we’ve learned this year. Advanced rhythms and bowings, lots of high threes and low ones for the upper strings, open position for the cellos and shifting opportunities for the basses.

8th Grade: Our festival music is coming along also.  But before festival (March 6th) we’ve got the exciting performance on the Barrage concert (February 23rd).  MacPherson’s Lament needs all of our attention between now and then.  The other 2 pieces we’ll do at festival, Brandenburg No. 3 and Postcards From Russia are both tough also.  Please make certain you give them the time they need so you are prepared for this important performance.

Mabry Symphony: As stated earlier on this blog, the performance on February 13th has been cancelled.  The music for our festival (February 26th) is sounding great.  Rites of Tamburo and Finale from Symphony No. 2 are both exciting.  Meeting only once a week is a challenge.  Please make sure you’re preparing your music so when we get together we can work on ensemble issues.

All: Please practice regularly and efficiently.  We’ve talked at length in class about how to practice.

Locate then isolate the problem, work it out SLOWLY, put it back in context (with the measure or few beats before and after) then gradually work it back up to tempo.

Some problems won’t be fixed in one practice session, that’s why regular practice is so important.

Remember, each one of you is important to the quality of both the Mabry and Lassiter Orchestra programs.

posted on: February 11, 2007

Mark O'Connor

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This is a link to an NPR program where Mark O'Connor plays through various fiddle styles.  It's very cool!

Mark O'Connor playing fiddle styles

posted on: February 06, 2007

Barrage

Picture 2The Mabry 8th Grade Orchestra has been invited to perform on the program with Barrage.  On Friday, February 23rd we will travel to Kell High School after school by county school bus.  We will rehearse, then have dinner about 7 pm.  Dinner will be cheese or pepperoni pizza.  Students may bring their own dinner.  The performance begins at 8:00.  We are first on the program. 


If your child will not stay for the Barrage portion of the performance, they need to be picked up at 8:15 from Kell.  If they will stay for the program, please pick them up at 9:30 pm at Kell.

Basses and cellos must be returned to Mabry the following morning.  Let me know now if that will be a problem.

The uniform will be our new t-shirt and
nice jeans.  Please, no holes or graffiti.

We will need chaperones for the trip to Kell, to help with dinner.

For more information on Barrage visit their web site at: 
www.barrage.org. 

Email questions to Chris.Doemel@cobbk12.org

posted on: February 06, 2007

Practice Records

Practice records are due.  Please turn them in before the end of the day on Thursday

posted on: February 06, 2007

Playing Test

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Both 6th grade and both 8th grade classes will have a playing test this Friday.
The 6th grade will play #116, Song For Maria.  The 8th graders will play an excerpt they were given
today in class from the Bach Brandenburg Concerto.  For the 8th graders it will determine their seating
for our Festival performance.

posted on: January 17, 2007

Cool pics

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posted on: January 12, 2007

Do This!

The Lassiter Orchestra's Winter Concert is this Friday at Kell High School at 7:30pm.  There will be light hors d'oeuvres prior to the concert in the auditorium lobby at 7pm.  A special guest is performing with the Lassiter Symphony.  Milton Masciadri, Professor of Double Bass at The University of Georgia will be performing 2 fabulous pieces.  If you have never seen Dr. Masciadri, it is a special treat. The rest of the program will include music of Mozart, Saint-Saens, Puccini, and Copland. The best part...IT'S FREE!!
Hope to see you there! 

posted on: December 15, 2006

Practice Records are due 12/18

Click below to download and print practice records.

2006 practice records.doc

posted on: December 12, 2006

Fall Concert

What a great concert the other night.;  I am extremely proud of the hard work all three groups put into preparing for this performance.  Most important are the new skills that were put into play. 

The 6th graders play as well in-tune and with as nice a sound as any group I've ever started.  I tell them all the time that I'm excited about what they will be able to accomplish over the next 2+ years. 

The 7th graders continue to work hard and are making good progress.  7th grade is a big skill building year and they are doing well on all the skills that will take them to a higher level of playing. 

The 8th grade orchestra is starting to play with a very mature sound and is working hard on advanced skills like vibrato and shifting.  Mrs. Doemel said afterward that she is really looking forward to this group and what they will bring to the Lassiter Orchestra.   

A special thank you to all the parents who volunteered to help with the evening.  I absolutely could not have done it without your help. 

posted on: December 12, 2006

Winter Concert Information Letter

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Fall 2005 Concert Letter-3.doc

Click on the file name above to view and download the Winter Concert letter.

There is also a request for chaperones.

posted on: November 28, 2006

Uniform Information

This is excerpted from the Orchestra Handbook that was handed out in August.

Uniform Information

IMPORTANT! Due to the design of most concert stages, Mabry's included, short skirts will not be allowed as concert attire.  All students need to feel comfortable and relaxed during their performance and should dress in a way that will not inhibit the posture required to play their instrument.

Unless otherwise stated, Mabry Orchestra concert attire is as follows: for the
young ladies a long (ankle length or longer) solid black skirt or black slacks, long sleeve white shirt, and black or dark dress shoes, for the young men solid black slacks, long sleeve white shirt and long tie, black socks and black or dark dress shoes.  T-shirts, jeans and sport shoes are NOT appropriate concert attireStudents not dressed appropriately will not be allowed to take the stage and will be considered unexcused.  Please address problems regarding this to me early enough to be resolved. The school dress code is enforced at all orchestra functions.

posted on: November 28, 2006

Winter Concert

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The Mabry 6th, 7th and 8th grade orchestras will perform on Thursday, December 7th at 7pm in the theater at Mabry.  The 7th and 8th grade orchestras should arrive at 6:15 to tune and warm-up.  The 7th grade orchestra will meet in the Chorus room and the 8th grade orchestra will meet in the Orchestra room. 

The 6th grade orchestra will stay after school that day for a final run-through and to combine classes.  This is the only time we will be able to combine both classes so please make plans to stay after school.  We will order pizza for dinner (or you may bring your own dinner from home). 

We will need chaperones through out the evening.  Chaperones are needed in the Orchestra, Chorus and Band rooms beginning at 6:15.  We will also need help with the 6th grade dinner at about 5:30.  Also, chaperones are needed during the concert to sit with each orchestra that is not playing.  Please volunteer to help. 

There will be a reception following the concert in the cafeteria. 

posted on: November 20, 2006

Finding Your Way Around Here!

This is the 'front page' of my blog.  It'll only hold so many posts.  If there's something you can't find (practice records,  or our calendar for instance), click on General Information on the right.  All posts will then appear.  Scroll down until you find what you need.  Practice records are the last three pages of the orchestra handbook, which is at a link in a post called Orchestra Handbook.  The calendar is there also. 

posted on: November 14, 2006

Lassiter Math Team

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Congratulations to the Lassiter Math Team. The LHS Math Team came in first at the Cobb County Invitational Math Competition. The Lassiter Math Team competed against teams from the Wheeler High School and Kennesaw Mountain High School Magnet School teams.

8th graders should keep this in mind as you decide on plans for next year.

posted on: October 31, 2006

8th Grade Spring Trip

The 2nd payment for the spring trip is due November 5th.

posted on: October 30, 2006

You've Got to Hear This

If you're a cello player it's required, If you're not a cello player, it's required.

Click here to hear.

posted on: October 27, 2006

Orchestra Dates

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These things are happening in October.

Monday October 2nd - Last day to turn in Six Flags form and money.
Tuesday, October 3rd - Fundraiser ends. Turn in order brouchure and money.
Saturday, October 7th - Solo and Ensemble Festival.
Monday, October 9th - 2nd practice record due.
Friday, October 13th - Trip to Six Flags (Teacher Workday).
October 16-20 - Conference Week.
Saturday, October 28th - All-State Audition, Pope HS.

posted on: September 28, 2006

What did you do today in orchestra?

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Here's what's going on in class.

6th Grade: The 6th grade orchestra is awesome. We're working hard on our left hand 'set-up'. They know what it looks like. Have them show it to you and monitor their practice to make sure they stay in that position. I have asked them to spend some time in front of a mirror so they can monitor their left hand themselves. We'll soon be learning notes on the A string.

7th Grade: We're working on new notes, C# and G#. This requires a new hand position for cellos and a new finger pattern for violins and violas. We're also working on rhythms that include eighth notes in different arrangements.

8th Grade: These classes are working on shifting, vibrato and our 2nd 2-octave scale, G Major.

posted on: September 26, 2006

8th Grade Playing Test

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The 8th grade orchestra has been busy learning new skills and reading new music. Vibrato and shifting are the new skills. Ask your musician to demonstrate each for you.

The first playing test for 8th graders will be Thursday, 9/21. From the Essential Techniques book, lines 106 and 107 will be the material tested. A demonstration of a beginning vibrato will also be assessed.

posted on: September 17, 2006

Orchestra Fundraiser

The Mabry Orchestra fundraiser will begin Tuesday, 9/19. This has been a great fundraiser in the past and we hope to repeat that success. Look for information on the products and procedures to come home on Tuesday.

All money raised will be used to enhance the students' orchestra experience.

Cobb County Schools policy prohibits door-to-door fundraising sales by students.

posted on: September 17, 2006

8th Grade Orchestra Spring Trip

8th grade parents were recently sent home a survey to judge interest in a Spring trip to Orlando. The response has been overwhelmingly in favor of the trip, so we are making those plans. If you have not returned the survey please do so ASAP. On that survey there was an initial payment date of September 15.

Please DO NOT send any money for the time being. We are just now making a request to our administrators for approval of the the trip and researching several different tour companies to find the best deal. We will send a separate letter at a later date with a payment schedule. Thanks for your continued support of the Mabry Orchestra Program.

FYI, we have what seems like a a great new 6th grade group this year, thanks in large part to word-of-mouth from the Mabry/Lassiter Orchestra community. Thanks and keep it up!

posted on: September 11, 2006

Orchestra Handbook

The orchestra handbook contains important information for students and families. Please mark all calendar dates that apply to you on your family calendar. Practice records are on the last 3 pages. Please review the list of class expectations. The supply list will outline what is needed for class every day. There are also sections on our uniform, “How To Practice” and a “Parent Guide” that will help you help your child get the most out of orchestra. In the 7th/8th grade handbook are forms for both Solo & Ensemble Festival and All-State Orchestra.
These handbooks were sent home with all students this week.
Click here here to view and download the 6th grade handbook.

Click here to view and download the 7th/8th grade handbook

posted on: August 31, 2006

Mabry Symphony in Concert

Mabry Symphony in Concert

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The Mabry Symphony will perform on Thursday, January 19th at 7pm in the Kell High School Theater. We will perform our entire GMEA program. Please plan on staying for the Lassiter Symphony's performance immediately following. Friends were 'blown away' by their performance in December. This will be the only opportunity for family and friends not going to Savannah to hear these two programs.

Transportation IS NOT being provided. If this is an issue please plan ahead. Contact me asap for help resolving transportation problems.
This performance is an IMPORTANT step toward our performance in Savannah.

Dress will be the same as for our Winter Concert and for Savannah, solid black on the bottom and solid white on top, black socks and shoe. Boys will wear ties, girls' skirts must be mid-calf or longer, NO EXCEPTIONS!

Please arrive at 6:15pm, dressed and ready to play. I will let you know where the staging area will be at Kell. Click here for directions to Kell.

posted on: January 10, 2006

8th Grade Orchestra

The 8th graders are continuing to work on music for the Mabry Symphony performance in Savannah at the GMEA Conference. Please see elsewhere on this blog information about an important meeting regarding that trip.

We are working hard and focused in class, but conscientious practice at home is critical for this to be a successful performance.

Parents, please make certain that your child is putting in the work at home necessary to make this the great experience for them that I hoped it would be when I applied for the invitation. We simply can’t do it all in class.

posted on: October 25, 2005

8th Grade Orchestra

Carole Brink, former Mabry AP, currently Principal of Davis Elementary has invited the 8th grade orchestra to perform at Davis on Tuesday, October 18th. Unfortunately, we do not have school busses available as they are needed for the afternoon high school run.

I have accepted the invitation to play and am asking that parents provide transportation for their child to and from Davis. I understand that some students might not be able to participate and am sorry. This is not a mandatory performance and missing it will not affect your grade or standing in the orchestra. I do hope that as many as possible will try to be there. Please set up a car pool if possible.

This is a good opportunity for us to show off and possibly recruit some future Mabry Orchestra members. On Tuesday, please have your child at Davis by 2:45. We should finish around 4:00. Thanks

posted on: October 13, 2005

9/12 - Eighth Grade

8th graders are also finishing up a playing test. We are working on new skills from their book, Essential Technique. We are continuing to work on vibrato, shifting and the spicatto (off the string) bowing technique. We’re also reading through the material we will perform in Savannah in January.

They received now folders today and will be assigned music this week. They will receive original copies of the music. This music is expensive to replace. Please help them keep track of it and have it in class every day.

posted on: September 12, 2005

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