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Developing a Community Music Group

By Albert Asch


In the Beginning

In September, 1968, the University of Wisconsin Washington County Campus opened its doors to the first student body. At 7:30 p.m. on Thursday of that first week the first rehearsal of the Kettle Moraine Community Orchestra was to begin. Everything had been done to attract community musicians to the rehearsal: articles and pictures to the paper; visits to musicians who were interested in a community group who could help recruit; letters to musicians in the community notifying them of the new organization and requesting that they bring a friend and finally letters, a newspaper article and posters announcing the time and place for the first rehearsal of the new community music group.

I was at the door at 7:00 ready to greet the new members, welcome them and ask what part they would like to play. By 7:15 there was one clarinetist, a violin, a mandolin and a percussionist (with no sticks). As I walked to the unfinished music department to find music for that unusual quartet, I thought “Oh well, it is a beginning.” When I returned to the library there were 45 musicians ready to play! In West Bend at that time 7:30 meant 7:30. Warm-up? Who needs it? We rehearsed very easy selections and had to call it quits at 9:15. The woodwinds and brass had no chops and the violinists were playing with their left elbow on their knee.

The 36 years that followed that first rehearsal have had the usual ups and downs. At times it was a luxury to have a string bass and at times even a second bassoon.

That community orchestra is now the Kettle Moraine Symphony Orchestra, Inc. with complete instrumentation, an office in West Bend, a part time executive director, a personnel manager, a librarian, stage manager, equipment manager and an active board of directors. The Kettle Moraine Symphony Orchestra is the resident orchestra at the Schauer Arts Center in Hartford and presents nine concerts a year in West Bend, Hartford, Slinger, Kewaskum, Jackson and Cedarburg. It is still a community orchestra with members from 19 communities in the Kettle Moraine Area.

Tips for Organizing a Community Group

By working with the Kettle Moraine Symphony (and the Lakeshore Symphonic Band) I found some ideas that worked for me. I will mention a few in the hope they may serve as a starting point for someone interested in organizing a community group.

Getting Started

Recruiting New Members

Auditions vs. No Auditions

Developing a Board or Support Group

Choosing Repertoire

Directing the Group

Biography

Albert Asch is Emeritus of Music at the University of Wisconsin, Washington County Campus and is music director of the Kettle Moraine Symphony Orchestra. The orchestra was started when the University opened its doors in 1968. The orchestra has now reached semi-professional status.

Asch, a native of Kentucky, came to UWWC from Wichita State University in Kansas where he taught oboe, music education and directed the concert band. Asch’s orchestra experience includes oboist with the Louisville Symphony, the Wichita Symphony and the Urbana Chamber Orchestra. In addition to teaching at Dupont Manual High School in Louisville, Kentucky, Asch has taught at the University of Louisville and the University of Illinois-Urbana Campus.

Asch’s undergraduate and Masters Degree work was at the University of Kentucky. The Doctoral work was at the University of Illinois.