Dear Warren,
It reads wonderfully to me. I will take one exception. The term “maestro” in
the way that it is used in American culture is one with which I am not
comfortable. I can expound on this for days, but, for now, please change it to
read: Robert or Robert Laguna. Many thanks.
Robert Laguna
hhw
From: acweboard-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <acweboard-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf
Of Warren Gill
Sent: Thursday, April 9, 2020 4:14 PM
To: acweboard@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [acweboard] In theory, practice and theory are the same. In practice,
they are not. -- Albert Einstein
HERE's what I'm thinking to send the band TONIGHT (and add to our web site and
Facebook in watered-down form to make it "public")
Is there a Zoom support site where people can test if they have good enough
connectivity, etc.? If so I would like to add that info to this message.
It's not Tuesday, so it must not be ACWE rehearsal!
Tonight, I'm excited to tell you about something the ACWE board has decided to
offer you in this socially-distant time.
Music moves us in profound ways. It evokes reactions and emotions that
transcend other forms of communication. If these feelings are real, they
deserve study! Music thoery is more than set of rules we use to write music;
it's the study of patterns that are already in the music.
So, starting Tuesday (April 14th), to further ACWE's mission of "using music
for lifelong learning" Maestro Laguna will lead us through some common practice
that we like to call Music Theory. We'll learn about rhythm and meter, as well
as pitch, keys, scales and intervals -- and more!
These classes, during our regular rehearsal time (Tuesday at 7:30pm), will be
held online, and all ACWE members and friends are invited to join.
Details about how to connect will be sent shortly.
Band Geeks Unite!