Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Band’ Category

Jamar Jenkins (right) is smiling because he knows bass-playing rock goddess Savanna Dohner will one day be selling out arenas, and hopefully she'll remember him. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Jamar Jenkins (right) is smiling because he knows bass-playing rock goddess Savanna Dohner will one day be selling out arenas. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Aiden Crimmins may be up after his bedtime.

Aiden Crimmins may be up after his bedtime.

"This is my chance. I'm doing my Zeppelin solo now!"

“This is my chance. I’m doing my Zeppelin solo now!”

And the band played on.

And the band played on.

You can knock Jamar Jenkins down, but you can’t knock him out.

The Coupeville High School band director got plowed by a Sultan player chasing a loose ball Tuesday night, but, after shaking it off, he was back up and leading his band through its paces shortly after.

Half-man, half-music Terminator. The legend rocks on.

Read Full Post »

Keith Hovde with fellow CMS athlete Hope Lodell.

Keith Hovde with fellow CMS athlete Hope Lodell.

Hovde's select soccer squad.

Hovde (middle row, second from left) on his select soccer squad.

One day changed everything.

Keith Hovde missed the first day of band practice in sixth grade, and found all the spaces for drummers had been filled by the time he showed up.

Forced to pick a new instrument, he wound up with the trumpet and has been going strong ever since.

Now an eighth grader at Coupeville Middle School, Hovde balances his time on the trumpet with action in the soccer net, where he plays as a goaltender for a select U14 squad out of Oak Harbor.

A big fan of the movies “Forrest Gump” and “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” he also enjoys BMX biking and history class and is the secretary for his school’s ASB.

His trumpet playing has been honed with work along side a family friend, a retired admiral who was also a composer and orchestra conductor.

Now in his 90’s, Dr. Lotzenheiser joins Hovde’s family for dinner each Thursday night, and has imparted some of his vast musical knowledge to a younger generation.

It’s worked, as the musically-included CMS student has blossomed behind a new instrument.

“I enjoy the fact that I can play the music that I so much love listening to,” Hovde said. “And that a bunch of kids can play music and make a wonderful sound.”

Following in the footsteps of his mother, who played the flute (“I, of course, think my mother has really helped me get confidence and pave a path”), Hovde is constantly striving to reach new levels.

“My strengths are tone and confidence, but I would like to work on my sight reading,” he said.

Read Full Post »

"I am the one who plays the bass!"

Savanna Dohner: American Badass (Jenn Dohner photos)

Savanna Dohner, American badass. (Jenn Dohner photos)

“I am the one who plays the bass!”

Rock star disguised as a high school student.

Rock star disguised as a high school student.

Savanna Dohner was born to be a star.

With two outgoing parents to set an example, including a mom who spends many of her nights shooting cutting-edge rockers live on stage with her ever-clicking camera, she had a great start.

Toss in a gaggle of older sisters, all fairly creative in their own right, and the stage was set.

A natural wonder with a bass in her hands, and the rare ninth-grader who looks like she stepped off a fashion runway while still acting like the goofy teenager next door, Dohner will put Coupeville on the map. It’s only a matter of time.

She works with professional axe man Jeff Rouse, who has played bass for bands such as Alien Crime Syndicate and Duff McKagen’s Loaded, and has already received offers to step up off the Island and play in the big city.

Jeff is pretty much the raddest guy I know. He completely gets me as a musician and a person,” Dohner said. “When I play with him we come up with the most wicked bass lines and songs.

“He has taught me not only how to play like a rocker, but how to hold myself in the business, because the music business is definitely a scary place,” she added. “As far as bands go, I have promised myself to wait until the right one comes along. But I’m just gonna go with the flow and see where life takes me.”

It’s a journey she knew she always wanted to take, right from the days when she started working the crowd in kindergarten.

“Music is the only thing I’ve every shown interest in and it makes me feel more alive than anything else can,” Dohner said. “Even when I was about five I cut out pieces of paper and wrote in crayon “1 free concert ticket to see Savanna” and handed them out EVERYWHERE.

“I know it’s a hard business to get into but I’ll make it work; it’ll take dedication, time, and hope,” she added. “But I’ll make it happen because it’s the only thing I will ever be happy doing; music has my heart and it always will.”

Along with her work with Rouse, and often following mom Jenn Dohner into the camera pits at rock shows, Savanna finds time to fine-tune her musical skills with her classmates as well.

She’s in her fourth year of playing with the school band, and has dabbled with drums and keyboards, while always returning to her beloved bass.

“I started mainly because I love music. I always have and I always will,” Dohner said. “I’ve been raised on music, whether it was punk, rap, country, classic, jazz or alternative. I was exposed to it all.

“I enjoy learning a different aspect of music; without band I’d probably just be reading tabs constantly,” she added. “Even though I really hated learning to read music and learning the notes, it’s improved my playing by 100%.”

But, while she plays what the class requires, there’s a rocker always waiting to break free and get the long, golden hair swinging.

When the CHS freshmen put together a ’90s-themed float for Homecoming, some of the participants might have been just pretending to be playing along to the music.

Dohner was windmilling the bass for real, hair flying in the fog in a scene that would have brought a tear of joy to the members of Soundgarden and Pearl Jam if they wandered by.

“I love the sensation you get in a song when you hit a gnarly bass line that just makes your fingers feel on fire!,” Dohner exclaimed. “That’s the music that makes me forget quite literally everything except me, my bass and the music I’m playing and that’s an extraordinary thing to feel.

“It’s what I’ll be playing forever!”

While she still has most of her high school days to get through, Dohner already has her sights set firmly on the future. The moment the diploma hits her hands, she plans to be on the ferry to Seattle, bass in hand.

Wherever the music takes her, she has her head set right, and knows the value of those who have, and will continue to, support her, financially and emotionally.

“I’ve had so many impacts on my life, so obviously I’ll start with my family; without them I’d be nowhere,” Dohner said. “That’s quite literal too; without my dad (Brent) supporting my crazy dreams and helping a little financially (maybe not just a little…) I’d be without all my gorgeous gear.”

She also gives big props to two families who have helped shape her budding career, the Kertsons, which includes son Jason, a rising singer who she’s worked with, and the Savoias, who are music photographers.

“I have had the honor to jam with Jason Kertson a few times and learned so many things from his mad skills,” Dohner said. “Then became friends with his mom whom I absolutely ADORE and his dad, who is pretty hardcore himself. The Savoias have supported me and my career completely and totally.”

But the figure that looms largest in her life is her mother, the woman who opened her ears to the possibilities of music and has been there beside her daughter every step of the way.

“She has been so forgiving of the countless times I have kept her up at night rocking out, saying “Please mom! Just five more minutes!,” Dohner said. “Along with driving me hours on end to lessons, jam sessions, and band tryouts.

“This girl has been through heck to support me and get me to where I am! Thanks mom!”

While she plays the game when it comes to school (“I always strive to get the best grades possible because better grades means happier parents. Ha!”), music is her life. Plain and simple.

“My time is mainly used to either daydream about my career of being a rocker, along with actually doing the things that will make it happen.”

She reels off an impressive list of favorite bands, with Weezer, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Sick Puppies, 30 Seconds To Mars, Nirvana, The Ramones, Guns ‘n Roses and Blink-182 the first ones to rumble from her lips.

One day, soon, other highly-creative young women looking for influences will be adding her name to the play-list.

Read Full Post »

Mckenzie Meyer, hanging out with cousin Leroy Meyer.

Mckenzie Meyer, hanging out with cousin Leroy Meyer.

Whenever Mckenzie Meyer sings, she remembers her older brother, Kyle.

The Coupeville Middle School eighth-grader, who deftly balances sports, drama and band in a busy life, first found music thanks to her older sibling, who passed away recently.

It will be a link that will always keep the two connected.

Kyle got me into music and I never let go,” Meyer said. “He taught me to sing, which I find is the easiest way to express my emotion, so without him I wouldn’t be the same and I probably wouldn’t be in band.”

Now in her third year of band, Meyer started on the clarinet, before bouncing over to the saxophone.

Regardless of what kind of music she’s playing, it’s a world she enjoys at all times.

“I like all the types of music we play, especially in jazz band,” Meyer said. “I love music and band seemed like the perfect place.”

Like all musicians, she’s a work in progress, and would like to improve “definitely my sight-reading and knowing my notes. I need to work on tone.”

Away from the band, she’s always active (“I spend my spare time listening to music and climbing trees”) and has played volleyball, basketball and track for CMS, while also taking part in the school’s drama club.

Since the middle school doesn’t offer soccer, Meyer kicks up her heels playing for a team out of Oak Harbor, but is already looking forward to joining the Wolf pitch squad next year when she becomes a CHS freshman.

“I can’t wait to play in high school next year!”

Read Full Post »

McKenzie Rice lays down some tunes. (? ? photo)

McKenzie Rice lays down some tunes. (Wendi Yang photo)

McKenzie Rice can wail.

The Coupeville High School sophomore, who has a busy schedule with tennis, drama, Leo’s Club and band, is inspired by a legend when she picks up her saxophone.

“I think my strength is my tone and how well I can manipulate the sound of my instrument, but I could definitely improve on almost everything there,” Rice said. “My goal is to be able to get as close as I can to playing like Charlie Parker on the saxophone. He is amazing!”

A four-year veteran of band (“I joined because I was given the option to join either band or choir, and at the time, not having any idea what either completely were, I chose band and have not regretted the decision once”) she also plays the flute.

Regardless of which instrument she has at a given moment, she delights in the audience response she and her bandmates receive.

“I enjoy getting to hear all the cool music we play,” Rice said. “I like playing for everyone at our concerts.”

While the legend of Charlie Parker inspires her, two more close-to-home players helped fire her interest in the sax.

Shelby and Anna (graduates from two years ago/amazing saxophone players) had a huge impact on me,” Rice said. “They made me challenge myself and try to improve as much as I could so I could prove that I was good enough to play with the high school band.

“Without them I wouldn’t have had anyone who proved that great saxophone players can exist in small towns,” she added.

A big fan of her pre-cal class, Rice is fond of the Leonardo Di Caprio film “Inception” and Maroon 5 (they’re an amazing band”). She was also just in the CHS stage production of “Christmas Belles.”

“My primary interest is pretty much just acting and drawing,” Rice said. “I mostly spend my time with family and/or friends, or catching up on all the work my teachers give me.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts