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The Closest Thing To Expressing The Inexpressible
December 2, 2007

Dear Doctor:

I’m sitting in a hotel room in Rochester, N.Y., looking out the window at a snow swept field beneath a wintry gray sky, with a smile on my face and a tear in my eye, remembering a special weekend -- the New York State School Music Association Winter Conference, featuring the 2007 All-State Concerts.

Some of the brightest and most talented of our youth in New York State came together to take the next step in their musical evolution – already excelling at their schools, they earned the right to play with the best in their class, both to see how they compare, and also to enjoy a rare opportunity to perform more challenging music with more competent and experienced players their own age. It’s like having a team of all-stars at every position, only there are hundreds of positions, each dependent on the other to make the show a success by coordinating their unique gifts. It is, in a word, thrilling.

There were eight acts in this series of concerts, ranging from jazz to classical, from string orchestra to wind ensemble to symphonic band to chorus – my seventeen-year-old Dan got to sing with the All-State Mixed Chorus, one of about three hundred young men and women to achieve a perfect score on their qualification audition, and to garner sufficient recommendations to be accepted into this exclusive club. Each of these groups of young prodigies is the distillate of tens of thousands of juniors and seniors state-wide, who made it through to this level of competition and therefore get the joy and prestige of performing at this level, in the magnificent Eastman Theater in downtown Rochester, to a packed house of appreciative music lovers, mostly their adoring parents and beaming teachers.

Each performance was led by a guest conductor, the cream of the school music elite, and I especially enjoyed the comments of Dr. Aimee Beckmann-Collier, Director of Choral Studies at Drake University in Iowa, who was chosen to conduct the Mixed Chorus.

In reflecting on the unusual skill, presence and maturity of these young artists, Dr. Beckmann-Collier described them as counter-cultural – in other words, they behaved in a paradoxical way, different from many of their peers. Where so many teens are about “me,” she observed that these young people were about “we” – and that while society moves so fast, with texting, microwave ovens and video games, these brilliant kids handled this complex challenge with patience, poise and discipline.

And the sound! The acoustically perfect auditorium provided the ultimate venue for the crystallized passion and genius of these budding musical wonders, each splendid in his or her own right, blossoming right before us. It was nothing less than spectacular, from the opening number to the last strains of the symphony orchestra. In his closing comments, President of NYSSMA James Cassara quoted Aldous Huxley in saying, “After silence, that which comes closest to expressing the inexpressible is music.” Proudly, I honor the efforts of my son Dan and the next generation, who seem to grasp the importance of the arts and humanities in developing our culture to be all it can be.

Dennis Perman DC, for The Masters Circle

PS You could buy them a fruit cake – or, you can make your gifts count for something more this year by shopping in The Masters Circle Store! Books, CDs, DVDs, a subscription to TMCtv – don’t settle for after shave lotion when you can pick a present that will add something to someone’s life and practice that makes a difference. Put knowledge, wisdom, motivation and perspective on your gift list this year, and you’ll feel that you did more than just check someone off your list -- to see all the options, please go to www.themasterscircle.com or call Andy at 800-451-4514. Happy Holidays!

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