Just in time for Halloween, the dramatic cinematic scope of Randall Standridge’s A Ghost Story complements the exquisite craft of Julia Perry’s Symphony No. 6 as we celebrate the centennial of this pioneering Black woman composer. Nick Omiccioli plays double duty as both composer and soloist in his new work for electric guitar and band that is inspired by 70s funk and disco!
Season and individual tickets go on sale August 1, 2024, at www.freedomband.com. Individual Tickets are $20; season tickets are $50. Discounts are available on individual tickets for students with ID, educators, seniors, and first responders. Children under 12 are admitted free. Season ticket holders will have reserved seats for “Variations on Democracy.”
Our Program
Night on Bald Mountain by Modest Mussorgsky, arr. Willliam A. Schaefer
Sponsored by the Flute Section 
The Haunted Carousel by Erika Svanoe
Symphonic Band Symphony by Jullia Perry
I. Moderately Fast
IV. Fast
Tin Glizzy by Nick Omiccioli
Featuring Nick Omiccioli on electric guitar
World premiere, MAFB commission
Beetlejuice by Danny Elfman, arr. Karel Chudy
Sponsored by the Clarinet Section
Intermission
Symphony No. 1 “A Ghost Story” by Randall Standridge
I. Unquiet
II. Loss
III. Midnight
IV. Ascent
MAFB co-commissioin
Movement IV sponsored by Nicholas McWilliams 
ABOUT THE PROGRAM
Modest Mussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain
Night on Bald Mountain was one of the first tone poems written by a Russian composer. Tone poems are typically single-movement works that are meant to evoke the content of a piece of literature or art, a landscape, or some other non-musical source. In this instance, Mussorgsky captures the Witches’ Sabbath on St. John’s Eve. Despite the popularity of the work today, this piece was never performed in Mussorgksy’s lifetime and, in fact, its original form was only made available in 1968 with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s reimagining of the piece still being the most well known.
Erika Svanoe: The Haunted Carousel
The Haunted Carousel takes the listener on a spooky journey. As a demented waltz, the piece alludes to the sounds of film scores of which Svanoe is well versed. With fun rhythmic interplay and detailed orchestration, this piece captures the creep factor of disembodied children’s voices and ominous whispering.
Julia Perry: Symphonic Band Symphony
Having many names including Symphony No. 6, Symphonic Band Symphony, and Symphony for Band, Perry’s foray into symphonies for the concert band remains largely unknown in spite of the historic importance of the work as the first symphony for band written by a Black woman composer. This is a delicate work of a composer straddling many musical worlds but exists firmly within her own style. For the entirety of the full work’s 22 minutes, the ensemble only ever plays collectively as a whole group during the very last moments. Before this grand, earth-shattering climax, Perry tosses fragmented ideas to various instrumental families around an unyielding harmonic progression and strictly repeated rhythmic passages.
Nick Omiccioli: Tin Glizzy
Tin Glizzy was originally written for my band and is a direct reference to Steely Dan. It was given a tongue-in-cheek title as a placeholder, however, it kind of grew on me. Many of my recent compositions have originated from short exercises I’ve created for students to learn songs. At the time, one of my students was working on “Kid Charlemagne” by Steely Dan — which has an iconic guitar solo by Larry Carlton — and another student was learning “Someday” by Tatsuro Yamashita - a staple of 1980s Japanese City Pop. After working on these songs with my students, I was inspired to write my own City Pop-style song reimagined as if Larry Carlton was playing on it.
- Program note by the composer
Danny Elfman: Beetlejuice
Elfman’s iconic score to Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice contains many of the composer’s hallmarks: reliance on low instruments, demented circus-like vibes, and delightfully twisty melodies. These traits, coupled with Harry Belafonte’s “Day-O” and “Jump in the Line,” made for an instant classic. The soundtrack remained in the Billboard 200 long after the film had dropped out of theaters and earned Elfman a Saturn Award nomination in 1988.
Randall Standridge: Symphony No. 1 “A Ghost Story”
We are all just ghosts waiting to happen.
This is something that, as I grow older, weighs on my mind more and more.
We are all just ghosts waiting to happen.
As I sit here writing this, I am 46 years old. I have lost all of my grandparents. I have lost over half of my aunts and uncles. Cousins, friends, teachers, co-workers, pets…I have lost many over the years. Up until the moment I leave this world, I will continue to lose those around me. This is a unifying fact of human existence. Death stands tall in our future and beckons to us our entire lives. Some of us dig our heels in and fight against that bony, outstretched hand with all of our might. Some of us turn a blind eye, refusing to acknowledge the dark shadow on the horizon, and are surprised when he finally comes calling. Some of us run towards him fearlessly, laughing all the way until we disappear into his dark robes. But hesitant, indifferent, or enthusiastic, we will all meet him eventually.
We are all just ghosts waiting to happen.
But what is a ghost? 
A spirit, a wonderful or terrible phantasm that haunts the lonely and forgotten places of the world?
A memory, a moment in time, the past impressing itself ineffably upon the present?
A story?
Yes…a story. A ghost story. 
Ghost stories have been part of human culture since time out of mind. Stories of shadows that still walk the places of their mortal lives. Stories of mysterious hitchhikers who disappear, only to leave evidence of their existence on their graves. Stories of dark hallways, where the cries of unseen children echo each night. Stories of lovers who return for one last glimpse of those they left behind.
Every ghost has a story.
I am haunted by the memory of all of those that I have lost. I yearn for their presence and grieve for them day after day. I tell people about the times we laughed, the times we cried, the times we fought. I tell them about the impact they had on my life. And every time I do, I am telling a ghost story.
When I was asked to write this symphony, I wanted to write something that would speak to a universal experience. I have chosen the idea of ghost stories, as I feel a really good ghost story works on a lot of levels. Ghost stories are about the past, life, loss, love, fear, and hope. Fear and hope most of all, I think. Fear of our own mortality and the hope that we will survive the experience and be reunited with those we have loved.
And also the hope that one day, someone will tell our story.
Our ghost story.
Because, after all…
We are all just ghosts waiting to happen.
Peace Love and Music,
Randall Standridge, December 2022
Mid America Freedom Band Personnel
The Mid America Freedom Band provides a safe space for instrumental performance opportunities, outreach, and social advocacy for music enthusiasts within the LGBTQ+ and ally spectrum of the Kansas City area to create an inclusive community that fosters and celebrates diversity.
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      Jenniffer Aleshire 
 Christina Carroll
 Debbie Farrell
 Kat Hoffpauer
 Helena Howell
 Margo Moore
 Lisa Phillips
 Erin Rand
 Bea Reiter
 Brenda Schlenk
 Alyssa Ulrich
 Ashley White
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      Trevor Asher 
 John Bennett
 Kevon Hall
 Jon Kuder
 Tiffany Nesbihal
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      Mattie Basham 
 Geoff Brown
 David Coy
 Sara Geringer
 Dana Goodwin
 Christina Graber
 Timmy Hewitt
 Adrienne Hixson
 Cory Hogan
 Joy Hope
 Sean P. Jones
 Sylas Liperuote
 Emily McVicker
 Christian Montes
 Kelsi Myers
 Maryn Neighbors
 Emma Nelson
 Elizabeth Reid
 Olivia Requist
 Michael Salzman
 Kathryn Smith
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      Jeanine Asay 
 Jessie Davis
 David Deatherage
 Donny Gross
 Sam Holmes
 Tyler Huntington
 Steven Irving
 Rameka Jennings
 Kyle Key
 Kelly Pangburn
 Giggi Pearson
 Rose Rodriguez
 Andrea Sexton
 Chase Tagle
 Gerald Turner
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      Hannah Brayfield 
 Hunter Chamberlain
 Chris Eckert
 Avigail Gomez
 Sarah Harmon
 Nick Kashka
 Matthew Kelso
 Debra Leiter
 Ryan Mayberry
 Avery Remboldt
 Dwayne Smith
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      Hollie Blakeney 
 Mark Brannon
 Addy Gabriel
 Jenna Hamilton
 Katherine Kashka
 Nathan Lübeck
 Jen Spaeth
 Lucas Testin
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      Barb Aker 
 Brian Alexander
 April Booth
 Nathan Brown
 David Burre
 Rachel Elting
 Jacob Harmon
 Aaron Jones
 Lisa Klockenga
 David Machado
 Nick McWilliams
 Daniel Moraine
 Ben Robinson
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      Shelly Alexander 
 Alyssa Dowdy
 Mark Hash
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      James Arcano 
 Elizabeth Brent
 Yeyoung Kim
 Kevin Overton
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      Gage Brown 
 Joe Cameron
 Ashton Duplechain
 Brehan Guinn
 J.J. Pearse
 Mallory Pearson
 Sam Ribaudo
 Lamar Sims
 Taylor Starks
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      Christian Montes, Board Chair 
 Steven Irving Board Secretary
 Lisa Klockenga, Board Treasurer
 J.J. Pearse
 Shelly Alexander
 Debbie Farrell
 Joy Hope, Marketing Chair
 Rameka Jennings, Fundraising Chair
 Nick McWilliams, Membership Chair
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      Ian Bradt, Executive Director 
 Lee Hartman, Artistic Director
 Jessie Davis, Assistant Artistic Director
 Steven Irving, Color Guard Director
 Bailee Young, Production Coordinator
 Jeanine Asay, Librarian
 Bea Reiter, Asst. Librarian
 Tyler Huntington, Asst. Librarian
 Erin Trampel, Webmaster
The Mid America Freedom Band acknowledges that the majority of our members reside on the ancestral territory of several nations, including the Kaw/Kansa, Kickapoo, Osage, and Shawnee peoples. This land acknowledgment recognizes that Native Americans are the guardians of the land and that there is an enduring relationship between the land’s peoples and these traditional territories. We recognize, advocate, and support the sovereignty of these nations.
