![]() They will learn about the sections of the orchestra, They will see and hear soloists, sections, idiomatic techniques, and so much more. The music, story, graphics and humor are my tools to connect the orchestra and the kids, and light their inquisitive brains on fire for music and their life with music. When the orchestra plays, the musicians are the stars. In this concert, I include a funny story, interesting characters, and kid-friendly graphics that bridge and support the musical moments. ![]() I want kids and families to fall in love with the people, the sound, and the experience of a symphony concert. What do you hope children will enjoy learning during this performance? I was constantly thinking, Will this keep his attention? Will the story make him laugh? Are the pictures memorable and descriptive for him? What will he tell his friends about after the concert? Bob Singleton, composer It’s taken much longer to take what’s in my brain and put it into the score and parts that the orchestra will be reading at the concert.Īs a matter of fact, I kept my grandson, Quinn Leach, from Katy, Texas, in mind as my quality control throughout the composing and production process. ![]() It took me 2 months of composing while collaborating on the script and the art. How long did it take to compose this work? We worked with him on creating a unified style for the concert, and then sent Max descriptions for each graphic that corresponded to events in the narration. Max lives in Ukraine, and has illustrated books, interactive games, and animated projects in a variety of styles. I hired a terrifically talented artist, Max Larin, to create the visuals for the concert. He and I had several brain-storming sessions over Tex-Mex and junk food to come up with ideas that would fit into the template of a kids & family orchestra concert. He has an incredible kid-sensibility, and is one of the funniest people I’ve ever known. Steve is an Emmy-nominated writer who I met while we worked together on Barney the Dinosaur. My writer-collaborator for the story and narration is my good friend, Steve White. The challenge is huge to make something that kids will think is “lit,” and that my symphony friends will appreciate and enjoy performing. It was a natural thing for me to want to create something for kids and the symphony, and the idea of what that would look like has been bouncing around in my head for years. It’s extremely challenging, and extremely gratifying when it works. Kids are brilliant, complicated, inquisitive, and have no pretense. Creating music for kids ramps up the fun and the difficulties at the same time. I have the most fun in life creating music. Tickets and more information about this concert can be found here. We hope to see you and all the children you know at the performance! Bob was kind enough to answer some questions I had about the piece. ![]() It has nothing to do with the scary “Jurassic Park” movies and is instead a hilarious romp through the orchestra through means of some musical dinosaurs. It is written by local Grammy-award nominated composer Bob Singleton, whose music you may have heard on Barney the Dinosaur® as he was the music director for that series for ten years. In the trailer, Al Roker recalls the sensation of anti-Barney furor, and one person remembers scandalous schoolyard rumors like “Barney hides drugs in his tail.” Words flash onscreen saying, “Why does the world love to HATE?” It all sounds a bit extreme, but then again - did you ever think a Barney trailer would have the words “death and dismemberment” in it? Did you think it would end in a shooting? I Love You, You Hate Me will premiere on Peacock on October 12 in all its big purple glory.Musicians of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra newsletter The first conductor and orchestra Interview by Tanya Smith, violin FWSO, as it appeared in the January, 2019 edition of the newsletter for Musicians of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra ( link to original newsletter)Īt the beginning of February, the FWSO will give the world premiere of the piece, “Jurassic Parts,” as the last installment of the Family Series concerts. And here I thought singing “I hate you, you hate me, let’s go out and kill Barney” was just a healthy way for 6-year-olds of the time to signal they were big kids now. “Barney stands for inclusion, acceptance,” says Bob West, the voice of the big purple dinosaur, ergo, the “violent and explicit” plush-Barney-bashing imagery we see in the trailer must be against those values. He’s one of a number of talking heads in the trailer for I Love You, You Hate Me, a two-part documentary “chronicling the rise and fall of Barney the dinosaur’s furious backlash - and what it says about the human need to hate.” That’s … a pretty Hannah Arendt–ish choice for this subject matter. “What color is happier than purple? No color.” This sounds like an empirical fact because Bill Nye is saying it.
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