Music for Music

by Christine Benedetti, Time Out Staff Writer
It’s tough enough for adult local musicians to find venues to play in this valley, and for teenagers, that hunt is even harder. The schools have (shrinking) music programs, and fairs, jam nights and even finding an empty shed in which to practice are few and far between.

That’s why Battle of the Bands organizers Dan “Pastor Mustard” Sadowsky and Chris “Biff” Phillips are hosting their 10th annual version of the event to make sure funds from the six-hour music smorgasbord go back into the schools to subsidize what this duo calls “anemic music education.”

“We’re putting talent from the Roaring Fork Valley on stage and saying to the world, look at this energetic, rockin’ youth we have,” says Sadowsky. “We want good music in the schools.”

After just returning from New Orleans — a city that’s fabric is stitched with syncopated notes and groove-hewn threads — Sadowsky says that musical history is dependent on tradition and pride: two characteristics that come from an involved and supportive community.

“There are legendary dudes going into the schools to play with young kids,” he says, and “the community IDs with that. ... It’s a long-standing tradition.”

As national education funding is slashed, music and art classes are the first to take the hit. While numerous studies show that a diversity in learning, i.e. arts education, means students are likely to perform better in their core subjects and be more involved with their communities, it’s an area that continues to downward spiral and students must look to unconventional resources as an outlet.

In this valley, although many of the schools are fortunate to have at least a music teacher, loud, experimental, play-in-the-garage-so-the-parents-don’t-get-pissed bands are still, playing in the garage.

Battle of the Bands is a chance for these musicians to come out from the basement.

In its fledgling days, it was a place for more traditional trombone-and-marching-type school bands to strut their stuff, but it’s shifting to embrace, and perhaps become, a garage-band-only event, says Phillips. But, the intention will still be to support in-school music education.

Aspen High School junior Dominic Franklin, and his band Common House, tied for first place in last year’s BOB. Their group — which is named after the Hunter Creek Longhouse location in which they practice — actually has the opportunity to play festivals like Carbondale’s Mountain Fair and occassional sessions at Steve’s Guitars.

“Every time you play live, you learn a little something about making the show better,” he says. “Battle of the Bands is cool because you get to watch everybody from the other schools.”

Since fifth grade, he’s been in school music programs and extracurricularly taken drum lessons. But, a lot of that learning comes from practice; something he and his band do almost every day in the Hunter Creek common house.

“Usually it’s just jam sessions, and we’ll play a song we’ve been itching to play all day,” says Franklin. “We practice there every day we can.”

And although BOB has been a Roaring Fork-only event in the past, this time around invitations have been extended to those in outlying areas. Steve Ivey, a director for the music program at the Logan School in Denver, is bringing his school group, Paper Jam, up this weekend. He started the experimental music class three years ago, and it’s since grown.

“That’s the whole point,” he says. “It’s some sort of accessible way of getting kids interested in playing at the schools because it’s not a big part of it ( the curriculum) anywhere.”

Because they same students have been playing together for three years, he says the crowd could be “surprised.”

“They’re still a kid band, but they can play,” he says. “They enjoy it ... and they are learning a lot about working together.”

With only 12 minutes on stage, a trip from the Front Range to the High Country is a trek for middle-schoolers, but well worth the experience. And for the majority of musicians who are hailing from this valley, even their dozen minutes up in front is a highlight.

Twelve minutes is all the event can afford, with more than 30 bands sandwiched into six hours of live music. Ranging across the board from jazzy and laid-back to trash-your-purple-mohawk-around metal, the music is all over the place.

But, what it does have in common is a chance for student musicians to take the stage, in hopes that the occasion will become a norm.

christine@aspendailynews.com