Brent Biskup leads Flower Mound Marching Band in 2019 Rose Parade appearance

Brent Biskup

Brent Biskup, Director of Bands for Flower Mound High School Marching Band, will lead his student musicians in their first Rose Parade appearance on January 1, 2019.

Music educator Brent Biskup, Director of Bands for the Flower Mound High School Band from Flower Mound, Texas, will be marching in the 2019 Rose Parade on January 1.

This is the first appearance in the Rose Parade for the 360-member group, but under Brent’s able leadership, the student musicians have won many other accolades. The Flower Mound Marching Jaguars have been named a finalist and a regional champion multiple years in the Bands of America Texas Regional and Super-Regional competitions. They have also been named a finalist multiple times at the Bands of America Grand National Championships in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Marching Band has been honored as a University Interscholastic League Texas State Marching Band Contest finalist. In 2016, the group was named the Class 6A State Champion.

But appearing on the international stage of 2019 the Rose Parade is the pinnacle  of honors for the Jaguars. “It’s a reward for the hard work and the commitment, and the things they’ve chosen to do at a high level,” remarks Brent.

Brent earned his Bachelor’s degree at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and his Master’s degree in Music Education from Southern Oregon University.

Talented band directors help Puerto Rican students achieve Rose Parade appearance

Maribel Lopez Garcia

Band Director Maribel Lugo Garcia, center, is one of three talented music educators who will lead the Banda Escolar de Guayanilla Puerto Rico in th Rose Parade on January 1, 2019. The other two are Parker Bixby and Kyle Thompson of Mercer Island School District.

Three talented music educators will lead the Banda Escolar de Guayanilla Puerto Rico through the coveted Rose Parade route on January 1, 2019. The 156 members of the band feel fortunate to march this year, having survived two category-5 hurricanes, Irma and Maria, immediately following their acceptance of the coveted invitation to appear. In the hurricanes, the band lost their instruments and their infrastructure. But they were able to pull themselves together, with the tenacity of their Band Director, Maribel Lugo Garcia and the generous assistance of Band Directors Parker Bixby and Kyle Thompson of Mercer Island School District in Mercer, Washington.

Under the leadership of Parker and Kyle, Mercer High School students raised $55,000 of the $190,000 the Guayanilla students needed to make the trip to Pasadena. In addition, the mainland students rehearsed and will participate in a joint performance as both schools march in the parade together. “This partnership is one of the things I’m most proud of in my entire career of being here (in Mercer),” remarked Parker. “This became about human beings connecting and being part of something bigger than what we’re all doing in each of our own band rooms,” he continued.

Music Director Maribel Lugo Garcia has taught music education for the pat 20 years, 17 of them at Guayanilla. She garnered her first teaching job when she was only 13 years old. That’s when she became her music teacher’s assistant during the summer vacation. While serving in this role, Maribel was able to offer saxophone lessons to children her age and younger. “It was at this moment that I realized that teaching brought me great pleasure and satisfaction,” Maribel remembers.

Parker Bixby has taught in the Mercer Island School District for 15 years. He earned his Bachelor’s degree in Music from the University of Washington, and his Master’s degree in Music Education from the University of Montana, where he served a fellowship as an Assistant Director of the Grizzly Marching Band. In addition to his classroom responsibilities, Parker is an active performer as a member of the Washington Wind Symphony. He is a member of The Washington Music Educators Association and the National Association for Music Educators.

Kyle Thompson has worked in the Mercer Island School District for six years, but this is his first year teaching band. Kyle earned his Bachelor’s degree in Music at Central Washington University. Before coming to Mercer, Kyle was the Director of Bands at Cedarcrest High School in Duvall, Washington. He also served as a consultant with the UCLA Marching Band, among other positions. Kyle is an active member of the National Association for Music Education and the Washington Music Educators Association.

Tennessee’s Barry Trobaugh leads Munford High Band to the 2019 Rose Parade

Barry Trobaugh

Munford High School music educator Barry Trobaugh.

Music Educator Barry Trobaugh of Munford High School in Munford, Tennessee, will lead his students in their appearance in the Rose Parade on January 1, 2019. The 204-member group will perform a tribute to Memphis music especially selected for the parade.

This is the 25th year Barry has taught at Munford High School. During his tenure, the band was selected the US Band National Champion (2011), and has won numerous local and state awards. They have garnered the State Championship three times and the Southern Region Champions three times.  In 2015, the group performed in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Some of the freshmen who performed in 2015 are now seniors, and will be performing in the Rose Parade.

Barry said he’s elated that the Munford High School Cougars were selected for the parade on their first try. “As in any leadership position within education, our job is to accentuate current activities, but also strive to provide additional and unique opportunities from which students will learn and hopefully maintain as memories throughout their adulthood.”

Barry is a graduate of The University of Memphis, where he earned his Bachelor’s degree in 1982 and his Master’s degree in 1993. He is a member of the Music Educators National Conference, on the Board Council of Tennessee Music Educators Association, President-Elect of the West Tennessee School Band and Orchestra Association, and a Program Resource for The Memphis Sound Drum and Bugle Corps. Barry was also a semi-finalist for Tennessee Teacher of the Year in 2008. He is a native of Memphis.

Music Educator Tony White directs LA All-District Band in 2019 Rose Parade

Music educator Tony White will once again lead the All District High School Honor Band in their annual appearance in the Rose Parade on Tuesday, January 1. For the past three decades, the group has been marching under the able direction of this amazing educator. Tony worked as a music teacher at John C. Fremont High School for ten years. Although he currently works as a professional jazz musician playing the saxophone and clarinet, he is still heavily involved with music and arts education, serving as the music and entertainment coordinator in the LA Unified School District. “The  challenge for me is maintaining both,” he asserts.

This chalkboard champion earned his Bachelor’s degree from University of California, Riverside, his teaching credential at Cal State Dominguez Hills, and his Master’s degree in Educational Leadership from Pepperdine University.

The 390-member band is comprised of student musicians from all over the Los Angeles Unified School District. The group has appeared in the Rose Parade every year since 1973, and has also appeared in Super Bowls XI, XIV, and XVII. This impressive band is known for its energetic marching style and powerful brass. And, a little-known fact about this band is that both celebrated musicians Herb Alpert and John Williams were once participants.

You can learn more about the Los Angeles All District High School Honor Band at  www.laallcityband.com. Be sure to watch their performance in the Rose Parade on New Year’s Day!

Former teacher Peter Tork: He doesn’t Monkee around

Peter Tork

Musician and actor Peter Tork of the Monkees also worked as a teacher.

Former teacher Peter Tork doesn’t Monkee around. But there was a time in his life when he did.

In the mid-1960s, a pop band known as the Monkees hit the music scene with a few songs and a zany television show aimed at American teens. The band became, literally, an overnight sensation. Peter Tork, who played bass guitar and keyboards, was a member of that band. The other three members were Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, and Michael Nesmith.

Over the next five years, the group attempted to keep up with a whirlwind schedule that included weekly television sitcom episodes, studio recording sessions, national and international concert tours, and a full-length feature movie. The hard work paid off. Since they first hit the scene, the Monkees have sold more than 75 million records worldwide, making them one of the biggest selling groups of all time. Their best known songs are “I’m a Believer,” “Last Train to Clarksville,” “Daydream Believer,” and “Pleasant Valley Sunday.”

But the work schedule, creative differences with producer Don Kirshner, and infighting among the band members left Peter exhausted. In December, 1968, he bought out the remaining four years of his contract and left the Monkees. For the next few years, Peter drifted from one gig to another and spent or gave away all his Monkees earnings. By 1975, he’d hit rock bottom.

That’s when, even though he had dropped out of college, Peter accepted a position as a teacher at Pacific Hills School, a private secondary school in Santa Monica, California. He was hired to work there by Dr. Penrod Moss, the school’s director, because Moss was so impressed by Peter’s interview. “I like to hire people who are independent and creative,” Moss explained. “I was impressed by his personality and his ability to talk.” For Peter, a career in the classroom is not so odd when you consider that his father was an economics professor at the University of Connecticut for many years. At Pacific Hills, Peter taught many subjects, including English, math, drama, history, and music. He also served as a baseball coach at several schools. In all, Peter’s career as an educator spanned three years.

In 1986, the Monkees got together again to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the band. The following year they released a new studio album which earned measured success. Since then, Peter participated with fellow Monkees in numerous reunion shows and tours, until band member Davy Jones passed away in 2012.

In March, 2009, the former teacher was diagnosed with adenoid cystic carcinoma, and later that year underwent extensive surgery. In September, 2009, he was declared cancer-free. Now age 76, Peter Tork resides in Mansfield, Connecticut.