Showing posts with label barbershop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barbershop. Show all posts

Monday, October 20, 2014

Octoberfest

Join us October 26th at 5PM for Octoberfest! We'll celebrate fall with refreshments and songs sung in the good ol' barbershop style. Fun for the whole family! We'll see you there.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

"All About Savannah" - 13th Colony Sound's Annual Show

“All About Savannah” is a musical comedy highlighting the sights and places of Savannah. Exploring our beautiful parks, ballparks, restaurants and churches through song provides an entertaining evening of laughs and listening pleasure for the entire family.
Presented by 13th Colony Sound, Savannah’s Barbershop Harmony Society Chorus also features select quartet performances as well as the Savannah Arts Academy “Skylarks” and Boys Quartet.

Presented on Friday, September 19th and Saturday, September 20th at the Savannah Arts Academy, 500 Washington Avenue, Savannah, GA. Curtain Time is 7:00 PM Friday, and 6:00 PM Saturday. Parking is free. Advance tickets are $10 for adults and $6 for students; tickets at the door will be $15 for adults and $10 for students. Tickets for military personnel, sponsored by community businesses, will be distributed at the Hunter AAF gymnasium.

To reserve tickets please visit www.savannahbarbershoppers.org or call 912-344-9768.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Bidding A Fond Farewell to the Howells

Recently, we bade a fond farewell to one of own. Spence Howell has been a long-time member of 13th Colony Sound and a beloved friend to each member of our group. He and his wife Claire are moving to Arizona to be closer to family.

We will miss them both very, very much.

We aren't just losing one unique character with Spence's departure—we're losing a bunch of them. Spence put his gifts to good use and created some of the most iconic characters in TCS show history. A considerable portion of his career was spent in South America, and he is fluent in at least 3 or 4 foreign languages. He drew on his experiences and his ethnic understanding to make memorable characters that ring like one of our barbershop chords.

Who can forget this memorable member of the Tijuana Tacos, who sang “Mexicali Rose,” right before the sheriff demanded to see their green cards?




And then there's the famous musicologist Dr. Omar Valentino, who can match any couple to their their perfect song. “Here, There, and Everywhere” is not a suitable song for love that lasts—no, no, no, try “Because of You” instead.



Spence's wife Claire has also been a valuable part of our chorus. Not long ago, she served as our Valentine's coordinator and did a fantastic job on what is always an arduous undertaking. I don't believe she or her husband are capable of uninteresting conversation—no matter the topic. That's the definition of a classy couple.

Things are already different here at 13th Colony Sound. We look forward to the time when we'll meet them again.

Nathan P. Daniel
VP Public Relations & IT
13th Colony Sound

 


Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Sundae Singers - 2013 Fall Show

13th Colony Sound, Savannah’s Barbershop Harmony Society Chorus, presents a musical comedy “The Sundae Singers” on Friday and Saturday, September 20 and 21, 2013, at Savannah Arts Academy, 500 Washington Avenue, Savannah, GA. Curtain time is 7:00 PM.

Featured performers are 13th Colony Sound, Savannah Storm Youth Chorus, Downtown Sound Boys Quartet, Savannah Arts Academy Skylark Chorus, Soprano Erin Love, Vintage
Four Quartet, and Carolinas District Championship Quartet: ½-Ton Pickup.



Johnny, a young Tybee businessman, recruits a curious group of locals known as The Sundae Singers who draw customers to his ice cream shoppe. Unlucky in love and lured by his franchisor to think global, Johnny submits an application to sell ice cream in Ireland – only to wind up in a barren land where the outlook for his franchise is bleaker than the landscape.

Before long Johnny finds a nomadic group of singers to promote his ice cream while they keep peace throughout the land. But Johnny may have been running from love, which pursues him even to the edge of the desert.

“The Sundae Singers” will provide an entertaining evening of songs and laughs for the entire family. Advance tickets are $10 for adults and $6 for students; tickets at the door will be $15 for adults, $10 for students. Military personnel tickets, sponsored by community businesses, will be distributed at the Hunter AAF gymnasium.

To reserve tickets please visit the Savannah Arts Academy website box office portal, visit savannahbarbershoppers.org or call 912-344-9768.







Monday, May 27, 2013

“It's better than spending the night in the Thunderbolt Jail.” - The Story of Richie Towns

We have a lot of very unique characters in our chorus, not the least of which is good ol' Richie Towns. Part Chuck Norris, part Gomer Pyle, this born and raised Savannah native decided to go career military....in none other than the Green Beret.

Richie's laid back attitude and easy-going nature is a constant in the universe of Savannah barbershop singing. He's so gentle and fun-loving, you'd never guess he's probably waged war in countries we're still not allowed to know exist. I roomed with Richie once at a barbershop convention. He's a very peculiar roommate to have—as long as the room is better than a ditch in a war zone during a hurricane, Richie is completely content.

“It's better than spending the night in the Thunderbolt Jail.” That's Richie's response to just about everything in life. Everything. That shows the kind of impact he has on those around him.

Richie is a bass, and one of the few charter members of 13th Colony Sound still around. His most famous role in our chapter meetings these days is the weekly raffle. At the end of break, tickets are drawn from the hat, and the winners are given some rather unique prizes, courtesy of Richie Towns. Typical prizes include: antique calendars, autographed books (signed “Richie Towns”), the occasional CD, and—if all else fails—a used pen.

Richie also has a passion for Haiti. He was there when the earthquake hit a few years ago. He's gone back on several mission trips to help rebuild. Thanks to his influence, another 13th Colony member recently took a mission trip there. Haiti is a better place now, thanks to Richie's efforts, the efforts of those who go with him, and the efforts of those who are inspired by them.

So on this Memorial Day, we'd like to not only remember those who served our nation, not only remember those who never came home, but also note the continuing contributions those who did come home have made since then, continuing to serve our nation—and even the nations around us—for the entire duration of life, whether in or out of the military. And for this purpose, it's hard to find a better chorus-member to pick on than our "Bonna Bella Richard," Mr. Richie Towns.

Now if we could just get him to use a computer so he can see this...




Nathan P. Daniel
VP Marketing & Public Relations
13th Colony Sound

 

Friday, September 21, 2012

Celebrating 90 Years of Dan Gillespie!

On this day, 90 years ago, our buddy and beloved tenor Dan Gillespie was born. The years that have followed have been nothing less than legendary. An active member of our chorus for many, many years, Dan has been a staple of barbershop harmony here in Savannah.

When I first started with 13th Colony Sound, Dan was the tenor in one of our most prominent chapter quartets--Driftaway. As I began to settle into my new-found hobby of barbershop singing, Dan's sly smile and witty sense of humor were among the ever-present mainstays affirming that this is the hobby for me.

Not long after I began singing with Dan and the other 13th Colony Sound members, I learned something else about this remarkable man. In WWII Dan didn't fight in Europe. He didn't fight in the Pacific either. Dan worked on the Manhattan Project. His responsibility was making the initiator mechanisms for the first atomic bomb in human history as well as the one used on Nagasaki--the one which ultimately ended the war.

At that time, my own grandfather was preparing to invade Japan--a task he doubted he would live to see to the end of; a task that, thanks to my buddy Dan, never began. And so, I count it among the greatest honors of my life, that I have not only gotten to meet this man, not only gotten to sing with him, but have also gotten the privilege of naming among my friends my dear friend, Dan Gillespie.

So, Dan, we, your friends and fellow barbershoppers, wish you the greatest and happiest 90th birthday ever!

Happy birthday, Dan!

Nathan P. Daniel
VP Marketing & Public Relations
13th Colony Sound

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

TCS Fall Show - "Witness for the Defense"


A trial is  beginning. The plaintiff charges that barbershop harmony as practiced by the 13th Colony Sound and Moon River Choruses violates the rules of classical harmony and seeks to prohibit them from that style of singing. Both the plaintiff and the defense present arguments supporting their positions, principally through songs sung in the barbershop harmony style. The defense calls the Ghost of O. C. Cash, the founder of the Barbershop Harmony Society as a witness. He explains the origins of barbershop harmony with many examples. A trial ends with shocking, surprise evidence.


Come enjoy this night of barbershop harmony with us, Savannah's barbershop chorus, 13th Colony Sound, as we present to you...



WHERE: Lucas Theatre
WHEN: October 5th & 6th at 7:08 PM
COST: $15 Advanced Tickets; $20 at the Door

Check out our website for more information: http://savannahbarbershoppers.org.
Or call 912-525-5050


Saturday, May 19, 2012

Hat's off to Henry! Class of 2012

Today was a special day in the life of 13th Colony Sound. One of our newest and youngest chorus members, Henry Wadman, braved the challenges of wearing a tasseled hat in front of a large audience, and became an official high school graduate.

Henry, from all of your fellow barbershoppers here in the Savannah chapter, we wish you our highest congratulations! We're honored to have you among us.

We also have a few other members who I believe are graduating as well--we look forward to celebrating your accomplishments as well.

Henry is one of the chorus members that tips the balance of our chapter's average age below retirement and social security eligibility. Henry, we are most thankful!

As young men, we find value in spending time with the older guys we sing with, knowing that they can teach us great volumes of things if we stop and listen. Henry is the type of young man who not only will do this, but he is also the unique type of young man that the old men also find value in learning from.

Barbershop harmony is about two things: music and fraternity. Folks, the two are not necessarily in that order.

On this occasion, as on so many others, the harmony of music takes a back seat to the harmony of fraternity.

-But don't count the music out: Henry placed his pitch pipe next to his graduation picture at the reception.

Nathan P. Daniel
VP Marketing & Public Relations
13th Colony Sound