| Eighteen of the
Coachella Valley's 20 public middle and high schools
have met today's deadline for ordering materials from
the Manilow Music Project.
But the schools' band directors say they need more
support to help their students compete for admission to
the top music colleges.
Barry Manilow said that's why he
announced his offer this month to buy $250,000 worth of
instruments, stands and sheet music for local public
schools with band programs.
"The reason I'm talking to you is
not to brag about doing this," he said in an exclusive
interview at his Palm Springs home, "I think everybody
should do it. At your kids' school you can buy a
clarinet and they would be very grateful for that
clarinet.
"I thought the school system takes
care of things like this. Well, they don't. Or they
won't. Anybody that wants these kids playing music, they
can do it."
Manilow formed a committee to help
support local music programs. It assigned a point value
to dozens of Yamaha instruments and offered each school
100 points for instruments they'd select on order forms
due today. Manilow also got the Hal Leonard music
publishing company to offer sheet music to the schools.
The materials are expected to be
delivered in September.
"I hope it helps," Manilow said.
"I hope it encourages other people to do it, too."
Local high school music
instructors said the donations will supplement what
their band booster programs are doing.
Paul Bluto, band director at La
Quinta High School, said he sees Manilow's plan as a
relief for his boosters, which last year helped lease
$100,000 worth of instruments and band uniforms.
"Our biggest needs are providing
uniforms and equipment," Bluto said. "I know that in the
future, with the cuts coming down from the state, we're
probably going to be hit pretty hard in transportation,
to be able to go to events and do things."
Greg Whitmore of Cathedral City
High School said transportation costs would be next on
his wish list from another philanthropist. His bands
have earned invitations to perform in prestigious venues
from Carnegie Hall to British concert halls, but he said
his students need financial help to be able to take
advantage of those rare opportunities.
"I think Barry's belief that more
needs to be done reflects his understanding that the
arts are not oversubsidized," Whitmore said.
Brian Ingelson, band director and
fine arts chairman of Palm Springs High School, said
he's getting tympani from Manilow to add to a string
orchestra his booster club helped him start with
donations from the Agua Caliente band, the Friends of
the Philharmonic, Wells Fargo and Tour de Palm Springs.
But Ingelson said Palm Springs is
the only local school with 60 string instruments in an
orchestra and it needs additional instructors.
"You look at Boston or New York or
Philadelphia, there's an orchestra in every school," he
said, "and they'll have staffs of five or 10 people that
are hired by the school districts. They have private
instructors. We just don't have that in California.
"For us to be able to have our
students compete on a national level, (we need)
fundraising and the generosity and support of the
community." |