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Catholic School Band Entertains Sandy Victims

By Theresa Laurence, Catholic News Service
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Sophomore Anthony Nguyen plays the saxophone as the Father Ryan High School Marching Band of Nashville, Tenn., participates in the 86th annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York Nov. 22. After the parade, the 83-member band traveled to the Fa

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (CNS) -- Ever since Kenley Cadena picked up a flute to perform in the band at her Catholic grade school in Nashville, she knew what she wanted to do.



"I wanted to be at the top," she said. "Ever since then, it's been a passion, and I love it so much."



On Nov. 22, Cadena and fellow members of the Father Ryan High School Marching Band were at the very top, performing the highest profile gig of their lives -- at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City.



For the first time in school history, the band performed in what has become a traditional kickoff for the holiday -- seen by more than 3 million spectators lining the streets and watched by another 50 million on TV.



Father Ryan was one of only 11 marching bands selected to participate out of more than 150 applicants from around the country.



After the parade, the Nashville band headed to Far Rockaway in the New York borough of Queens to perform as part of a Thanksgiving celebration for more than 800 residents in one of the areas hardest hit by Hurricane Sandy.



After the hurricane hit, school administrators and the band community had donated money to the Macy's/American Red Cross Relief Fund -- more than $5,000 from a fundraiser held for the fine arts program.



But the school wanted to do more, and contacted Macy's to see if there might be a New York-area community hit by Sandy that might want a special performance. A day later Macy's received a call from a Far Rockaway minister asking about if a band might be available. Macy's put the two together and "lifted the spirits of the community."



Interviewed before their New York trip, Cadena and her band mates were laser-focused on perfecting their 1-minute, 15-second Macy's routine, which will be taped live and broadcast into millions of homes on Thanksgiving morning. In addition to the choreographed routine performed for the television cameras, the Father Ryan band will be entertaining the crowds as they march through the streets of Manhattan.



For band field commander and Father Ryan senior Kevin Finnegan, leading his band in the parade was something he'd been "dreaming about for years."



A native New Yorker, Finnegan always watched the parade on television with his family growing up. On Thanksgiving morning, 35 of his family members planned to be in the bleachers on the parade route.



"It's something they'll never forget," said Jereme Frey, a Father Ryan band co-director who marched in the Macy's parade with the McGavock High School band in 1992. "It's a wall of noise and people," he told the Tennessee Register, newspaper of the Nashville Diocese. "It's awesome."



Being among the chosen few for the parade was, in a sense, a reward for the decades of hard work that band director Jeff Schletzer, his past and current co-directors, and all the former student musicians put into building the program.



"This is a culmination of the work the kids started a long time ago," said Schletzer, who helped revive Ryan's band when he came on staff 32 years ago.


Schletzer has helped move the Father Ryan band from football pep support to champions in national and international band competitions. Last year, the band won first overall in the Southeastern Regional for Bands of America competition; they also were the sole recipient of National Bands of America's Al Castronovo Memorial Esprit de Corps award for most spirit.



While victory in competition can be thrilling for band members, it's not something that many people outside of the band connect with the way they have with the Macy's bid.



"This has absolutely raised the profile of the band," Schletzer said. "It's nice to see them recognized in a way they deserve."



The Father Ryan band, including drum line and color guard, includes 83 members, which is markedly smaller than most other bands considered for a slot in the parade. For example, when Frey marched with McGavock, they had nearly 230 members.



Before they left for New York, it was "a full court press" of parade prep, said Frey. For six weeks, the band rehearsed in the student parking lot, inside a large square with a giant white star in the middle, designed to match the exact dimensions of the TV taping area during the parade.



Frey noted the Father Ryan band students "make a lot of sacrifices and they have a lot of pride and ownership in what they do."



Band parents are also an integral part of the experience.



"It takes a village," said Paul Bell, who has seen two sons through the Father Ryan band. His son, Sebastian, a French horn player, marched in the Macy's parade.



From sewing uniforms and flags and serving meals for band members, to spearheading fundraising efforts, to helping the band load and set up instruments on the field, band parents are everywhere the band is.