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Brighouse composer-in-residence Leigh
Baker, Sterling Brass Instruments and the Collegiate Brass Ensemble are
involved in campaign to teach school children how to make music, and
save water!
Anglian Water commissioned the Bedfordshire
based instrument maker to create 5 hybrid instruments – part brass and
part genuine blue water pipes. The Collegiate Brass Ensemble is using
the instruments in educational workshops with a parallel set of messages
about water conservation and how to make musical instruments out of
pretty much anything.
Sterling’s Managing Director Paul Riggett said: “We’ve
has unusual commissions before but using the blue plastic water pipes
was certainly tricky. We spent as long playing with bits of pipe and
scratching our heads as we did in the actual production! We couldn't
actually make a trumpet, no blue water pipes are small enough, so have
created an entirely new instrument: The 'flumpet' is part trumpet and
part flugel. The final result is bizarre, certainly unique: the
instruments play more or less in tune, and make quite a mellow,
mysterious sound. This idea will, I’m sure, be inspirational when
presented to children, and we were delighted to have been involved”.
Anglian Water handed the challenge of
writing something suitable for two flumpets, a horn, a euphonium and a
tuba to Leigh Baker. His brief was to compose something suitable for
Collegiate Brass to present to schools. The final result is “The
H2-Overture”. Leigh said:
“I’ve taken snippets from various
water-related pieces and worked them together into a piece which I’m
sure will appeal to youngsters. I know the idea is to roll this campaign
out to all sorts of TV and radio stations too, so it sounds like the
piece, and the instruments, should get plenty of exposure. Writing for
these bizarre instruments was quite tricky, but the really tricky part
will be playing them!
Leigh’s sentiment is shared by leader of
the London-based Collegiate Brass Ensemble Pete Collins, also principal
cornet at Ratby Band and musical director of Foresters Brass 2000:
“We’ll be doing a lot of lipping to get these in tune. Sterling
Instruments seem to have done a great job with such a challenging brief.
Leigh’s piece is superb too, and we’re really looking forward to taking
these messages out to children around the Anglian Water region. The
company has come up with a fantastic idea to inspire and motivate
children and we’re really looking forward to it. Anglian Water is well
known in PR circles for innovative campaigns and this one is no
exception – hopefully it’ll attract plenty of media coverage too”.
Anglian Water’s ‘music in the pipeline’
campaign is visiting Norwich, Kings
Lynn, Chelmsford, Colchester,
Biggleswade,
Bedford, Lincoln
and Peterborough. For
more information about those involved, please visit:
www.leighbaker.co.uk,
www.sterlingbrass.co.uk,
www.collegiatebrass.com and
www.anglianwater.co.uk
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