
Junior Dan Hipke plays an electric guitar solo during the Meadowdale jazz band’s performance of the ballad “Kelly’s Eyes” at the Clark College Jazz Festival. Band director David Hawke listens to him play.
The Meadowdale High School jazz band can swing it with the
“big boys.”
Meadowdale’s jazz band placed second in the AAA division of
the 48th annual Clark College Jazz Festival last weekend at Clark College in
Vancouver.
“It kind of sets a name for ourselves for the rest of the
year at Clark,” said junior Todd Hollenhorst, the band’s pianist. “It’s good to show what we’ve worked on
and what we [still] have to work on.”
For almost 50 years, Clark College has held a three-day
competitive festival for more than 60 high school jazz choirs and bands from
the Northwest, according to the college’s Web site. This year’s festival ran from Jan. 28-30.
“We compete against the ‘big boys’ at that festival,” said
Meadowdale’s band director David Hawke.
The “big boys” are schools from the Puget Sound area – like Garfield and Roosevelt high schools – with strong jazz programs, he said. “It ups the bar.”

The
Meadowdale High School jazz band performs at the Clark College Jazz Festival
last weekend at Clark College in Vancouver. The band placed second in the AAA division of the festival.
“The Puget Sound area is kind of the hot bed for big
jazz. Jazz education got rooted in
the Northwest with people like Quincy Jones. We’ve competed in L.A. and Reno, and all over the place the judges
are always saying, ‘Boy, you guys in the Northwest are lucky.’”
First place in the AAA division went to Mountain View High
School of Vancouver, while the festival’s sweepstakes trophy was awarded to
Garfield High School of Seattle.
The Edmonds School District was well-represented at Clark
College. Mountlake Terrace High
School’s jazz band also placed second, in the AAAA division of the festival.
Junior Dan Hipke of Meadowdale also won the Outstanding
Musician Award for his electric guitar solo in the ballad “Kelly’s Eyes.”
Meadowdale’s jazz band was one of about 14 bands in the AAA
division to play three songs in front of three judges and a live audience last
Saturday. The band performed the
bluesy “I Be Serious ‘Bout Dem Blues,” “Kelly’s Eyes,” and an up-tempo “Wind
Machine.”
“Kelly’s Eyes” is a trumpet ballad, but the band arranged it
for guitar, so that Hipke could play his award-winning solo, Hawke said. And with “Wind Machine,” he said, the
judges were impressed that the band “took it at such a burning tempo.”
In the finals competition, the top three bands of the day
played two songs and were ranked for first, second and third place.
“We probably should have had first, but we all know how that
goes,” Hawke said. “It’s like ice
skating. It’s what the judges are
looking for. We definitely had the crowd.
We were exciting, we were moving them, but maybe they (the judges) liked
the soloist in the other band a little better.”
Clark College President Bob Knight presented the trophies to
Saturday’s finalists.
“Getting second at the festival is still good,” Hipke
said. “Just even placing at the
festival is good because of the other competition, because the Northwest is
such a big center for jazz education.”
Starting in January, the jazz band gets competitive.
The band placed first in the AAAA division of the Riverside
Jazz Festival in Auburn on Jan. 23.
In Auburn, Hipke also won the Outstanding Musician Award for his solo in
“Kelly’s Eyes.”
“That was the warm-up for the big festival at Clark College,”
Hawke said. “We worked the bugs
out, the kinks out.”
Next Friday, Feb. 5, the jazz band is competing in the
Viking Jazz Festival at North Kitsap High School in Poulsbo. The band placed first at North Kitsap
in 2009.
“I’m just looking forward to taking what we have now and
just taking it to that next level,” Hollenhorst said, “and just having fun
because that’s what it’s about.”