Recapturing the magic

Amy Ray and Emily Saliersācollectively the Indigo Girlsāperformed April 5 with Gary Lewis and the CU Symphony Orchestra for the second time in as many years.
The CU Symphony Orchestra continues to solidify itself as a go-to for crossover collaborations. After a sold-out concert with pop-folk duo the Indigo Girls in Spring 2016, this spring the College of Musicās premier ensemble again booked a gig with the Girlsāthis time to record a live album.
āThe conversation started during last yearās concert,ā says conductor Gary Lewis. āAs we were standing backstage before the second half, I asked if theyād thought about recording a symphonic concert. They said, āYeah, that would be fun.ā And then a few months later, their management contacted us.ā
According to CU Presents Executive Director Joan Braun, who first booked the Indigo GirlsāAmy Ray and Emily Saliersāfor the 2015-16 Artist Series, this repeat visit was a direct result of the positive experience a year before.
āIt wasnāt just about doing a symphonic recording,ā Braun says. āIt would have been a lot easier to do that with an orchestra nearer to where theyāre based. There was something special and magical about the situation that night, between Gary and the students and the audience. They wanted to capture everything about that experience.ā
It was a whirlwind on the night of April 5. Macky Auditorium was packed with Indigo Girls diehards, and after just one night of rehearsals, Lewis conducted his students in a collection of the groupās favorites.
For many of the students in the orchestra, this high-profile setting represented their first recording session. But it wasnāt Aaron Jensenās first rodeo.
āIāve recorded with the Chris Cameron blues band as an artist, and I was a recording engineer at a junior college when I lived in Utah. While I was there we recorded more than 180 sessions a year.ā
Jensen, a trumpet masterās student, says he learned a lot about the unique process of recording with a large ensemble.

At one point, the group took a second run at a song they had already recorded earlier in the concert. Jensen says the decision taught a valuable lesson for his peers.
āThat one extra take can make the difference. You can overdub as much as you want, but sometimes you just have to do it again. That was probably fairly eye-opening for some of the students who hadnāt sat in on a recording session before.ā
The outcome of the recording remains to be seen; the recording won't be released until early 2018. Lewis says regardless of the final product, students can feel proud of their professionalism and talent.
āIt gives our students the chance to develop a skill set that most university orchestras donāt get,ā he says. āIām the music director of a professional orchestra and I can tell you that being conversant with various pop, jazz and commercial styles is a skill that the 21st-century musician must have.ā
From Jensenās perspective, the more experiences like these students can have on their resumes, the better.
āI used to have a director who said that professional musicians have one rehearsal for 30 gigs, and collegiate musicians have 30 rehearsals for one gig. It was good for us to have that experience with a more real-life scenario.ā