• RL’s Glee Club Takes To Texas

    RL’s Glee Club Takes To Texas

    The Glee Club recently concluded its annual spring break tour, bringing their performances to the Lone Star State! 

    Each day was full of singing, education, and some fun. To kick off the trip, the boys performed at St. Agnes Academy in Houston and later heard the combined groups of St. Agnes and Strake Jesuit. Later that day, they traveled to the Houston Rodeo at NRG Stadium. Their time in Houston also included performing at Sunday Mass at St. Basil Chapel, a trip to the Space Center Houston, and fun at Galveston Beach.

    During the trip’s second leg, the group visited Cathedral High School, providing music for their morning mass and engaging in a choral exchange with their choir. The next stop was San Antonio, with a visit to the Alamo and Mission San José before attending the Spurs–Knicks game, where the boys performed in the concourse pregame. The tour continued with a trip to the Natural Bridge Caverns before touring the Texas State Capitol in Austin, concluding with the trip’s final performance.

    After a fun few days, the boys returned home to Massachusetts, where the weather was a bit colder, and there were slightly fewer cowboy hats.

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  • Holiday Concerts Kick Off Winter Break

    Holiday Concerts Kick Off Winter Break

    In Roxbury Latin tradition, on the day following mid-year exams—and before students and faculty depart for a well-deserved winter break—nearly half of the student body assembles to deliver a festive and joyful holiday concert honoring the celebrations and spirit of the season. On December 20 we were delighted to have Rousmaniere Hall filled with family and friends who joined in a happy evening of song to commence the vacation and close 2024.

    Led by RL’s Director of Music Rob Opdycke the members of the Glee Club, the Latonics, and the Junior Chorus regaled audiences at 4:30 p.m. and again at 7:30 p.m. on Friday a snowy Friday night. The second concert was followed by refreshments and fellowship in the Bernstein Tea Room.

    Watch the full video of Friday’s concert on RL’s YouTube page.

    View a photo gallery of Friday’s concert on RL’s Flickr page.

  • A Tour of Italy for RL’s Glee Club

    A Tour of Italy for RL’s Glee Club

    On March 15, 72 RL boys—along with four faculty chaperones—departed Boston for Italy, to enjoy a week-long, spring break tour of music and culture. On day one, the group first sang Mass at Santa Croce in Florence before heading to San Gimignano, where the Latonics drew a crowd busking, and the Glee Club sang a second Mass at San Agostino. That Monday offered a slower pace, as the group embarked on a city tour of Florence in the morning, before enjoying a free afternoon to explore the city independently in smaller groups.

    Next, the boys and faculty headed to Siena, where they packed a lot into two days. En route from Florence to Siena, they stopped to visit the Corsini Estate in the beautiful Tuscan countryside. There they enjoyed a tour of the villa and the wine and olive oil production facilities—enjoying an olive oil tasting prior to lunch! After arriving in Siena, the singers gave their third performance of the tour at San Francesco—another wonderful acoustic experience. They then continued their Franciscan theme by traveling to his hometown of Assisi, where they performed in the San Francesco Basilica in the morning and took a tour of the city in the afternoon. Since all roads lead to Rome, the group concluded their Italian adventure there, with a visit to the Vatican and the powerful experience of singing at St. Peter’s Basilica. Our special thanks, for planning and leading a successful, memorable trip, goes to faculty chaperones Rob Opdycke, Kerry Brennan, Michael Beam, and Alex Pellegrini.

  • Justin Yamaguchi (I) Named National YoungArts Winner

    Justin Yamaguchi (I) Named National YoungArts Winner

    For his skills on violin, senior Justin Yamaguchi has been named a 2024 National YoungArts Winner in Classical Music Violin. As described on the YoungArts website, “Winners are chosen for their caliber of artistic achievement by esteemed discipline-specific panels of artists through a rigorous blind adjudication process.”

    For more than four decades, the YoungArts Award has been recognizing talent and hard work like Justin’s: artistic skill that demonstrates exceptional technique; a strong sense of artistry; and a depth of thinking and performance that exceeds the level of peers at this career stage.

    As part of the award, in addition to a cash prize, Justin is eligible to participate in one of two in-person interdisciplinary programs held in Los Angeles or New York City this spring, as well as virtual professional development seminars with fellow YoungArts award winners.

  • Glee Club Takes to Nashville and Memphis!

    Glee Club Takes to Nashville and Memphis!

    In the early morning hours of March 18, four members of RL’s faculty and 56 members of the Glee Club boarded a plane to head to two of America’s most iconic music destinations. First the group spent three days in Nashville, Tennessee—Music City! On Saturday, they spent some time getting to know downtown Nashville before heading to the legendary Grand Ole Opry. On Sunday, RL’s singers provided music for the service at Belmont United Methodist Church; performed at and visited the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum; and enjoyed a private concert by the versatile artist Ajaye at Ole Red. On Monday, the group worked with two choirs at Montgomery Bell Academy and performed at the all-school assembly that kicked off MBA’s Field Day. RL’s boys and faculty visited Vanderbilt University and enjoyed a wonderful dinner and musical exchange with our friends, the French Family Band. (Camille, Stuie, and Sonny French—along with their bassist Joe Reed—were last year’s Berman Visiting Artists in Residence, performing two concerts at RL and working with student musicians in master classes and jam sessions throughout the school day.) RL’s students and adults were also honored to meet, hear, and perform with Jimmy Fortune of the Statler Brothers. Highlights of that evening included Tait Oberg (I) and John Austin (I) trading solos with Sonny and Joe, and Glee Club singers singing “My Girl” with five professional musicians as their backing band!

    From Nashville, the group departed for Memphis, where they spent three days performing and hearing some great music, as well as learning about the history and culture of our country and the Mississippi Delta region. On Tuesday, the group visited the battlefield where Union forces held off a Confederate charge at the Battle of Franklin. They then arrived in Memphis, where they performed at the Central Atrium of Crosstown Arts and heard a tremendous jazz concert presented by the students of Stax Music Academy. On Wednesday, the group headed downstream: First stop was Helena, Arkansas, where they performed at the Helena Country Club for the local Rotary and Kiwanis Clubs. They then went on to Clarksdale, Mississippi, where Tait and John once again got to jam with a pro: blues artist, Super Chikan. The day ended with a fun change of pace, as the group took in an exciting NBA game (with the hometown Grizzlies prevailing!). The trip’s concluding days began with a tour of the legendary Sun Studio, followed by time to explore Beale Street (which included some Latonics busking in the Land of the Delta Blues!), followed by a moving visit to the National Civil Rights Museum.

    The weeklong trip was memorable, and included not only performing, hearing, and learning about music, but also taking in the sites, sounds, and tastes of another area of our country, rich in history and culture. Thank you to Mr. Opdycke, Mr. Pojman, Mr. Beam, and Mr. Pellegrini for chaperoning this year’s spring break Glee Club trip.

    View photos from the Glee Club trip to Nashville and Memphis, taken by Mike Pojman.

  • Eric Zhu, Class II, Accepted into National Youth Orchestra

    Eric Zhu, Class II, Accepted into National Youth Orchestra

    After a comprehensive and highly competitive audition process, Eric Zhu (II) was invited by Carnegie Hall’s Weill Music Institute to join the National Youth Orchestra of the United States of America (NYO-USA). As a member of NYO-USA, Eric will have the honor to play with some of the most talented young musicians from around the country; learn from top-notch orchestra professionals and guest artists; and serve as a cultural ambassador while traveling and performing nationally and internationally. Each year, NYO-USA receives applications from many exceptional musicians but ultimately offers about 100 instrumentalist spots. Eric is one of 14 violists chosen for the orchestra.

    In its tenth anniversary season, the 2023 NYO-USA program will span the month of July and kicks off with a two-week residency at Purchase College in New York. Following the residency, NYO-USA will embark on a North American tour—its first since 2014—under the direction of Sir Andrew Davis, with Gil Shaham as the guest soloist for most of the concerts. After an opening performance at Carnegie Hall, the orchestra will travel coast to coast, starting at the newly opened Groton Hill Music Center in Massachusetts and ending at the spectacular Rady Shell in San Diego. The tour will also have an international stop at one of Canada’s leading festivals outside Montreal. 

    In addition to being accepted into the NYO-USA, Eric will join the Massachusetts All-State Orchestra to perform at Symphony Hall in March. Having started his musical journey at a young age, Eric has been a member of Boston University Tanglewood Institute, NEC Prep Chamber Music Intensive Performance Seminar (CHIPS), Greenwood Music Camp, and Rivers Honor ChamberMusicLab, and is currently part of the Honors Chamber Music at Boston Youth Symphony Orchestras and a principal violist for the Boston Youth Symphony.

  • Roxbury Latin Welcomes Jazz Quartet The Late Risers

    Roxbury Latin Welcomes Jazz Quartet The Late Risers

    It was fitting that on a cold, gray day in January, Roxbury Latin students, faculty, and staff were treated to a sunny and upbeat performance from local jazz quartet The Late Risers—a band that has been described as “the musical equivalent of blue skies and glorious sunshine.”

    The Late Risers got their start in 2014, when trumpet player and bandleader Sam Dechenne invited Josiah Reibstein (tuba), Tev Stevig (tenor banjo), and Nat Seelen (clarinet) to participate as a jazz quartet in the growing revitalization of Boston’s Downtown Crossing district. Their strolling “Pocket Jazz Band” has been together ever since, bringing traditional 1920-1940s era Jazz to the street corners of Boston and all over the world.

    In addition to performing traditional and New Orleans-style jazz, The Late Risers play popular modern tunes as well as original compositions. They even welcomed RL students to perform with them, as the band members spent the morning on campus for conversation and musical collaboration with some of RL’s talented jazz and vocal musicians in both the Smith Theater and Instrumental Room.

    The concert Hall was made possible by the generosity of the Andrew Daland ’46 Memorial Concert Fund, established by Andrew’s wife, Pamela Worden, and his family and friends, with the purpose of bringing a musical concert to Roxbury Latin boys each year in Andrew’s memory. 

    Since the Fund’s establishment, Roxbury Latin has welcomed many musicians to campus, including guitarist Jason Vieaux; the a cappella group Cantus; Elijah Rock; violinist Stefan Jackiw ’03; Yale’s Whiffenpoofs; singer-songwriter Jonathan Edwards; alumnus David Leach ’09 and Julia Connor who together form Room to Spare; and most recently, Matt Weiner ’89 and his band Squirrel Butter. We are grateful for the generosity that fuels this musical experience each year.

    View their Hall performance, this year’s Daland Concert.

  • Holiday Concerts Kick Off the Winter Break

    Holiday Concerts Kick Off the Winter Break

    In Roxbury Latin tradition, on the day following mid-year exams—and just before the students and faculty leave campus for a well-deserved winter break—nearly half of the student body assembles to deliver a festive and joyful holiday concert, honoring the celebrations and spirit of the season. On December 16 we were delighted to have Rousmaniere Hall filled with family and friends who joined in a happy evening of song to commence the vacation and close the year 2022.

    Led by conductors Rob Opdycke, Director of Music, and Kerry Brennan, Headmaster, the members of the Glee Club, the Latonics, and the Junior Chorus regaled an audience at 4:30 p.m. and again at 7:30 p.m. on Friday. The second concert was followed by refreshments and fellowship in the Bernstein Tea Room.

    Roxbury Latin Glee Club

    Personent Hodie
    from Piae Cantiones
    Mathias Why, organ
    arr. Gustav Holst

    Ne Sedi Djemo
    Bosnian Folk Song
    arr. Stephen Sametz

    Lowlands
    American Sea Shanty
    Eddy Pan, solo
    arr. Alice Parker & Robert Shaw

    Ave Maria
    Tomás Luis de Victoria
    arr. Hans Lavater

    Somebody’s Calling My Name
    Traditional Spiritual
    Emmanuel Nwodo, solo
    arr. Wendell P. Whalum

    Roxbury Latin Latonics

    Ave Verum Corpus
    William Byrd

    Shenandoah
    American Sea Shanty
    Michael Allen, solo
    arr. Jameson Marvin

    The Christmas Song
    Robert Wells & Mel Tormé
    Emmanuel Nwodo, solo
    arr. The Blenders

    Roxbury Latin Junior Chorus

    Winter Wonderland
    Felix Bernard
    Marco Suri, piano
    arr. Andy Beck

    The Lion Sleeps Tonight
    Solomon Linda
    Nishant Rajagopalan, Rory Kelly,
    & Flynn Hall, solos
    arr. Rob Opdycke

    Pompeii
    Bastille
    Eric Archerman & Michael Clark, solos
    arr. Rob Opdycke

    Roxbury Latin Latonics

    Got to Get You into Good Day Sunshine
    Lennon & McCartny
    Xavier Martin & Ryan Miller, solos
    arr. Rob Opdycke

    Walking in Memphis
    Marc Cohn
    Emmanuel Nwodo, solo
    arr. Rob Opdycke

    Sh-Boom
    The Chords
    Brendan Reichard, Alexander Sanzone
    & Tommy Reichard, solos
    arr. Alexander Sanzone

    Grenade
    Bruno Mars
    Tommy Reichard & Fin Reichard, solos
    arr. Rob Opdycke

    Roxbury Latin Glee Club

    My Girl
    Smokey Robinson & Ronald White
    Emmanuel Nwodo, Tommy Reichard & Nahum Workalemahu, solos
    arr. Rob Opdycke

    Joshua Fit de Battle of Jericho
    Traditional Spiritual
    Justin Yamaguchi & Eric Zhu, piano
    arr. Howard Helvey

    Chanukah, oi chanukah
    Charles L. Baker
    Justin Yamaguchi, piano

    Brightest and Best
    from Southern Harmony
    Justin Yamaguchi, violin;
    Michael Allen, bass; Eric Zhu, piano
    arr. Shawn Kirchner

    Sleigh Ride
    Leroy Anderson
    Dennis Jin, piano
    arr. Michael Edwards

    The Founder’s Song
    James Shelley Hamilton
    Mathias Why, organ
    Joined by the Junior Chorus & Roxbury Latin Alumni

  • A Memorable, Moving, and Musical Spring Break Trip, Two Years in the Making

    A Memorable, Moving, and Musical Spring Break Trip, Two Years in the Making

    When COVID-19 forced the Roxbury Latin Glee Club’s spring break to be canceled in March 2020, no one knew when students might return to school, much less travel the world. But RL’s singers finally went back on the road for the first time since spring break 2019, arriving in Munich on March 11 to begin a long-awaited adventure through Austria and the Czech Republic. The Glee Club’s first stop was Obdach, a small village 220 miles southeast of Munich in central Austria. 

    “We red-eyed on Friday, to Munich,” said RL’s Director of Music Rob Opdycke. “So the real rough day was Saturday, March 12, because we had a six-hour bus drive to Obdach. Some boys slept, some boys took in the scenery and all the strangely shaped church steeples and skylines.”

    Obdach, a village of less than 4,000 people, is not a tourist destination in the mold of Vienna, Salzburg, or even Český Krumlov—all subsequent stops on the tour, but the town has a unique tie to Roxbury Latin.

    “Obdach is not typically on anyone’s itinerary,” says Mr. Opdycke. “We go there because it’s the childhood home of our tour guide, Marco, and his mother, Ushi. Kerry Brennan met Marco and Ushi 45 years ago on an Amherst glee club trip. At the time Ushi was the tour guide and Marco was five or six years old.”

    Today Marco Riha runs the tour company MusArt, founded by his mother, Aranca (Ushi). And on the first night in Obdach, the group dinner coincided with Ushi’s 80th birthday party. The boys were invited to sing for the guests in between sets by a traditional oom-pah band—an authentic introduction to Austria.

    “We’re talking tuba, accordions, and clarinets,” says Mr. Opdycke. “It was awesome. Pints of beer were flowing (not for our boys, of course, but in the bar), and the boys were encouraged to sing along to German songs they didn’t know. And in turn, they offered their singing—everything from Glee Club songs to Sweet Caroline.

    The next morning the boys sang for Mass at the Parish Church, where Peter Bacher, the mayor of Obdach, welcomed the group, while the local newspaper, Obdacher Gemeindenachrichten, covered the concert. From there the tour traveled 137 miles northeast to Vienna.

    “I joked with the boys that they transitioned from being local celebrities in a small village to typical tourists in a big city,” says Mr. Opdycke. “Vienna was great to see—the center of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the center of so much great German music, so many composers. Our hotel was right near Schönbrunn Palace, which is the summer home of the Hapsburgs. Some boys would go on morning runs just in the gardens of Schönbrunn. It was a wonderful opportunity.”

    In Vienna the Glee Club had two opportunities to perform, first for Mass in the city’s renowned Saint Stephen’s Cathedral, and again the following day during Mass at St. Peter’s Church (Peterskirche), a smaller but no less stunning Baroque church nearby, where they had a special guest in attendance, U.S. Ambassador Victoria Reggie Kennedy.

    “Ambassador Kennedy sat with Mr. Brennan,” said Opdycke, “and then delivered some remarks to the boys afterward. She even took some questions—just like a Hall speaker would take questions. It was wonderful. Her message was that the type of diplomacy the boys were doing, in being American tourists, performing music, and coming with goodwill was as important as any diplomacy she can do from her embassy.”

    On March 16 the group departed Vienna and made their way toward the Czech border, stopping first two hours west at the Mauthausen Concentration Camp. The visit was a profound experience for everyone, and several boys offered prayers of mourning and remembrance—some in Hebrew, some in English, many in silence. Mr. Opdycke remarked that so much of the tour celebrated the best of human society: artistic, architectural, cultural. Mauthausen presented an example of the worst.

    “I had brought boys there 14 years ago, as well,” said Mr. Opdycke. “It was somber. It was profound. It felt important to bear witness. The boys spent a good two hours—mostly in silence, some in a state of prayer. And that was an important aspect as well. So much of the tour was about the high end of music-making—for worship or for concerts, for audiences—but paying witness to the atrocities of the Holocaust and seeing that place? I think that will be a major takeaway for the boys on this trip.”

    An hour and a half later, the group reached the medieval Czech town of Český Krumlov, stopping off at a bus park and walking beneath a centuries-old viaduct into the town. They also received a two-hour tour of Český Krumlov, ending in the top courtyard of the second largest castle in the country (just shy of Prague). 

    Later that evening, across the Vltava River at the Jesuit Hall, the Glee Club presented its longest concert of the tour, performing all of the Glee Club and Latonics repertoire for the locals who attended.

    “Český Krumlov hadn’t really opened up yet, so we were the only tourists in town,” said Mr. Opdycke. “That Thursday night was our only concert that wasn’t in a church, and we had a piano so we were able to do our pieces with accompaniment, and we were able to perform not only our sacred songs, but all of our pop stuff that wasn’t necessarily appropriate for a church setting. All told, the boys performed about an hour and 15 minutes’ worth of music before they went off to a post-concert dinner. That was a great visit. Our 54 boys slightly outnumbered the audience, but not by much. The opportunity was much more about the singing than the audience.”

    “There is something significant about being able to perform wonderful choral music that was originally composed to be part of a church service. It is typical to perform beautiful, sacred music in concerts, but to have the opportunity to perform it as part of a worship service—like we did for the Mass in Obdach and the Mass in Vienna—was powerful. For some of the boys who are Catholic, that was part of their Lenten worship. For other boys who are Protestant, it was the same. For boys who are of other faith traditions, or don’t practice a faith tradition, it’s still meaningful to be able to contribute. The beauty of music is helping a congregation to be part of a state of worship. I told the boys whether you are of this faith or not, you are contributing to a process of worship that should make it more meaningful than just singing the song to an audience at a concert.”

    The Glee Club’s final stop was in Salzburg, 150 miles southeast. There the group enjoyed a city tour, after which the Latonics held court busking in front of Mozart’s birthplace. 

    “With the Latonics, there’s a long tradition of finding opportunities to busk,” said Mr. Opdycke. “To sing on the street for the public, to put out a hat. It’s not as much about collecting the money as it is about interacting with passersby. They did that in both Vienna and in Salzburg. In Vienna they got a nice crowd in Stephansplatz, and in Salzburg they picked the spot right in front of Mozart’s birthplace and got an impressive crowd. I think they made 175 Euro, which was a pretty good clip. They gave some of it to a homeless person, and they’re using the rest to buy some Latonics swag.”

    Busking is just one of many RL traditions being rekindled as school life and spring break trips return to pre-pandemic normalcy, but Mr. Opdycke was impressed by the boys’ ability to maintain continuity in the face of unprecedented interruption.

    “It wasn’t lost on me that this was the first Glee Club trip in two years. All the institutional memory of boys being in the routine of doing this had to be restarted. There were only two students on this trip, Eli Bailit and Ale Philippedes, who had done a Glee Club trip previously—to Los Angeles as freshmen in 2019. And here they were as senior leaders on this trip. The boys were impressively cooperative, patient, and punctual. I was very pleased that they seemed to understand that while it was a chance to have fun and kick off the spring, it had certain parameters and school rules in effect. They didn’t push the envelope, they were where they needed to be when they needed to be there. They were in their rooms for bed check. They were incredibly positive about the whole experience. I was so pleased that they all brought a good attitude.”

    The cooperation of the 54 boys made relatively easy work for the four faculty members on the trip—Chris Brown, Michael Beam, Kerry Brennan, and Rob Opdycke. The group returned from its tour on Sunday, March 20, weary from jet lag and 10 days of intense travel and performances, but energized and restored by the opportunity to share its music once again with a global audience.

    “In all of its travel programs, RL is trying to help boys think of themselves as global citizens,” said Mr. Opdycke, “not just as citizens of greater Boston, or even of the United States. I hope they take away from this experience a sense of a common humanity, of seeing other cultures up close and realizing that there’s so much we have in common, even if our languages and customs are different. The boys saw quite a few blue and yellow flags, a lot of solidarity with Ukraine being expressed. In fact, there were a couple of Ukrainian refugees who were making their way into Český Krumlov when we were there. We obviously didn’t know while planning this tour that there’d be a global conflict just to our east, but the boys saw how real that is for Europe. For the students to be on the other side of the Atlantic and see how intertwined that continent is with the world’s geopolitics was significant.”

    “Finally, from a musical perspective, bringing your repertoire outside of the friendly, ‘home court’ audience, and performing for an audience that’s just there out of curiosity—not rooting for you because they know you—is so important. The boys stepped up nicely to present and be proud of how they sounded, of the music they were making. We’re proud of sharing this music in a part of the world where music has a high level of traditional excellence—Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Bruckner, Mendelssohn. So much of the height of music-making—especially in the 18th and 19th century—happened in that part of the world. And here we are, representing to the best of our ability. It was such a memorable, worthwhile experience.”

  • Roxbury Latin Presents “Catch Me If You Can”

    Roxbury Latin Presents “Catch Me If You Can”

    Roxbury Latin and the Winsor School presented this year’s winter musical production—the 2011 Broadway hit Catch Me If You Can—on Friday, February 25, and Saturday, February 26, in RL’s Smith Theater.

    The story is about skilled con artist and imposter, Frank Abagnale Jr., who worked fraudulently as a doctor, a lawyer, and a co-pilot for Pan Am—all before his eighteenth birthday. A master of deception, he was also a brilliant forger, whose skill gave him his first real claim to fame: At the age of 17, Frank became a wildly successful bank robber, sought ceaselessly by FBI Agent Carl Hanratty, who makes it his primary mission to capture Frank and bring him to justice. But Frank always proves himself one step ahead.

    Roxbury Latin’s production of the play—written by Terrence McNally, with music by Marc Shaiman—included a cast and crew of nearly 40 students. Under the superb direction of John Ambrosino, musical direction of Rob Opdycke, and choreography of John Crampton, the company avidly tackled a challenging script and score, and delighted audiences two nights in a row.

    Watch a brief highlight video of the play, care of Mr. Miller.

    View photos of the production, care of Mr. Pojman.

    Read the program, which includes a complete list of the production’s cast and crew, and notes from the director.