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THE RALEIGH RINGERS: ONE WINTER
EVENING AT MEYMANDI—FEATURE STORY
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
[insert date here]
CONTACT: [insert your contact info here]
The mention of handbells elicits
a broad range of mental pictures, from church choirs
dressed in unanimously bright-colored robes to a group
of young children piping "Silent Night" in
front of a shopping mall on a snow-covered evening.
Still some people remember a group of well-meaning marching
carolers, clinking their way through "We Wish You
a Merry Christmas" as if it had no beat. Needless
to say, "Dueling Banjos," "We Will Rock
You" and "Stairway to Heaven" would not
be on the top ten list of well-known handbell tunes.
Unless you're The Raleigh Ringers.
An impressive group of auditioned musicians that began
in 1990 under director David M. Harris with 15 people,
the Raleigh Ringers perform on the largest collection
of handbells and bell-like instruments owned by any
handbell group in the world. Their repertoire includes
everything from country to classical, religious to rock
and roll, and audiences in France and almost half of
the US have heard them perform. [INSERT STATION NAME]
brings this incredible group to [INSERT STATE NAME]
with The Raleigh Ringers: One Winter Evening at Meymandi
- a Holiday Special on [INSERT AIRDATE AND TIME].
Performing in the beautiful Meymandi
Concert Hall in Raleigh, North Carolina, The Raleigh
Ringers open this holiday concert with Sarajevo/Christmas
Eve 12/24, the energetic Savatage/Trans-Siberian
Orchestra neo-classic. Selections from The Nutcracker
Suite along with more contemporary holiday favorites,
including Blue Christmas and Sleigh Ride,
round out the rest of the hour. The concert concludes
with a breathtaking rendition of Stille Nacht (Silent
Night).
Although listening to The Raleigh
Ringers is an immeasurable experience by itself, even
more impressive is seeing the array of bells and percussion
pieces—337 total—including six sets of bells
covering 27½ octaves. This collection includes
a seven and one-half octave set of Malmark handbells,
five octaves of Whitechapel handbells, four octaves
of Whitechapel Cup Bells, three octaves of Petit and
Fritsen handbells, two octaves of Silver Melody Bells,
and six octaves of Malmark Choirchimes. With the different
sets of bells, the ringers can mix sounds together,
creating contrasting moods and highlighting melodic
lines.
Short Trip to Fame
The Raleigh Ringers' career took
off with a swift pace seen by very few in the musical
world. After fifteen of the original sixteen ringers
who had auditioned for the group—including the
director, David Harris—announced the formation
of the new community handbell choir in 1990, they immediately
began receiving invitations to perform. One of only
a dozen or so community handbell choirs in the country,
The Raleigh Ringers spent their first year performing
for church services and celebrations, festivals, and
some popular Raleigh city concerts.
Word about The Raleigh Ringers also
reached Malmark, Inc., a handbell and Choirchime manufacturer
that enthusiastically helped out the fledgling group
by lending them five octaves of handbells for six months.
By the end of their first year, the ringers had collected
enough money through grants, performance fees and a
six-month loan to buy the handbells. Between 1997 and
2003, the group would purchase the Whitechapel English
handbells, Petit & Fritsen Dutch handbells, Choirchimes
and Cup Bells.
Despite their growing popularity
in Raleigh and the surrounding area, the group's national
success began the next year at the American Guild of
English Handbell Ringers Area III Festival/Conference
in Richmond, Virginia, where guest composer Dr. William
Payn took notice of the group and became a helpful artistic
mentor. The next five years found the ringers touring
not only the southeast and northeast states, but also
overseas in France, thanks to an invitation by Fred
Gramann, composer of "Fantasy on King Weston,"
who was thrilled by the ringers' performance on his
piece. In 2002, they traveled to California to perform
at the magnificent Crystal Cathedral.
The young handbell choir introduced
rock and roll into their selections in 1992 with "Stairway
to Heaven" for handbells, and audiences clamored
for more of the same. The "rock and roll"
part of their performance became a permanent part of
their concerts, with the ringers going backstage to
change into tie-dyed shirts and headbands. The Raleigh
Ringers even began marketing handmade tie-dyed gloves
in 2000 to earn an income for their future instrument
purchases and trips and still sell them today.
The Largest Collection of Bells
Besides their vastly diverse venues,
the other feature distinguishing The Raleigh Ringers
from any other community handbell choir is their collection
of bells and percussion instruments. The Raleigh Ringers
perform the majority of their music on the Malmark handbells.
The very low bass bells are aluminum, allowing their
sound to travel further; the others are bronze. The
Malmark Choirchimes do not contain any bells; rather,
their 73-pitch set of chimes played with exterior clappers
or a mallet, depending on the size of the chime.
In 1997, the ringers acquired their
five-octave set of Whitechapel bells from the Whitechapel
Bell Foundry in London, England, founded in 1570 and
makers of Big Ben and the Liberty Bell. The Whitechapel
Cup Bells, purchased in 2001, was the first four octave
set made.
The Raleigh Ringers uses its set
of Schulmerich Silver Melody bells to accent musical
lines. One of only 25 sets in the world, the bells'
cylindrically shaped structure makes them useful for
emphasis but not for chords. The ringers' Petit and
Fritsen handbells produce a "tower bell" sound,
a resonance the group finds useful in change-ringing
patterns or accenting melody.
An Inspiring Concert
From its initial gentleness to the
final crescendo, The Raleigh Ringers: One Winter
Evening at Meymandi - a Holiday Special is a program
worth watching. Prepare to be awe-inspired and soothed,
excited and mellow as [STATION NAME] and American Public
Television (APT) present this handbell choir that will
bring out the spirit of the holidays.
To purchase a copy of the VHS or
DVD, send a check for $25, plus 2$ shipping and handling
to:
The Raleigh Ringers
8516 Sleepy Creek Drive
Raleigh, NC 27613
Or call 919-847-7574. Additional
Raleigh Ringers merchandise, including CDs, t-shirts,
notecards, mousepads and tote bags are available on
www.rr.org.
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