It was a musical experience Hillcrest students may remember the rest of their lives.
Several Hillcrest Elementary students were in the audience for the Sloan concert at Song Sparrow Hall on Sunday night, March 5. The students, and music teacher Brook Roberts, had their own connection to the band, having performed the Canadian alt-rockers hit The Rest of My Life in the recent Canadian Music Class Challenge.
The schoolâs video entry, riffing off Sloanâs own video for the song, climbed to the top 10 in the Elementary Vocal (Grades 4-6) category.
Though they didnât reach the top spot in the CBC radio competition, Hillcrest received recognition nationwide, including the attention of Sloan and the bandâs bassist/vocalist Chris Murphy.
During the concert, Murphy invited the attending Hillcrest students and Roberts on stage to once again perform The Rest of My Life.
âHe called all the kidsâŠanyone who is from Hillcrest that wants to come up on stage and do your stuff, come on up,â said Roberts, noting this was a surprise for the Hillcrest contingent. â
And then he called for the ringleader, âWhereâs the ringleader?â So I went up there and that was all cool.â
Roberts said a person in the audience then yelled, âGet Mr. Roberts a guitar!â The band then set him up with a guitar and, after confirming with guitarist Jay Ferguson the key theyâd be playing in, the band and students got rocking.
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âWe rocked it out and it was amazing,â said Roberts. âIt was a super fun time and I was so pumped to be playing the song.â
At the intermission, Roberts said the band spent time chatting with the kids.
Hillcrestâs Sloan experience wasnât over yet.
The following day, Roberts brought Murphy to the school, where he spent the afternoon.
âThey watched the video together, then did the song together with him, taught him the dance moves and he did it with us,â said Roberts, who arranged the visit in advance.
âHe and I did an interview â the kids came up with the questions⊠and then Chris and I played The Good In Everyone. We just jammed out a duo version and that was it.
âThe thing about coming to the school â thereâs no contract to do that, no one is getting paid.â
Asked what the students picked up from his visit, Murphy said he wasnât sure, but he encouraged them to learn music for fun.
He was âcertainly moved to hear them singing a song that I wrote that was popular, in the scheme of things, before they were born.â
Murphy said it was legitimizing that The Rest of My Life was included in the list of songs schools could choose from in the Music Class Challenge.
âIt makes me feel like the song lives on even in a small way.â
For Roberts, Murphyâs visit was a Music Class Challenge win for Hillcrest.
âWe have to do what we do well and, in Salmon Arm, we do certain things well,â said Roberts.
âWe have a folk music society that does shows well and does a festival well, weâve got kids at Hillcrest where we might be a little rough on the edges musically but we have the ability to work well as a teamâŠ
âAt the end of the day, weâre the people that are hanging out with Chris Murphy and what an experience. Itâs all worked out.â
lachlan@saobserver.net
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