A large group of talented performers from Craik, Elbow, Loreburn, Bladworth and Davidson entertained a delighted crowd of spectators last Wednesday at the Central Saskatchewan Music Festival Grand Finale held in Davidson’s Parish Hall.
Davidson Mayor Clayton Schneider welcomed the young musicians and speech artists along with an eager throng of family and friends at the beginning of the evening by reciting a Music Festival story involving his family. Schneider said his son Noah approached him a day earlier to express his nervousness of playing the guitar in front of a crowd, as he’s only a beginner with the instrument.
Schneider said he told his son that nervousness ‘is a sign that you’re pushing yourself, it’s a sign that you’re growing.’ He added it is the same with all the brave performers who took the stage during the 54th Annual Central Saskatchewan Music Festival.
“This teaches kids how to grow as individuals,” he told the crowd. “It is lessons like this that the Town of Davidson will always support.”
The Davidson School Kindergarten class kicked off the Grand Finale performances with the songs “Rise and Shine” and “Four Hugs a Day.” The song-and-dance numbers thrilled the crowd of appreciative parents and grandparents and even had one young girl dancing along in the middle aisle.
A piano duet of “Rhythm and Boogie” by Elbow’s Emmitt Hundeby and Baylee Batza followed before Hayla Herback jumped on stage to play “The Balloon Man and Stepping Up and Down.” The first of many speech arts performances followed when Rhett Gust told the funny tale of “I Eat Kids Yum! Yum!” that helped earn the performer two scores of 93 during the judging part of the three-day festival.
“We have to thank the ladies (Linda Haas, Laura Willner and Arlene Low) who were instrumental getting speech arts going in Davidson School,” said Grand Finale emcee Sharon Riecken.
Baylee then took the stage again to perform “Carefree Boogie,” which was followed by Craik’s Cohen Ter Heide playing a wonderful piano solo of “Spooks.” The guitar duo of Gavin Arend and Noah Schneider followed with the tune “Love Somebody” before Noah left the stage for Rosa Lee to come up and help Gavin play “When the Saints Go Marching In.”
Loreburn’s Nicole Yakimoski then sang a great rendition of “My Favorite Things” from “The Sound of Music” that came before first-time violinist Stephanie Elliott played “Au Clair de la Lune,” Jasmine Hundeby performed “Big Teddy Little Teddy” and Davidson’s Bailey Smith cracked up the crowd with “Bad Case of the Giggles.”
“We had so much talent in our speech arts this year it was unbelievable,” said Riecken after Bailey’s show, noting the young artist received a score of 90 during adjudication.
To read more please see the March 31 print edition of The Davidson Leader.