Cedarburg Civic Band in the news
Musical traditions continued in this
summer's first show
By Tom Flaherty of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel staff
June 23, 1999
Cedarburg -- For more than 100 years, the Cedarburg Civic Band's serenades
have been as much a part of Cedarburg summers as soft evening breezes from Lake
Michigan. Maybe there has been at least one Boerger in the band all that time.
Or maybe it just seems like it. Bill Boerger started playing the French horn in
the band's concerts more than 30 years ago.
"In the parades, he often played the big drum," said Bev Boerger, Bill's widow.
"That was because he could wave to all of his friends."
Bill's gone now. He died about two years ago, but a family tradition played on
Sunday night when the Cedarburg Civic Band played its first concert of the
summer with a special Father's Day program. Bill Jr. lives in Germantown now,
but drives over to play the trombone. Another son, Bob, lives in Random Lake,
but he still drives down with his tuba for concerts and his trumpet for parades.
A daughter, Beth Thierfelder, played the flute for several years, and now
coordinates the color guard. Beth's daughters Kim and Kelly are in the color
guard.
"I've moved a couple of times," said Bob, who was 11 years old when he joined
the band 27 years ago. "I was raised in Cedarburg, then I lived in Fond du Lac
and Sheboygan. Now I'm in Random Lake, but I still participate. I enjoy the
music end of it, the challenge. You work your whole life to develop your music
skills. You want to use them and not just leave your instrument in a closet at
home. It's an opportunity to continue to play and develop friendships along the
way. I probably drive furthest from the north. My brother comes up from
Germantown just because there is no other band around. If you want to keep
involved in playing, there are not many options around."
While the Cedarburg Civic Band is still blowing strong after all these years,
community bands are disappearing everywhere else.
"There are not too many around anymore," said Roger Butt, who stepped down last
year after 32 years as the bands director. "I don't know what it is in the
United States anymore, but the numbers are dwindling."
In Cedarburg, family traditions such as the Boergers' keep the music playing.
"There are people who have been with the band for a long period of time, and it
just kind of goes through the generations," said Albert Abena, who also made his
summer concert debut as the band's new director Sunday night. "As members have
kids, some of their kids inevitably get into music. They get recruited into the
band and keep it alive."
So the concerts go on, and communities that don't have bands anymore borrow
Cedarburg's band for their parades.
"That's one of the beauties with Cedarburg, that there is such a rich history,
and people have stayed here and they have kept a lot of things alive," Abena
said "I think the band is one of the things that make Cedarburg the kind of
community that it is."
from the Ozaukee News Graphic, May 1999