Mary Ann wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2026 11:25 am
Yup bit of a pancake there but you didn't miss any notes, either. And like arpthark said, no boo-WHEEP. I kind of like a bit of boo-WHEEP, but I'm weird.
Tupelo, Mississippi is up-and-coming with a huge Toyota plant, the world's largest furniture manufacturing facilities, related industries, other manufacturing, and several community colleges, daily flights to/from Dallas and Nashville (as well as a bit of tourism, and a pretty decent climate, as well as a being a crossroads of US-45 and I-22), but the population of "Greater Tupelo" is only about 140K and the city/town itself is only about 40K.
Players drive from considerable distances, and the pay is only a few hundred dollars per concert. I believe the rehearsals scheduled in the very short time are considered to be about as many (combined with long travel time, which is more exhausting than that to which some will admit) as the players should be asked to play. I only live about 1-1/2 hours away (with no traffic issues), and don't even stay overnight (hotels - from ★ to ★★★★★ - are gross), but others (see map) come from considerable distances and the pay (unless bumped up considerably more) doesn't automatically draw the best players from the cities seen in the pictures. (Oddly, Tupelo's growth seems to have stagnated, in spite of these factors...and we all know that "interest in symphonic music" is VERY MUCH on the wane.) When there are truly remarkable players, they either just REALLY want to play OR they happen to live closer to Tupelo. I honestly have no idea how long this little orchestra will continue (??)
A post script, we all need to come to the realization that what the Fed did to our currency in the early 2020s caused most things that we regularly purchase to cost roughly double, and that includes housing in many high density population areas...so not only is the money paid these musicians worth less (worthless?), but it's more difficult for all but the wealthy to consider purchasing tickets for events and such as these, whereby most people stay home, though admittedly I still see tremendous numbers of people wasting tremendous amounts of money on things such as luxurious levels of phone service, nearly new cars, $$$ fast food as dinner on the way home every single night, incredibly expensive television subscriptions, fancy vacations, and so forth. I'm not claiming that aren't extremely large percentage of people aren't far more childish than they were in the past.
Only Ole Miss (University of Mississippi - faculty, graduate students, and perhaps some gifted undergraduate students) is "conveniently" close to Tupelo:
