 happy to have you here to be celebrating this awesome set of musicians and creative people and expressive people. That's really the big thing here, how much expression you're going to notice and hopefully some individuals coming through that expression. So I'd like to welcome to the Risers the High School Chorus class. It's been dynamic. We thank so much the work of Kristina, Kristiana Athena Blackwell who is here for three quarters of our year and she is home with her new baby and I hope they're well and if you're watching Kristiana can we all say thank you. I think she might be watching. We'll have the pleasure of working with Jay Taryon. I'd like to introduce Jay Taryon this year and will be joining us again in the fall so we're so pleased to have Jay added to our department and I can't tell you between Jay and our tech specialist Spencer how much time it actually took to do this. I think in the budget we'll be asking for a full-time tech person for something. I don't know maybe it doesn't need people. But yes, thank you so much for all the hours. I know it was a lot and I think you're going to hear that it pays off. So Mara Smiley is a composer, singer and chorus leader here based out of Vermont. If you enjoy these two arrangements, this one is an original composition. She wrote Please Look Her Up. It's very easy to find her on the internet. She does wonderful things. This song is called Deep Blue and just so I don't miss, this will feature Jonah, Sam, River and Ashley. I sent to the oracles that will confine me, realign and redesign me, suddenly I'm in a box and you can't find me. I look around and I see fences built by people who've lost a sense of wonder. Sense of wonder is plunder, gone under, or an asunder. She says you look at love, you look at hate, and when you look hard, you may appreciate that love is what connects you. You may make your hate protect you, but love will protect you. You may feel you've got to tell, you've got to play around with each other. Is that enough there or no? About two, made a good call, said it all about fear. It's a deer in its headlights and it blurs the sun sometimes, such fright in my eyes. It's flight, flight, flight. You can switch the sky and hold partitions to understand it, grand it, command it, but all the time it surrounds you, hounds you confound. Blue dutty blue, blue dutty blue, dutty blue. Seniors who are graduating from this program, any seniors that are graduating, any high school kids, but especially seniors who have gone through the journey, had the music in making music in an ensemble class at a school, is a big deal. Is a big deal. So I thank you very, very much for supporting your children and encouraging them, maybe suggesting, maybe you didn't have to say a word, but I also thank you so much to the seniors for keeping our ensembles alive and moving forward. It truly, truly made a difference and continues to make a difference. So I want to acknowledge Julia Parton. To make this arrangement of his music. Being with Chip Headler, it did we decide that it was at Ramney in the elementary school and just this little whipper snapper. I mentioned to the seniors in the high school, I mean you have been such a champion for this program and for the people in here. So I have so much gratitude for all the years that we spend together in this class. So thank you and congratulations and congratulations to her family. We work with these amazing humans and musicians. We've got three tunes for you and then we're going to have a big party and bring everybody back up. Our first tune is called Hillside March by Randall Sandridge. Our second tune also has March in the title. It's called March Thive. I'll leave when it is quite different as you're about to hear. And then our last one is a fun mix of three earth-winded fire tunes arranged by Paul Murtha. And yeah, let's do the thing. Good night.