Though they appear spontaneous
to onlookers, pop-up music happenings
require a fair amount of planning
and set-up. Music stands
and sound equipment, tympani,
euphoniums and baritone saxes
must be transported across campus
to the library—a lot of work
for a mini concert by a jazz band
and a symphonic wind ensemble
after only three rehearsals with
some of us still learning our parts.
Oddly, I am surprisingly calm about it
crawling through rush-hour traffic,
heading east into rain, clouds spitting
on the windshield.
Dry and warm, I hum my bells part,
hoping to link the tune in my head
to my still-awkward hands as we
commuters near the Sunrise offramp,
when, against the gray sky ahead,
a leg of rainbow faintly appears,
teasing those of us slow poking
our way to wherever we are going.
Practically at a standstill, I wonder
how many of us ensconced in our cars
sit entranced by the spectacle of
the full-spectrum light show as it
blooms, intensifies, then oh, so gradually
fades—this literal pop-up that earns
our wide-eyed, wow, look at that!
admiration for those high up
in the Rainbows Department
diligently working behind the scenes,
the ones busily polishing the prisms,
shining their little hearts out.
•••
With thanks to Dr. Molly Redfield and the Folsom Lake College Jazz Band
and Symphonic Wind Ensemble for all the work (and fun!) of our first
pop-up concert of the semester.













