Arts & Entertainment
Calling All Gamers, Musicians: Gamer Symphony Orchestra Forming in Rockville
"We can use this as a lever to make this a serious, accepted musical style," says Nigel Horne, Washington Metropolitan Gamer Symphony Orchestra conductor.

It quickly became clear during Thursday nightās audition in Rockville that the musicians involved with the Washington Metropolitan Gamer Symphony Orchestra donāt see themselves as digital denizens from the land of pixels.
Though, at least one of the chorus members was playing a video game on a tablet while the orchestra worked through passages from āObjection!āāthe theme from the Nintendo game, āPhoenix Wright: Ace Attorney.ā
Newly minted, the Washington Metropolitan Gamer Symphony Orchestra aspires to be a community ensemble of musicians who appreciate good music anywhere, even if itās the soundtrack to a video game.
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āWe can use this as a lever to make this a serious, accepted musical style,ā said conductor Nigel Horne.
Horne, who has a degree in computer science, is the musical director of the Rockville Brass BandĀ and said he didn't give it five seconds ofĀ thought when he was asked to lead the gamer symphony.Ā
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He said thereās not much difference in conducting a well-known classical piece than, say, the theme for Super Mario Bros.
āI approach it as a piece of music,ā Horne said. āI do not approach it as making it sound like Super Mario Brothers ⦠whatever the game may be.ā
The WMGSO has held two informal auditions in Rockville. About 25 musicians showed up to the most recent one on Thursday. More are scheduled into September.
Tuba player Ben Stanfield said he wasnāt sure which brought him out Thursday night: the love of music or the love of video games.
āProbably the music,ā Stanfield said, before puffing through a passage of sheet music as musicians warmed up and tuned their instruments.
Horne led the musicians through songs from āSuper Mario Galaxy,ā āThe Legend ofĀ Zelda: Twilight Princessā and āPhoenix Wright.ā There were things that needed fixing, likeĀ times when there was too much legato and not enough staccato and having to determineĀ they should ākillā the cymbal crash in a particular part of a songāsomeone anonymously shoutedĀ āfatality,ā mimicking the phrase from Mortal Kombat andĀ drawing chuckles.
There were also the subtle details to be worked through, like the issue of striking balanceāplaying the music in a way that doesnāt give away whatās to come next, according to Horne.
Trumpet player Robert Garner, the symphonyās official spokesman, said the orchestra has been in the works for more than a year. Garner was once the president of University of Marylandās gamer orchestra.
āWe all grew up in that group, graduated, looked around and realized there wasn't really an entity out there where we could keep playing this music,ā Garner said.
Soprano Ayala Hurley, the orchestraās president, said she performed with Garner at University of Maryland.
āI jumped at the chance because it didn't seem like anything else was picking up,ā Hurley said.Ā
Garner said the orchestra hoped to have its first performance in spring 2014 somewhere in the Rockville region.
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