Halloween is over. Finally. Not that I have anything against it. It's just that we've been hearing about it since, what, mid-June? Anyway, welcome to November, and even though there aren't as many things to do or see in the colder weather months, the Southern Tier of New York is still busy with events to check out.

Free Concert Tonight

And here's one for this evening!  The Southern Tier Concert Band will be presenting their first concert of the season this evening (Monday, November 3rd) at Chenango Forks High School Auditorium.

This is a free concert that will begin at 7pm at the school, located at 1 Gordon Drive, Binghamton, (just north of Chenango Bridge, near Route 12.

The 65-piece Southern Tier Concert Band is made up of music teachers, current and retired, along with professional musicians, and avocational musicians from other careers who have distinguished themselves by maintaining the highest possible musical stands.

Selections Featured At the Concert

Conductors Robin Linaberry and Barry Peters will lead the free concert. Some of the selections will include:

  • Fanfare For a New Era by PinkZebra
  • Amparito Roca by Jaime Texidor
  • Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves by Michael Kamen
  • Theme and Fugue from 'The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra' by Benjamin Britten
  • Animation - Episode 1: Wabbit! by Randall Standridge
  • La Procession du Rocio by Joaquin Turina
  • Valdres, Norwegian March, by Johannes Hanssen
  • Variations on a Korean Folk Song by John Barnes Chance
  • Broadway Spectacular, arraignment by John Higgins
The concert begins tonight at 7pm. The next performance by the Southern Tier Concert Band will be Monday December 1st at Oakdale Commons as they present their annual holiday concert.
98.1 The Hawk logo
Get our free mobile app

Did Anyone Watch These TV Shows in the 1980s and 1990s?

While you might think “watching while distracted” is a modern habit, even back in the day the TV was just… there, humming along while you did other things. These were the shows that weren’t exactly “must-see TV,” more like “might-see TV” — part of the culture, but you had to wonder: who was actually watching?

Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz

Guess the '80s Faces: How Many Do You Recognize?

Before social media, these '80s icons earned their fame the hard way — and while some are still in the spotlight, others may be harder to place today.

Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz

More From 98.1 The Hawk