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Mark Babcock, the guest choral conductor for the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival, leads the 80-member student choir Tuesday during rehearsals in Oberwesel, Germany.

Mark Babcock, the guest choral conductor for the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival, leads the 80-member student choir Tuesday during rehearsals in Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Mark Babcock, the guest choral conductor for the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival, leads the 80-member student choir Tuesday during rehearsals in Oberwesel, Germany.

Mark Babcock, the guest choral conductor for the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival, leads the 80-member student choir Tuesday during rehearsals in Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Mark Babcock, the guest choral conductor for the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival, sings while conducting during rehearsals Tuesday in Oberwesel, Germany.

Mark Babcock, the guest choral conductor for the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival, sings while conducting during rehearsals Tuesday in Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Student vocalists, from left, Ramstein's Aaron Young, Kaiserslautern's Caleb Chastain, Lakenheath's Quintin Pitts and Ramstein's Shamar Armprester sing Mozart's ''Veni Sancte Spiritus'' during rehearsals Tuesday for the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival. This year, 154 students were selected to participate.

Student vocalists, from left, Ramstein's Aaron Young, Kaiserslautern's Caleb Chastain, Lakenheath's Quintin Pitts and Ramstein's Shamar Armprester sing Mozart's ''Veni Sancte Spiritus'' during rehearsals Tuesday for the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival. This year, 154 students were selected to participate. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Vilseck's Crystal Morris, from left,  Alconbury's Mary Margaret McKillop, Patch's Chesney Walters and Ankara's Abigail Hansen practice a singing technique during rehearsals Tuesday at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival in Oberwesel, Germany.

Vilseck's Crystal Morris, from left, Alconbury's Mary Margaret McKillop, Patch's Chesney Walters and Ankara's Abigail Hansen practice a singing technique during rehearsals Tuesday at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival in Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Fingers move over the keys of a brass instrument during band rehearsal Tuesday at the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival at Oberwesel, Germany.

Fingers move over the keys of a brass instrument during band rehearsal Tuesday at the DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival at Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Mary Schneider, the guest instrumental conductor for this year's DODDS-Europe Honors Musical Festival, leads the band in rehearsals Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the Oberwesel Youth Hostel in Germany.

Mary Schneider, the guest instrumental conductor for this year's DODDS-Europe Honors Musical Festival, leads the band in rehearsals Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the Oberwesel Youth Hostel in Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Jonathan Ciero of Ramstein plays the timpani on Tuesday, March 24, 2015, during the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival in Oberwesel, Germany.

Jonathan Ciero of Ramstein plays the timpani on Tuesday, March 24, 2015, during the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival in Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Baileigh McFall of Bitburg smiles while playing the string bass during rehearsals Tuesday, March 24, 2015, for the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival at Oberwesel, Germany.

Baileigh McFall of Bitburg smiles while playing the string bass during rehearsals Tuesday, March 24, 2015, for the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival at Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Percussionist Malcolm Watts of Menwith Hill gets some playing time Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival in Oberwesel, Germany.

Percussionist Malcolm Watts of Menwith Hill gets some playing time Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival in Oberwesel, Germany. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Trombonist Stephen Bray of Ramstein marks a note on his sheet of music during rehearsals at the annual DODDS Europe Honors Musical Festival,  Tuesday, March 24, 2015.

Trombonist Stephen Bray of Ramstein marks a note on his sheet of music during rehearsals at the annual DODDS Europe Honors Musical Festival, Tuesday, March 24, 2015. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

Guest choral conductor Mark Babcock leads the choir in rehearsals on Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival.

Guest choral conductor Mark Babcock leads the choir in rehearsals on Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

A bird's-eye view of band rehearsal Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival. The event draws the best vocalists and instrumentalists from across schools in Europe for several days of intense rehearsals, culminating in a public performance Thursday night in Wiesbaden.

A bird's-eye view of band rehearsal Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at the annual DODDS-Europe Honors Music Festival. The event draws the best vocalists and instrumentalists from across schools in Europe for several days of intense rehearsals, culminating in a public performance Thursday night in Wiesbaden. (Jennifer H. Svan/Stars and Stripes)

OBERWESEL, Germany — Despite its secluded setting on a wooded hilltop overlooking the Rhine River, all was not quiet this week at the Oberwesel Youth Hostel.

Anyone wandering the grounds Tuesday afternoon might have felt as though she was among fields of Midwestern “barley, carrots and pertaters,” as loud, energetic notes from Rogers and Hammerstein’s “Oklahoma!” escaped from the building.

The Department of Defense Dependent Schools-Europe Honors Music Festival draws the school system’s top vocalists and instrumentalists for several intense days of collaboration with two college-level guest instructors, as well as DODDS music teachers. This year, 154 students — 74 in band and 80 in choir — from 21 schools were selected from blind auditions they submitted digitally.

After arriving at the hostel Sunday afternoon and jumping into their first rehearsals that evening, the young artists have four days to practice a diverse set of music that they’ll perform before a large American and German audience on Thursday night at the Kurhaus in Wiesbaden. That means long days of rehearsals and little downtime, but no one was complaining.

During a lunch break Tuesday, students said they were thrilled to be there and to have the chance to spend the week playing music with like-minded classmates.

“That’s how I would spend all of my weeks, if I could,” said Alex Cavoli, a junior percussionist from Vilseck.

Hope Matthews, DODDS-Europe fine arts coordinator, said programs like the music festival are intended to not only foster student interest in the performing arts but to also provide them with an experience that they might not get at their own schools.

“Many of our students come from schools that are small,” she said. “This is their first time to perform with an ensemble of this size and this quality. Whether they’re choral or band, it’s a life-changing high school experience for them.”

Some of the students plan to further their musical studies.

Mikayla Maiava, a senior in Honor Choir from Vilseck, has participated in four straight music festivals. She plans to study musical theater next year at SUNY Fredonia in New York.

“I’m really sad to leave this place, but I feel like it has prepared me,” she said.

Traevon Stith, a senior vocalist from Patch, will study electronic music production in Berlin next fall.

“Honestly, honors choirs, it’s the best week of my entire year. It’s the reason why I’m still in school,” he said, noting he could have graduated in January. “Being surrounded by so much talent, it’s very humbling as well as a great opportunity to take lessons and learn different things from different people.”

The instructors expect a lot, the learning curve is high, and the pace is extremely fast, students said.

“Note for note, the music itself isn’t much more challenging, but the quality at which we’re playing at is,” Cavoli said.

Demands for perfection are tempered by plenty of encouragement, however.

After a round of “hallelujahs” during Mozart’s uplifting “Veni Sancte Spiritus,” choral guest conductor Mark Babcock, a music professor at Central College in Pella, Iowa, and an accomplished organist, was pleased.

“Yeah,” he beamed to the choir. “If they’re (the audience Thursday) not happy at the end of that, if they don’t smile, they don’t have a soul.”

The DODDS Honors Musical Festival’s performance at the Wiesbaden Kurhaus begins at 7 p.m. on Thursday.

Tickets, which are free, may be picked up at the door beginning at 5 p.m. the day of the concert. The concert will be live-streamed at: www.doddshost.net.

svan.jennifer@stripes.com

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Jennifer reports on the U.S. military from Kaiserslautern, Germany, where she writes about the Air Force, Army and DODEA schools. She’s had previous assignments for Stars and Stripes in Japan, reporting from Yokota and Misawa air bases. Before Stripes, she worked for daily newspapers in Wyoming and Colorado. She’s a graduate of the College of William and Mary in Virginia.

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