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    US Air Force Band conductor

    US Air Force Band rehearses for upcoming performances honoring US Air Force birthday celebrations

    Photo By Lt.Cmdr. Jim Remington | Col. Larry H. Lang, commander and conductor of The United States Air Force Band, leads...... read more read more

    JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING, DC, UNITED STATES

    09.18.2014

    Story by Nicole Woods 

    Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling

    WASHINGTON - As conductor for the United States Air Force Band, for over two years now, and as the only colonel in the career field, Col. Larry Lang has been serving and performing with the Air Force for 24 years.

    From his hometown in El Paso, Texas, Lang became an officer in 1990 after getting through auditions for the band in 1989.

    He joined the Air Force because he wanted to work with professionals, knowing that they possessed a high caliber of musicians and people.

    “I have been so blessed every step of the way,” said Lang.

    With degrees in trombone performance and in music education from New Mexico State University and the University of New Hampshire, Lang taught for many years and performed professionally as a trombonist with the El Paso Symphony prior to enlisting.

    Lang was a college band director for 10 years at McNeese State University in Lake Charles, Louisiana.

    “I love doing what I’ve been able to do and what I’m doing today.”

    Currently on his sixth assignment with the Air Force, he explains that the Air Force Band program has 10 sub-bands and, “I’ve been very fortunate to be the commander of five of them.”

    In Lang’s opinion, every band has been fantastic to work with and because “this is the premier band of the Air Force, all the actual ‘cream of the crop’ musicians and airmen are here.”

    Gaining entry into this prestigious band is a very competitive process, with sometimes more than 150 people from all over the country auditioning for a single opening, until the best candidate is chosen, explained Lang.

    Lang said that the Air Force Band is a very small career field and is also a permanent assignment, unlike many assignments in the Air Force that sometimes last for just two years.

    Band members can stay in their positions for their entire career.

    “We have some chiefs who have been here for 25-27 years,” said Lang. “This is the pinnacle of the officer development in our career field.”

    In celebration of the Air Force’s birthday, the band performed a special concert Sept. 12 at the Air Force Memorial, with the secretary of the Air Force in attendance, the chief master sergeant of the Air Force and more than 1,000 people in attendance.

    “Thank you and happy birthday Air Force,” concluded Lang.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.18.2014
    Date Posted: 09.18.2014 15:16
    Story ID: 142579
    Location: JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING, DC, US
    Hometown: EL PASO, TX, US

    Web Views: 282
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN