((Excerpt))
St. Louis is well-acquainted with the design, engineering and manufacturing generated by the 15,000 employees of the Boeing Defense, Space and Security headquarters on the edge of Lambert-St. Louis International Airport.
Far more obscure is the decidedly low-tech endeavor undertaken by about 25 engineers, administrators and retirees who gather at a rehearsal once a week as the Boeing Concert Band, tooting their own horns in a throwback to another time and era.
Each December, a group that at any given performance might include current workers, retirees, and the musically inclined employee children over the age of 18, returns to its roots during a string of holiday-themed appearances at area assisted-living facilities.
Now an anomaly, factory bands were once quite common. The bands maintained enough of a domestic presence during the first half of the 20th century to warrant a doctoral thesis on the subject by Christopher Chaffee, now an associate music professor at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio.
Chaffee uncovered a study indicating more than 620 U.S. companies sponsored musical ensembles of one form or another in the late 1920s.
Read more at stlttoday.com (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)

Wright State’s annual Raidersgiving draws hundreds
Wright State named a Best for Vets College
Wright State’s Boonshoft School of Medicine receives full continuing accreditation from Liaison Committee on Medical Education
Wright State supports deaf and hard of hearing community with Deaf Festival
Wright State students showcase scientific discoveries at annual research festival