10 // COASTWEEKEND.COM WATER MUSIC FESTIVAL SUBMITTED PHOTO Hot club jazz group Pearl Django started in Tacoma, Washington, in 1994 and has released 12 albums since. The group will perform Friday with vocalist Gail Pettis. THE 32ND ANNUAL FESTIVAL OFFERS SWINGING JAZZ, CAPTIVATING FLUTE AND GUITAR, AND CLASSICAL PIANO OCT. 14 AND 15 ON THE LONG BEACH PENINSULA By MARILYN GILBAUGH I n 1717, reigning English monarch King George I requested from Georg Friedrich Handel a composition that could be performed on a barge on the Thames River, a high-end boat party done right. Handel, doing his best to stay in the king’s good graces — or what we might today call “on the payroll” — got busy. He created a collection of orchestral movements he divided into three suites. He ittingly called his work “Water Music.” In our own area, the Water Music Festival’s 32nd season is going strong, culminating in performances Oct. 14 and 15 on the Long Beach Peninsula. And like Handel’s three-part suite, the Water Music Festival now divides itself into three distinct musi- cal offerings, which it presents in three distinct settings. But it didn’t always. The Water Music Festival irst began in 1984. Minus royal re- quests and fanfare, a small group of classical music lovers gathered in Oysterville, Washington, locat- ed at the northern tip of Wash- ington’s Long Beach Peninsula. The area is bordered by Willapa Bay and the Paciic Ocean, so, as Continued on Pg. 11