Friday, November 20, 2009

Audition Weekend: Missions of the Possible

Today begins auditions for the 2010 season for a number of drum corps (and some winter guards as well). MP is with one drum corps this weekend.

Seems to me that over the past 20 years, the educational focus of the corps audition process has increased, and in many ways become more more standardized. My only hope is that the drum corps don't forget their missions. They are not NFL teams - putting together winning units, or at least trying to. There is the non-profit and educational mission that must be remembered. From what I've seen, I think many corps do that. It isn't about the medals, or the design or instructional team. It is ... it should be ... about the kids.

About a week ago my bride and I had a kitchen debate (I just realized she was closer to the knives, and I'm sure after reading this some of you will wish she used them!) about woodwinds in drum and bugle corps. She argued that if someone wants to march, let them march brass. I argued - for the sake of argument, mind you - that we are excluding a number of talented kids who can benefit from the "drum corps experience", and that the demands and talents in top corps may not give the great clarinet player a chance. Just think about this for a moment. What if a corps set aside 10% of its brass line for primary woodwind players?

Is drum and bugle corps the right name, anyway? We seem to thing it's not marching band (and does calling it major league relegate bands to minor league?) ... and what is marching band, anyway? None of this is what people think it is. (Before you laugh, "color guard", think about the origin of that term!)

Percussion and Brass Corps? The reality is that half of the "drummers" are in the pit and don't play "drums", and conventional trumpets, mellophones, baritones, and tubas are not bugles.

I started out talking about auditions, but seem to have (again) swayed into definitions.

Well, whatever we are, "marching band", "drum corps" or "color guard" ... there is the saying down in Texas about a certain school and it certainly applies: "For those who are here, no explanation is necessary. For those who aren't, no explanation is possible."

Good luck to everyone seeking to join. Especially to MP (... and to woodwinds!)

No comments: