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Show Concepts For Consideration - 2016


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Here are some narrative show concepts that corps may consider for 2016. Each show concept has an underlying thematic argument, strong visual set pieces, plenty of depth of concept, along with kick-a## drum corps.

Pines of Rome

A narrative story set to Respighi's homage to the Roman Military, 1900's Italian townsfolk gather around their hometown fountain, but the Italian military appears and entices the town's young man to enlist. The young man goes to battle, but when he comes back, he appears traumatized and on crutches. The townsfolk welcome him back, they gather round the fountain again, remove his bandages, and show a commitment to rebuild and restore their hometown hero. It takes a village.

La Mer

Set to the story of Jonah and the Whale, this show animates the ocean with undulating wave forms. The color guard gathers together to create a living breathing whale, some form the head, the body and the tale, and animate the creature simply with collective movement. The whale becomes tangled in a huge fishing net, Jonah helps untangle it. Later, during a mighty storm, Jonah nearly drowns, the whale returns to save him, and drop him on shore-- the favor is returned. A powerful story of nature's karma.

Parade, music by Erik Satie, ballet by Jean Cocteau

Set in Italy in the 1920's, this comedia del arte-influenced ballet thumbed its nose at critics of the time by using circus like characters in cubist costumes which lampooned the stodgy critics of the time. In this depiction for drum corps audiences, DCI judges (as portrayed by guard members posing as DCI judges) become the target and are pursued and tortured by the comedia del arte corps during the show. The corps, as a performing circus/ballet troupe, does everything in its power to pummel, trample and otherwise comedically fillet the judges who travel the field with clipboards judging the show. Eventually the judges are forced to take on the qualities of the troupe, including stilts, bizarre costume pieces and, by the end, give up their clipboards, and join in wholeheartedly in the bizarre, joyous ballet.

YS Bach and his son Carl Phillip Emanuel Bach

Bandenburg Concerto III, Concerto in A Minor

Fathers and Sons (Cavaliers, Madison)

A modern take on these two concertos written by famous father and son composers, the corps depicts a father son relationship simply through a game of catch. From a young dad trying to teach his toddler to catch a ball, time progresses through adolescence where the kid becomes preoccupied and doesn't want to play, and then through adulthood when the father tires and grows old. The ball is thrown to the dad, as an old man he misses the catch, he retreats behind a screen, and returns as a toddler. A powerful depiction of the cycle of life simply portrayed, with possible tie ins to corps members' own dads.

Edited by Channel3
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Here are three more show ideas.

My Favorite Things

Jazz Improv

A show that features classic Jazz tunes, with extensive, super-exposed and in-depth jazz trumpet and bariton/trombone solos. Real improv, not "I play it this way every time" improv. During the drum solo, the corps actually gathers in small circles and improvises their drill. For huge portions of the show, there is no drum major. Finally, near the end of the show, the corps spins a wheel on-the-fly to determine which ending they'll do. An homage to real, off the cuff, controlled chaos improv where no one knows what will happen next.

Young Elvis - Rock n' Gospel

In Elvis' youth, he was influenced by both Gospel and Rock. We see a young man, the featured dancer, bounce back and forth from the Gospel side of the corps to the rock and roll side where he lets loose. By the end of the show, the two sides come together, and a star is born. Elvis leaves his small town, never to return.

Calliope

Apollo musagetes, a ballet by Igor Stravinsky

In this adaptation of the Russian ballet we see a young man approach the corps which is standing still in a tightly formed box formation on the 50 yard line. The box is a Calliope, a turn of the century steam engine-powered music and entertainment machine. The young man, Apollo, puts a quarter in the machine, and it comes alive, and whisks him away on a journey of unbridled, freakish, intense adventure where he is challenged by three muses, who test his strength, courage and identity, as per the ballet. A wild coming of age experience that costs a quarter.

Edited by Channel3
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Here are three more show ideas.

My Favorite Things

Jazz Improv

A show that features classic Jazz tunes, with extensive, super-exposed and in-depth jazz trumpet and bariton/trombone solos. Real improv, not "I play it this way every time" improv. During the drum solo, the corps actually gathers in small circles and improvises their drill. For huge portions of the show, there is no drum major. Finally, near the end of the show, the corps spins a wheel on-the-fly to determine which ending they'll do. An homage to real, off the cuff, controlled chaos improv where no one knows what will happen next.

Young Elvis - Rock n' Gospel

In Elvis' youth, he was influenced by both Gospel and Rock. We see a young man, the featured dancer, bounce back and forth from the Gospel side of the corps to the rock and roll side where he lets loose. By the end of the show, the two sides come together, and a star is born. Elvis leaves his small town, never to return.

Calliope

Apollo musagetes, a ballet by Igor Stravinsky

In this adaptation of the Russian ballet we see a young man approach the corps which is standing still in a tightly formed box formation on the 50 yard line. The box is a Calliope, a turn of the century steam engine-powered music and entertainment machine. The young man, Apollo, puts a quarter in the machine, and it comes alive, and whisks him away on a journey of unbridled, freakish, intense adventure where he is challenged by three muses, who test his strength, courage and identity, as per the ballet. A wild coming of age experience that costs a quarter.

These are better than the first four.

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Please post your own show concepts. Thanks.

I'm in love with the very first story line with the Pines of Rome especially since Cadets are using it this season.
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