Jump to content

ironlips

Members
  • Posts

    2,318
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    31

Posts posted by ironlips

  1. "1971 was a Fiddler medley without a bottle dance but they had a nice soprano soloist for "Matchmaker" by the name of Wayne Downey."

    Best lip trills in the business...until his students, Pete Burnijko, Doug Huras and Larrie Dastrup met Dindi in 1980 (speaking of closers).

     

    • Like 1
  2. "Whomever made that last tick ( I blame a horn player -no way it was a drummer ) before the 11 1/2 minute execution gun went off has been quiet and in hiding for 45 years now. "

    Let's get real. All ticks were equally costly. Rifle, drum, horn...whatever, and the FIRST one in the show shaved just as much from the final score as did the last.

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 2
  3. 6 hours ago, seinphan said:

    Fred Sanford wasn't already in the WDCHOF???

    No, and now he is. Oversight corrected.

    Everyone, including the members, assumed he had been inducted years ago. When this was discovered, immediate steps were taken.

    There are others who "should be in the Hall of Fame". I urge anyone who is aware of an individual who deserves that honor to visit <www.wdchof.org> and confirm whether that person has been inducted. If not, begin the process then and there by downloading a submission form.

    If we don't value our own heritage, who will?

  4. As  a pre-schooler, since my parents both worked, I was often looked after by our Jewish neighbor, Mrs. Salloway.

    At Easter, she would say, "Yes, I know from the Bunny, but do you also know about the Passover Pigeon?" In my little-kid mind I would imagine those two sitting down together at dinner.

    So, in honor of Mrs. Salloway and all others who commemorate it, "Happy Passover".

    • Like 7
    • Haha 1
  5. In earlier days, the "Open" category bore other names (Div II, Class A...etc) and one of the most successful of these groups was the Milford Shoreliners, who made a habit of defeating World Class competitors when directly matched against them.

    Their director, Frank "Sarge" Polizzzi, who recently celebrated his 100th birthday, will be inducted into the World Drum Corps Hall of Fame with its "Lifetime Achievement Award" on Dec. 2nd.

    His bio is here:

    https://www.wdchof.org/members/polizzi-frank-sarge/

     

     

    • Like 2
  6. 18 hours ago, tommytimp said:

    I'm a musical actor and love Sondheim (my senior thesis was Marry Me A Little), and the show isn't without charm, but it's so far from what people associated 27 with in almost every way that I found it hard to reconcile the show itself with who was performing it. Plus, the same visual problems that had plagued the corps for five years were still there. 

    I think that's a fair critique, as far as it goes. It is interesting though, that after 37 years people are still discussing it here.

  7. The OP presents some very cogent arguments for adapting the model to suit regional reality. I say "go for it". Having had some personal contact with the management of Les Stentors, I am impressed with their philosophy and family/community style of operation, as well as their creative programming. (Full disclosure: I have the T shirt.)

    In a conversation about them with Hall of Famer Michel Boulanger, I suggested that this and similar Canadian corps go with their strengths, i.e., maximize uniqueness by changing the ratio of musicians to guard, for example.

    Consider: Electronics provide opportunities like utilizing a small number of musicians and featured vocalists who might be essentially stationary, accompanied by a massive color guard/dance ensemble for movement, color and field coverage. Emphasize the effect caption, a traditional strength of groups north of the 39th Parallel.

    When I first marched, Scout House looked and sounded very different from US corps. Their arranging and marching styles were refreshingly unique. They celebrated these things (the Bb bugles and glocks helped) and were not particularly concerned about out-doing the state-side corps at their game. They brought their own. But they consistently "won the crowd", a very gratifying thing for any performer and a great incentive to keep the act together.

    Many Canadian corps followed this route, Les Diplomates being a prime example. Sitting in the stands at DCI Canada in 1986, my mother (a very hip drum corps fan) witnessed the performance of the 10th place unit, Les Eclipses. During their closer, La Vie En Rose, she turned to me and said, "Now there's a group that knows how to reach an audience". It's notable that she held her opinion even after watching powerhouses like Madison, Cadets, Star, and Spirit in that same show. (Quick, what ear-worm do you have at this moment?)

    I think there's a lesson in there.

    • Like 2
  8. 1 hour ago, IllianaLancerContra said:

    Surfer Girl was in 1987; Sex Cymbals as well (although they may have been in more than one season.  IIRC it was a mechanism thought up by a few of the drummers to bring their girlfriends along for tour).  

     

    Keep Calm and Consider this...many of those California Girls are grandmothers now.

    • Like 1
  9. 16 minutes ago, denverjohn said:

    With all due respect, as section leader with basically zero percussion staff on tour, I feel that our entirely new snare line and the rest of the battery held their own quite well with Fred's percussion book. I once saw some recaps on soundmachine or elsewhere indicating that percussion in prelims recap was in the middle of the pack.

    I don't think Mike is dissing Fred. He's mocking himself for missing the opportunity to learn directly from him.

    Fred had just come East to take the job at Bergenfield High. His credentials and credibility were stratospheric. His career surpassed even those, as everyone knows.

    With their deep understanding of both rudimental and "legitimate" percussion, and their extraordinary pedagogical chops, Freddy, Shellmer, and Tuthill moved drum corps to it's next (much more musical) level, paving the way for youngsters like Poole, Aungst, and Hardimon. (Sounds like a law firm, no?)

    • Like 2
×
×
  • Create New...