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MadScout80

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Posts posted by MadScout80

  1. Well, this thread got me to subscribe to the Fan Network!

    I just remember this one part of the show, where I was waiting with baited breath to hear what would happen next after college... and not once but twice the music got softer and I thought we would get to hear the rest of the story... but to my dismay the music got louder and they kept me waiting for several more seconds.

    So I would change that part.

  2. I have a Madison Scouts historical 3-VHS set that has their 1981 prelim performance from McGill - high angle, Madison only. They (Scouts) may still be selling this, I got mine in '06. Wish it was on DVD though.

    Just checked website and don't see this. It is a cool set, goes back to the 40s and 50s even with video.

  3. Carl Jefferson owned a car dealership across the street from Larson's Music in Concord where the Blue Devils used to rehearse.

    See, this is what I'm looking for! Now if we can just find the wrinkled bar napkin with the scrawled words "Channel One - Buddy's idea!" ...

  4. That awesome jazz/rock piece with the wailing sops. This has always been one of my all time favorite drum corps tunes!!

    I always thought it was called Black Orchid and indeed that's what both corpsreps.com and the "History of Drum & Bugle Corps" calls it. corpreps says it was Stan Kenton. Anyway, I've been looking for the original tune for 30 years (literally) and never been able to find it.

    I think it is a tune called "Out of the Night", on an Album "Basie & Beyond" (Quincy Jones/Sammy Nestico) http://www.amazon.com/Basie-Beyond-Quincy-...s/dp/B00004YNDT . This album was recorded in 2000, it isn't the original obviously.

    I don't think the song was called Black Orchid. Was there a change of repertoire by the corps and the media never got the memo? Was it an original SCV composition that Sammy Nestico later renamed and re-arranged?! :)

    BTW, this Basie & Beyond album also has "Ya Gotta Try.... Harder!" of BD fame.

  5. I am from down river in St. Louis - and think about something like this every time I cross one of the bridges...that must have been terrifying.

    Miles Davis was from East St. Louis. In his biography he talks about his dad knowing the guys who built the bridges over the Mississippi between E. STL and STL, and knowing they were cheap and probably used bad materials and was convinced those bridges would collapse and thus would avoid them. To the day he died he was surprised that the bridges had not collapsed yet.

    Now what is spooky is I had just finished reading these words when my wife called me and said the bridge had just collapsed.

    I used to drive that route to work and Minnesota Brass practice. But don't use it so much these days.

    -Cam

  6. Of course they earn the 90's. You're either Box 5 or you're not!

    I agree scores are earned, and I'll agree that there are criteria that attempt to standardize things. But the criteria are ultimately subjective. Box 5 in 1997 was different than Box 5 in 2007.

  7. I remember RAMD around 91-92. There were probably less than 50 active posters and only a few posts a day. Remember most of the group (about 25) met in Madison in '92. Remember we had T-shirts made so we'd recognise each other? Cathy Doser, Vince Lamb, Christina Mavroudis are about the only names I remember. I don't even remember what my name was.

  8. I suspect that if the season lasted till mid-September, the top 7 corps at DCI would not be maxed out at 100 with the remaining top 12 in the mid-90s. Yet that is what should happen if they continue improving their shows.

    So clearly it is not an objective scale.

    The whole notion that there is anything remotely objective about scores is laughable.

  9. do the corps actually earn those scores,

    Answer: yes

    or is it agreed upon that by a certain date (roughly), the judges begin to give out numbers based upon what has been considered acceptable, based upon past practice?

    Answer: yes

  10. Just for the sake of argument, suppose the MSARP didn't help the current Scouts one iota, SO WHAT?!

    It helped 200+ men. Why is that so easily brushed aside? Because we're forty-five instead of twenty we are less worthy or in need of a life enriching experience? To dismiss it as simply "reliving our youth" is downright insulting.

    The whole thing was about so much more than drum corps. It was about life. I learned valuable life lessons in the 70s and 80s in drum corps. And I learned lots the summer of 2006 as well. I am a better person for having been a part of it.

    It was a beautiful thing.

  11. But I always keep in mind that 10 years ago (or earlier) we would have KILLED to be able to see any DCI shows live in this manner... or listen to audio recordings online not long after the show.

    So true. t\These younguns take it so for granted.

    And I have had continuous feed since BD ended. I really feel like I'm there.

    I applaud DCI.

  12. The only way I can get excited about a drumcorps season is if I can watch a corps show several times. Do others feel the same way?

    Definitely. The years where I go to DCI and see Thurs-Sat. corresponds to the years that I bought the DVDs. I just can't get excited about a show if my only exposure to it is thru a video. Maybe if I was a new fan it would be different but after you've been watching drum corps for 30 years and "seen it all before", it is as much about reliving the emotions I had live as it is the actual material being performed.

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