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cwallace600

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Posts posted by cwallace600

  1. Well, I was really referring to the SCV placement. Those guys owned the word 'drumline' in '92 and unfortunately, got hosed due to a lame show. Not trying to take away from the other groups' success though.

    SCV was an amazing line that year, full of DCI "All-Stars." I think they peaked way too early, because by the end of the season they were a shadow of what they started out as. Not saying they weren't amazing, but I never thought they deserved to win drums. They were dirty by the time they got to Madison. Now their tenor ensemble...that's a whole other story. I just saw a video of that for the first time in over ten years, and I'd forgotten how ridiculous it was! :laughing:

  2. Freezing cold? Back in my day we marched OUTSIDE in February in the snow... 10 miles playing a roll all the way around the uphill track 100 times... barefoot... and we liked it! And we could only go to Rocky Rocococ's to eat lunch... and then Parthenon for a Gyros dinner. The next day you had gas so bad that East High School was like practicing in a stenchfest ... and we liked it! AND gas only cost about $1.25/gallon or so... AND WE HATED THAT! :tongue:

    Don't you have any new stories Geno? :tongue:

    j/k, miss you Brother. You never make any gatherings!

  3. Note, I'm a brass guy, but why couldn't they have just kept the same Pearl drums they ALREADY owned? Why do drum lines seem to get brand new equipment year in and year out? Do they just not last that long?

    Most of the "name" corps don't actually own the drums...the sponsoring company retains ownership and then sells them at a discount after a couple of years of use.

  4. Star did have an impressive run but I would not put them down in history with the likes of SCV, BD, Cavies, Madison, or Phantom.

    Star had the greatest impact on the creative direction of the activity during the time they were around, hands down. I agree with the comparisons to early '80s Cadets.

    The thing that struck me in the mid '90s was that SO many people complained that Star was doing TOO MUCH dance and body movement, but within 5 years virtually everyone was incorporating dance and body into their show designs (including all those who complained in '93!)

  5. Bus Jousting event in '93...one of the participants in the first round, first heat dislocated his shoulder. Caravan had to stop in next town to take him to the emergency clinic or whatever. Needless to say, Bus Jousting was quickly and quietly laid to rest. He was OK, by the way, and was back on the field in a couple of shows. :P

  6. Amusement parks can be good or bad in my experience. In '04 we went to King's Island and it was awesome. In '05 we went to some Six Flags in Kentucky and it was almost 100 degrees, there were few good rides, and the place was full of drunk rednecks. And our guard staff quit that day...

    Beaches are good, but not as good if it takes you an hour to drive to them when you're less than 2 miles away, which is what happened in '05 (anyone sense a theme?)

    So I'll have to go for major cities. Cadets went to Boston, Chicago and Boulder (in that order) in '06. My activities centered around eating massive amounts of good food (lobster in Boston, steak in Chicago, Mexican in Boulder) and otherwise just sitting around. Excellent.

    Agreed on amusement parks...hit ot miss. Just happened that the two I went to over the 3 years I marched were Cedar Point and Disneyland (CA, not Orlando.) Both great! Boston and SF were both great for the same reasons you mentioned.

  7. Funny. We didn't destroy our equipment all summer. Something to be said for playing with a good outdoor technique? We cracked 1 rosewood bar this summer and it was the lowest note and the girl who did it was crushing the note. We knew that note was going to break. It happened, once. But that was their top end rosewood. And we had two sets, show and rehearsal. Our xylo's made from the Dynasty synthetic tended to break a little more. I'm not being a Dynasty honk because they're the sponsor for my corps. I'm just telling you guys that I couldn't stand the prodcut, because everyone had pretty much told me so. Then I get to experience the best of what they had to offer. And it's not bad. At all. For those of you who hear the differences in companies and can tell the difference is based on the drum itself and not the preferred tuning, man. Tell me where I can sign up for that ear training class. Cause I definitely didn't see it listed in my courses but would love to be that good.

    gotta agree with Duder on this one...I can find you plenty of people who love or hate any brand you want to throw out there. Sure the Dynasty instruments were bad some years ago, but I find that technique and tuning make way more difference than the drums/hardware. And for those of you who say you can tell the difference...sorry, I don't buy it. Because I am that good, and I don't hear it. It's the tuning. Ok, I'll give you that bass drums sound tonally DIFFERENT, but not better/worse...but everybody always talks about snares, and if they're tuned right they'll sound fine.

  8. no relish at all. It's just the difference between words and actions...kind of like compassionate conservative.

    Words and actions everyone....vast differences.

    It's what I've come to lovingly call "Sounds Great On A Tshirt." It's when people make a lot of loud statements that in reality can not be backed up, or even worse, that they have no intention of backing up.

    My alma mater has been experiencing difficult times of late, but I know that what I can really do to help is limited, so I keep my mouth shut and quietly do what little I can to help, and let those that need to hear it know that they are appreciated for what they do.

    And that's the point. It's the doers who keep these things going. If you can't be a doer, that's OK, not everybody can be. But if you run your mouth, you leave yourself open to the kind of scrutiny that our guy TB brings. So don't be a baby if you can't back it up.

    Does that about sum it up TB?

  9. So we should do nothing but help the strong survive? Just curious. I think once the weak die the strong will lose, with less corps mean less shows mean less exposure means less people to try out............

    I don't think he's expressing a desire, more along the lines of making an observation. Brian and many others have observed the slowly declining numbers in Open class, along with rules changes and cultural shifts that seem to be making it ever difficult to exist as a smaller, community-focused corps.

  10. The Jupiter horns are being designed by the same team who did the new King line for Phantom...and people seem to like those OK. Not a brass player personally, but alls I'm saying is it wasn't THAT long ago that Yamaha was considered crap, and look how many people play on those...

    Sometimes brands/companies figure it out.

  11. Why yes, I'm sure everyone paying nearly 4 dollars a gallon this weekend is giving thanks at this very moment for their sheer luck. Sounds like typical Republican trickle-down to me. Travel-oriented organizations like DCI should make noise about this situation.

    I live in an area that consistently has some of the highest gas prices in the country, and I filled up at $3.01 per gallon this weekend. I think the $4 a gallon declaration is a bit premature...although I do agree that it's coming, sooner rather than later.

  12. Yeah, there's some misinterpretation in that. I NEVER said that I'd be bored at an open class corps, I suggested that I MAY be bored at Alliance (non competitive dca) but not at an open class corps. I know I wouldn't be bored there, but I can't do it. And there are quite a few good reasons I wouldn't be bored at Cavies.

    Ok, fair enough on the misinterpretation. My apologies.

    I still stick to what I said, though. You need to be drumming with other people. If you can't march, I get that, I went through that too, but endeavor to find some people to drum with who are marching or get in a winterline or something. It's pretty rare for someone to make a top-tier line without some experience in either DCI or WGI under their belt.

  13. Alright, who am I kidding. There's pretty much no way I can do dci this year. The camps themselves would pose a conflict for 2 already conflicting activities in my life that I am barely hanging on to, attendence wise. I guess I shouldn't give reasons because I'll only get "well that reason isn't good because..." Let's just opperate under the assumption I can't. I had thought of doing Alliance, but after watching them practice I changed my mind. I guess it would be fun and I'd get better but I can already play the stuff they play (my high school plays stuff at least that hard). Not perfectly of course, but I think I'd be bored of it a few camps in. And I've drummed with the center snare and...

    If you are truly good enough that you would be bored at an Open Class corps, then you are ready for Cavies now. Since you do not believe you are ready for Cavies now (and I agree with you), your assumption that you would be bored at an Open Class corps leads to a serious question: What makes you think you wouldn't be bored at Cavies? They do the exact same stuff as everybody else (concerning rehearsal techniques, etc.) Lots of time on the same exercises...it's not like you spend the whole time playing Flam I Am. And the reason corps and winterlines spend so much time on basics is so that everyone can learn to play them exactly the same. Just because you can play something pretty well to your ears doesn't mean you can do it in a line consistently.

    Look, I'm not trying to take the wind out of your sails, but Cavies tryouts are VERY competitive, like 90 kids for 3 spots competitive. The best thing you can do is get some experinece somewhere else first, and if you can't do that, find some other people to drum with who are better than you and you'll learn things from them that maybe you haven't thought of. But you really need to be playing in a line, because there are things you'll have to learn about how to play clean in a line that noone can tell you and that you can't learn on your own.

  14. There are a few different configurations, depending on the line / instructor

    Most lines I think use 16, 18, 22, 26, 30 or 16, 18, 20, 24, 28...but I've never gone into the lot with a measuring tape. :P

    I thought most D1's had moved away from 16's. IMO they don't carry as well. But I've never done the measuring tape thing either. Just sayin'. :bluedevil:

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