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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!europa.asd.contel.com!darwin.sura.net!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!mmm.serc.3m.com!pwcs!medtron!china!ck10322
- From: ck10322@china.medtronic.com (Cameron Kaszas)
- Subject: Madison 93 show
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.154618.3599@medtron.medtronic.com>
- Sender: news@medtron.medtronic.com (USENET News Administration)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: china.inst.medtronic.com
- Organization: Medtronic, Inc., Minneapolis, MN
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 15:46:18 GMT
- Lines: 79
-
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-
- I believe that the Louie Bellson album containing "Numero Uno"
- is titled "Explosion". The title song was used by the Crossmen
- in '81. During this piece, the sopranos had a front and center
- feature that was quite memorable (to me anyway). It was a 16th
- note lick, several bars long, but what was neat was that each
- person fingered the guy's horn next to him! Has any other corps
- tried this? It always got a great response!
-
- -------------------------------
-
- MH > Yes, there is something to be said for history and the repetition and slight
- MH > variation on it.....the trouble is that it's damn near the ONLY thing that
- MH > Madison is capable of these days. Just look at the past few years:
- MH >
- MH > 1986 - Gershwin music from the 1970s regurgutated
- MH > 1987 - (I forgot this one...sorry)
- MH > 1988 - Maleguena regurgitated for the umpteenth time
- MH > 1989 - Slaughter on 10th Avenue regurgitated for the umpteenth+1 time
- MH > 1990 - an original show that I actually liked (but noone else did)
- MH > 1991 - City of Angels...an excellent production
- MH > 1992 - City of Angels...an excellent production (yawn)
- MH > 1993 - excerpts from the 1981, 1983 and 1990 shows
- MH >
- MH > C'mon!!!!!!!!!! How can you defend this lack of musical creativity?
- MH > Would you defend the corps if they did the same drill moves year after year?
- MH > Used the same guard uniforms and equipment? Etc, etc, etc....
- MH >
- MH > Mike Hughes
-
- I'll defend it!
-
- Gershwin music was Rhapsody In Blue. Now this is quite a long piece in
- its original. In 1986 they took TOTALLY different segments (OK a couple
- of "remembrance" chords were thrown in occassionally). However, other
- than the title, this was a new peice for them. Same with Slaughter.
- Again, they kept the company front push at the end, but this piece
- had a totally different, much lighter feel. Now, Malaguena had a
- lot more repetition to the '80-81 versions (although these were both
- severe departures from the '78 version).
-
- Furthermore, productions done in the '80/90s look totally different than
- anything fielded in the '70s. The integration between the drill and music
- just wasn't there back then like it is today. Not only does this mandate
- an entirely new visual production, but new arrangements that are more
- easily enterpreted in the new "style" of drum corps (the guard has to be
- able to dance to it, act to it, etc.)
-
- I would submit that Madison changes "style" from year to year more than
- most corps, even though they may bring back "melodies" more often.
- Boy, those Blue Devils have sure been innovators haven't they?!
- Same style year after year. I love it, don't get me wrong, but it seems
- to me that their staff has a formula that works and they are comfortable
- with, and even though they do different songs, they can sound remarkably
- similar year after year after year after year after .....
- I don't want to start a flame war here, just trying to make the point that
- taking a title from the past can be less repetitive than staying within
- one idiom. (Again, I don't mind either approach - there is certainly
- enough variety and creativity within drum corps as a whole, so that at any
- given show, we can all be happy :)
-
- Now having played a "blast from the past" as well as having a song that
- I was a part of played to me years later, I'll say that I LOVE IT. A special
- part of drum corps is memories. I am very sentimental about the period
- a few years before (I went to shows but was too young to march) and during
- the time that I marched. My most memorable moment in corps was in 1979, when
- we brought back the ending to "The Way We Were/Ballet In Brass" (from the
- '75-'76 shows) to end our show with, and the first show that we brought
- it out, how the fans went wild, and I marched past my brother (my biological
- brother :) who like me had loved this song as fans a few years before,
- and here we were part of it!!
-
- Anyone have a Kleenex? :^)
-
- Cam Kaszas
-
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-