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Marching Band
History
A marching band
is a sporting group of instrumental musicians who generally perform
outdoors, and who incorporate
movement usually some type of
marching with their musical performance. Instrumentation typically includes
brass, woodwinds, and percussion instruments and the music usually
incorporates a strong rhythmic component suitable for marching.
In addition to
traditional parade performances, many bands also perform field shows at
special events (often American football games) or at marching band
competitions. Marching bands are generally categorized by function and
by the style of field show (if any) they perform. Increasingly,
Marching Bands are performing indoor concerts, in addition to any "Pep
Band" duties, that implement many of the songs, traditions, and flair
from outside performances.
Click on picture for video.
History
Marching bands
evolved out of military bands. As musicians became less and less
important in directing the movement of troops on the battlefield, the
bands moved into increasingly ceremonial roles. An intermediate stage
which provided some of the instrumentation and music for marching bands
was the modern brass band, which also evolved out of the military
tradition.
Many military
traditions survive in modern marching band. Bands that march in
formation will often be ordered to "dress" their "ranks" and "cover
down" their "files". They may be called to "attention", and given
orders like "about face" and "forward march". Uniforms of many marching
bands still resemble military uniforms.
Outside of police
and military organizations, modern marching band is most commonly
associated with American football, and specifically the halftime field
show. Many U.S. universities had bands before the twentieth century.
Another
innovation that appeared at roughly the same time as the field show and
marching in formations was the fight song. University fight songs are
often closely associated with the university's band. Many of the more
recognizable and popular fight songs are widely utilized by high
schools across the country. Three university fight songs commonly used
by high schools are The University of Michigan's Hail to the
Victors�, Notre Dame's Victory
March�, and the United States Naval Academy's
Anchors Aweigh.�
Other changes in
marching band have been:
- adoption of the
tradition by secondary schools (high schools, junior high schools, and
middle schools)
- the addition of a dance
team, and/or baton twirlers/majorettes
- the addition of color
guard members
Since the
inception of Drum Corps International in the 1970s, many marching bands
that perform field shows have adopted changes to the activity that
parallel developments with modern drum and bugle corps. These bands are
said to be corps-style bands. Changes adopted from drum corps
include:
- marching style: instead
of a traditional high step, drum corps tend to march with a fluid roll
step to keep musicians' torsos completely still (see below)
- the adaptation of the
flag, rifle, and sabre units into "auxiliaries", who march with the
band and provide visual flair by spinning and tossing flags or mock
weapons and using dance in the performance
- moving marching timpani
and keyboard percussion into a stationary sideline percussion section
(pit), which has since incorporated many different types of percussion
instruments
- the addition of
vocalists and/or electric instruments (marching bands have as a general
rule adopted these aspects before drum corps, for instance the Drum
Corps International circuit has only allowed electronic amplification
since 2004 and has yet to permit electronic instruments without
penalties)
- marching band
competitions are judged using criteria similar to the criteria used in
drum corps competitions, with emphasis on individual aspects of the
band (captions for music performance, visual performance, percussion,
guard (auxiliary), and general effect are standard).
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