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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!ohstpy!miavx1!miamiu!mhughes
- Newsgroups: alt.drumcorps
- Subject: Re: Scouts 93
- Message-ID: <92323.150115MHUGHES@MIAMIU.BITNET>
- From: <MHUGHES@MIAMIU.BITNET>
- Date: Wednesday, 18 Nov 1992 15:01:15 EST
- References: <Nov17.183352.50167@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>
- Organization: Miami University - Academic Computer Service
- Lines: 142
-
- In article <Nov17.183352.50167@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>,
- gordons@CS.ColoState.EDU (vahl scott gordon) says:
- >
- >From: <MHUGHES@MIAMIU.BITNET> Mike Hughes says:
- >
- >>Yes, there is something to be said for history and the repetition and slight
- >>variation on it.....the trouble is that it's damn near the ONLY thing that
- >>Madison is capable of these days. Just look at the past few years:
- >>
- >> 1986 - Gershwin music from the 1970s regurgutated
- >> 1987 - (I forgot this one...sorry)
- >> 1988 - Maleguena regurgitated for the umpteenth time
- >> 1989 - Slaughter on 10th Avenue regurgitated for the umpteenth+1 time
- >> 1990 - an original show that I actually liked (but noone else did)
- >> 1991 - City of Angels...an excellent production
- >> 1992 - City of Angels...an excellent production (yawn)
- >> 1993 - excerpts from the 1981, 1983 and 1990 shows
- >>
- >>C'mon!!!!!!!!!! How can you defend this lack of musical creativity?
- >>Would you defend the corps if they did the same drill moves year after year?
- >>Used the same guard uniforms and equipment? Etc, etc, etc....
- >>
- >>Mike Hughes
- >
- >I think you're confusing musical creativity with playing different songs.
- >Would you contend that classical musicians all necessarily have no
- >musical creativity because they play pieces that have been played before?
- >Does Wynton Marsalis have no musical creativity when he plays an Ellington
- >or Parker song?
-
- Certainly not, nor would I ever contend as such. But Winton Marsalis or
- the Vienna Philharmonic have a much, much, MUCH larger repetoire than Madison
- apparently has. Also, do you contend that ALL Marsalis plays is Ellington or
- Parker? Or that all the Vienna Philharmonic performs is Mahler? Surely you
- are not. But, if it were the case that Marsalis or Vienna were so musically
- narrow-minded, I would be venting as much on them as I am on Madison. I dare
- say that neither would be the success they are today if such were the case.
-
- Read the first line of my post....I said *There is something to be said for
- history and the repetition and slight variation on it...*. This means that
- I have no problem with a corps playing a signature tune or a chart from the
- past, but when it makes up the NUCLEUS of your entire repetoire, then I have
- to question musical creativity.
-
- Musical creativity (to me) by definition means expanding ones musical
- horizons through new techniques, new musical devices and NEW MUSIC. Sure,
- one can continually rearrange Maleguena until the end of time, but at some
- point, in an idiom restricted to bugles and percussion, the freshness of the
- chart justs disappears. What is the big problem with playing new music more
- often that is in the same style?
-
- >How do I defend the use of previously used material? How about the
- >screaming applause that Madison manages to get nearly every year? (well,
- >there was 1990 but you liked that show).
-
- Screaming applause does not imply creativity. It implies popularity.
- I'm not arguing that Madison is not a popular corps. But it seems to me that
- they were just as popular in 1991 when they did City of Angels. News flash:
- that was a new chart. Looking back occasionally is fine...I'm just saying,
- why not uncover some new charts more often? Hell, you may even come across
- a work that'll become a new signature piece!
-
- Re: 1990, just listen to that show. Musically it was one of Madison's most
- sophisticated productions. The slam on it was that it was visually slow.
- Does that mean it wasn't musical? Or wasn't creative?
-
- >What about the challenge of playing intricate and difficult music?
-
- So presumably Star, Cadets, SCV, Cavies play cakewalk charts every year?
-
- >What about the joy of being a part of a long, proud heritage?
-
- ...and corps like Cadets or SCV have no heritage....
-
- >Getting the opportunity to play music that you've always wanted to play?
-
- I dare say that *getting the chance to play "Numero Uno"* is pretty far down
- on the list of reasons why people audition for Madison. In fact, with regards
- to "City of Angels", I'll bet that most people who marched Madison in both
- years 1991-92 wouldn't care if they ever heard "Angels" again.
-
- The chief reason people want to march with Scouts is that they are an exciting
- GE-oriented crowd pleasing unit. Are you saying this can only be accomplished
- by pulling out old charts? Even Madison does something new on occasion!!
-
- >Looking back is part of Madison's style. It's part of what draws people
- >to play in their corps, and it's part of what fans look forward to when
- >they take the field.
-
- That's fine. It's just TOO BIG of a part, IMO.
-
- >There should be room for this in the activity. What is WRONG with this???
- >If in the process of putting together such a show a corps is the BEST,
- >then why shouldn't they win?
-
- If the Maleguena production in 1988 were the BEST show out there, performed
- to the HIGHEST level of precision, then they would certainly have deserved
- the crown. Those who were there at Arrowhead that night (myself included)
- heard other corps (namely SCV and BD) who performed better. Maybe Madison
- was viscerally more exciting, but that doesn't mean they were better.
-
- >But let me get back to my discussion of what innovation is. Do we penalize
- >corps for using flags? After all, flags have been used before. No, we say
- >it's how they USE the flags. But apparently DCI doesn't think this applies
- >to music. Why does innovation have to mean songs that have never before
- >been used on the field? Remember Garfield 84, one of the most innovative
- >shows
- >in history? West Side Story was one of the most often played pieces in corps.
- >But it was WHAT they did with it! Remember the groans when Sky Ryders
- >announced that they were going to do it too in 87? But what THEY did with
- >it was regarded as thoroughly innovative! The feeling lately seems to be
- >that you won't get good marks from DCI unless you play songs that no
- >drum corps ever played before. (especially not your own, even if it was
- >20 years ago before any of the staff or members were even born)
-
- I agree that both of the West Side Story productions cited were innovative.
- Both had also neither been previously performed by the respective corps.
- My question is: what was so innovative about Madison's treatment of Slaughter
- in 1989 as opposed to the 1982 production? Or 1988's Maleguena as opposed to
- 1980's? (Or 1981's, for that matter?) Or 1992's City of Angels as opposed
- to 1991's? Other than the fact that all were just re-arrangements?
-
- You are comparing apples and oranges. West Side Story was programmatic
- music, from a musical which many people were familiar with, which told a
- story. There are many ways to tell this story...(Hell, Phantom told it
- again in 1988 with their Romeo and Juliet production. All West Side Story
- is is an updated R&J). Hence, a lot of the creativity in the corps' WSS
- productions was in HOW they told the story. Madison's music is not very
- programmatic.
-
- Also, WSS is a 2 hour musical, so any corps production would include only
- roughly one-tenth the available musical material. Thats one reason for
- the number of times we've all seen WSS. On the other hand, Maleguena is
- Maleguena, Slaughter on 10th Ave is Slaughter on 10th Ave, etc, etc, etc...
-
- >Don't get me wrong, I think it's GREAT when a corps plays new music.
- >I also think it's GREAT to be blown away by a piece that is known to be
- >a good vehicle for drum corps innovation. There should be room for both.
-
- Agreed, but in sensible proportions.
-
- -Mike Hughes
-