Friday, July 27, 2012

Junior Fife and Drum Camp, 2012

Last week three of us went to the Company of Fifers and Drummers’ Junior Fife and Drum Camp. This was my (Peter) seventh time at the camp, and the last time due to aging-out, and was the second time for John and Thomas. It was held in Ivoryton, Connecticut the week prior to the Deep River Ancient Muster, the largest fife and drum muster in America (I’ll be posting about the muster next post). The camp had 90-some fifers and drummers from around the states (mostly the north-east, but including California, Missouri, Indiana, Tennessee, etc...). We had a great time playing, learning, and listening to the fife and drum for the week.

This year we learned some of the music of the Connecticut Yanks Fife and Drum Corps, a corps from the 1960s-70s very influential in the fife and drum tradition. We actually had former members of the corps teach us at camp, as well as tell stories of fife and drum 35-50 years ago. You can see pictures from camp and listen to the original Yanks on their Facebook page. This completed a three-year series at camp where we had also learned music from the Sons of Liberty Ancient Fife and Drum Corps and the New York Regimental Fife and Drum Band (both from the mid-1900s). We have found it helpful to see the way the fife and drum tradition has been handed down from generation to generation, giving more motivation to see it continue to advance in our own time and beyond.

At the end of camp we performed the music at the Deep River Muster on Friday night. Here is video of most of the performance:








Hark! Can you hear the drum resounding? 
Can you hear the bass drum’s mallet pounding? 
Can you hear the fife’s clear melodic shrieks? 
Though the hills and valleys, ponds and creeks?

-Peter
 Memor!

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Independence Day in Elbert County

This year for the Fourth of July we performed at the Pioneer Fourth Celebration in Kiowa, put on by the Elbert County Historical Society. It was a fun event, and we enjoyed the museum as well. 



Performing at lunch time 


They had a costume competition (we got second place)

After our performance I recited the poem "The Patriot Pastor, or, the Rising in 1776" written by Thomas Buchanan Read. This is where the quote on the side bar comes from: 
"And there was tumult in the air,
The fife’s shrill note, the drum’s loud beat,
And through the land everywhere
The answering tread of hurrying feet;"
You can read the poem here.

Afterwards, we stopped by Main Street, Elizabeth for the parade we organized. We just forgot to tell anyone else about it...


We played at the Carriage Shops for a bit, first in formation (as pictured) and then in informal jamming

-Peter B.
 Memor!