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SUMMER
CAMPS
by George Wenger
Beginning in January, every
band director is bombarded with information about summer camps.
Each director must evaluate what is best for his students and band
program. These camps provide excellent opportunities for students
with particular individual needs. I wish to focus on what Dorman
High School makes available to our students during the summer to
prepare for marching band.
Our percussion instructor,
Matt McDaniel, runs a special week long percussion camp during
June. Extra instructors are hired to assist with the various
sections of the percussion. The purpose is to teach and stress
the fundamentals, which are important for percussion to succeed.
Additionally, evaluation of the personnel is conducted so our program
can be built to strengthen weaknesses. At the end of the week, students
begin working on the percussion feature, which is to be used in the
field show music. The goal is to establish excellent fundamentals
and to teach the section how to practice so they can learn their show
music. It is always necessary to teach students to play
additional percussion instruments or to switch them to a different
section to fill a need.
The guard, under the
direction of Janet Kuntz, has a special week of concentrated
rehearsals. During this time, we bring in special people to teach
the equipment work and fundamentals needed for the shows. The
goal of the week is to teach the fundamentals necessary to perform the
shows and learn the equipment work to one number before the full band
camp. We make decisions as to who does sabers, rifles, and
flags.
We work the winds slightly
differently. Our goals for every wind player are to be able to play and
then check off all of their music before we go to band camp. Some
will achieve this goal while others will not even be able to play all
of their notes even with music.
After July 4th, we begin
wind sectionals and full band rehearsals. At the first meeting
every student receives a packet of information, forms to complete, and
music to be memorized. We have eight two-hour full band
rehearsals, and three individual one and one half-hour section
rehearsals. During the sectionals, we begin teaching the
fundamentals of playing each instrument: posture, hand position,
embouchure, tone, intonation, balance, blend, etc. After review,
and reestablishing these fundamentals, the students learn how to play
the warm-ups and fall music. Time is always spent on learning how
to practice and memorize their music.
We go over the fundamentals,
style of music, and how to practice their parts. After identifying the
students with similar problems, we break up into small groups. A
student leader is placed in charge of each smaller group. This is an
upper classman who has a desire to become a section leader. Each
group has an assignment. Example: Learn measures 5 through
10 and come back. Students who can’t play a high note are
assigned an exercise so they can learn how to play the note. Students
with tone difficulties work on tone production exercises.
Students with rhythm problems are sent out to study counting.
Student leaders must bring their groups back every 10 to 15 minutes for
the next assignment. Each group models what they have learned for
the band director. Both the student instructor and the students
are evaluated each time they come back to the director. The
student instructors are trying out for section leaders and squad
leaders during this time. The groups and members in the groups
are changed frequently. This process is repeated until students
are ready to check off their music.
The students going out for
section leader and squad leader check off their music with a band
director beginning the second or third week of summer rehearsals.
These students who have checked off their music and are capable of
evaluating others are given the responsibility of checking off everyone
else’s music in their section. They must perform the music
by memory correctly at about a 95% accuracy rate to check it off.
The full marching band
rehearsals begin and end with everyone being called to attention by the
Drum Major. Encouraging speeches are given by both the directors and
student leaders and other house keeping details are
addressed. The goals of full rehearsals are to teach all
members to play their music, demonstrate what band is about, and show
them how to conduct themselves as members of our band. We want
each member to feel as though he is a member of a large family so he is
glad to come to band.
The summer music rehearsals
begin with extensive warm-ups to develop tone, balance, endurance,
flexibility, articulation, technique, and range. This usually
takes from 30 to 40 minutes. We then work on the Dorman Alma
Mater trying to carry over what we already talked about. After
this we start on the show music. Our objectives are to teach notes,
rhythms, and style and combine these with what was addressed during the
warm-up. As with the sectionals, students are sent out to work
with other students as needed in order to teach every student.
Every student is charged with the responsibility of leaving rehearsal
with a lot more knowledge than when they came. The music is rehearsed
in small sections beginning at an excessively slow tempo concentrating
on tone, balance, doing every articulation, breath mark, note length,
etc., and then repeated faster until the desired performance tempo is
reached. The last fifteen minutes of the rehearsal is spent with
the Drum Major running through the parts of the music we learned during
this rehearsal and previous rehearsals. The band is call to
attention and dismissed.
One week before our band
camp we have rookie camp, and marching review camp. The students
who wish to become squad leaders, or section leaders come from 8:00
A.M. to 12:30 P.M., while rookies and upper classmen come from 8:30
A.M. to 12:00 P.M. The student leaders are instructed by a band
director on what they will teach, and how they will go about teaching
their charges on this particular day. The rookies come Monday
through Friday while the upper classmen come just two assigned days to
review the fundamentals of marching and marching while playing.
At 12:00 P.M. we have a rap-up, and evaluation session with the student
leaders.
Band Camp at Gardner Webb
Band Camp runs from Monday
morning through Saturday noon. Our band camp goals are to
discipline, condition, and teach the band as much of our fall contest
show as they are capable of learning.
Monday we arrive at camp
between 7:30 and 8:30 A.M. and check into the dorms. By
9:15 we meet on the field. The section leaders are given an
8½ ” by 5 ½” laminated card stock paper with
their section members’ names and drill numbers written as large
as the paper permits. On the backs of each band member’s
card is his personal coordinate sheet. These cards have a
pleasingly soft stomach length string attached. This enables his
name and drill numbers to be read from the director’s tower.
On Tuesday through Friday
our schedule is as follows: We begin with breakfast at 7:00 A.M. and
rehearse on the field from 8:15 A.M. through 11:30 A.M. All
marching rehearsals begin in a warm-up block starting with marching
fundamentals. Items addressed are posture, foot placement, toe
placement, instrument placement, head angle, adjusted step, standard
step size, backward march, step off, halt, cross-over, flanks,
etc. We march in the warm-up block, up and down the field both
forward and backward. We march the block in a box forward and
backward. We do fundamentals using every tempo known to
man. After 30 to 40 minutes, we take a water break. Each
student brings his or her own water jug. Every morning the
college provides ice for the students. After a short break we
begin in chart 1. Then we find chart 2. Then we march from
1 to 2 until the students master 1 and 2. We again stress
marching fundamentals while we are doing this. We will then stand
still, play warm-ups and play the music from chart 1 and stop on the
note beginning on chart 2. The music quality must be emphasized at this
time. Then we march from chart 1 to 2 until this is
mastered. We then find chart 3, and march from 2 to 3 several
times. Then we play and march from 1 stop on 2 then on to
3. Then, we march nonstop from 1 to 3. This process is
repeated until we learn a section. Let’s say that the first
section is 1 through 8. At this point, we start on chart 9 as we
did on chart 1 and rehearse this section and repeat until the end of
the drill. The guard rehearses on a different field, and
percussion usually rehearses in a different location during the morning
session. At 11:00 we put everyone together and rehearse the music
standing still and then run the show.
Lunch is at 12:00 P.M.,
which is followed by a rest period. We meet in sectionals from
1:30 to 4:00 P.M. The sections work on musicianship with the
music, check off music, and march fundamentals playing the music.
Students have a break until
5:00 when they eat supper. We meet back on the field at 6:00 and
rehearse until dark. The evening rehearsal begins in warm-up
block where the band warms up both marching and playing. After
warming up, we review what we learned in the morning and reteach as
necessary. If time permits, we learn more drill.
Students have free time or
evening activities until time to be in their dorms at 11:00 with lights
out at 11:30. The activities include a talent night, freshman induction,
attending a drum and bugle contest, and a dance.
The next day we do it
again. On Saturday morning, we have a rehearsal in the Gardner
Webb Stadium and then we perform what we learned during the week for
the parents and friends.
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