Tennessee Band/Rocky Top—1972

#3
#3
Some of you may not have been born. Thought a lot of you would enjoy it.

Ahhh, what memories. Precision drills, swirls, 'circle drill', & excellent music! Pageantry at its best. Dr. W.J. Julian & his staff created the Pride of the Southland Band. :cool:
 

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#4
#4
That is great.

I love marching bands. It's another one of the college game day experiences that makes the student years so awesome. More and more, though, it is replaced by stupid piped in music from the latest CFB fad playlist.
Like the difference between your Torino...
1975-ford-gran-torino-starsky-and-hutch-tribute-car.jpg

and THIS POS...
voiture-electrique-russe.jpg
 
#11
#11
Thx for sharing. That band has more moves than Dylan Sampson!

What is truly mind boggling though is the fact that the band director sketched EVERY move and sequence on PAPER, yes Paper my friends. He must have used 1,000 pages of paper to help each band member where exactly thus be on the field for their 12 minutes on the field. Wait!! You mean there weren't computers back in the 70s??? Oh the humanity!
 
#14
#14
Thx for sharing. That band has more moves than Dylan Sampson!

What is truly mind boggling though is the fact that the band director sketched EVERY move and sequence on PAPER, yes Paper my friends. He must have used 1,000 pages of paper to help each band member where exactly thus be on the field for their 12 minutes on the field. Wait!! You mean there weren't computers back in the 70s??? Oh the humanity!
Julian was genius!
 
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#15
#15
Thx for sharing. That band has more moves than Dylan Sampson!

What is truly mind boggling though is the fact that the band director sketched EVERY move and sequence on PAPER, yes Paper my friends. He must have used 1,000 pages of paper to help each band member where exactly thus be on the field for their 12 minutes on the field. Wait!! You mean there weren't computers back in the 70s??? Oh the humanity!
They were still having to do the designs manually for a lot of shows when I marched in 2003, though they used software to print them rather than sketching by hand. The software would tell them two marchers could not pass so close to each other. Technically correct but we "made it work".
 
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#19
#19
Dr. Julian was a great administrator but the entire design of the show was due to the tremendous amount of work by Walter McDaniel ( Mr. Mac) and his on the field training of the Pride. He also was the designer of the orchestral and band performances at the opening ceremonies of the’82 LA Olympics. He passed away 2 years ago. I sure do miss the halftime performances. Thanks for posting this.
 
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#24
#24
I believe it was 1972 when band director WJ Julian introduced a new tune for the band, one called ‘Rocky Top.’
I like they they play the “original” version with the repeat before the Rocky Top chorus. I don’t know my musical terms but maybe @feathersax or another POTS member can chime in.
 
#25
#25
I like they they play the “original” version with the repeat before the Rocky Top chorus. I don’t know my musical terms but maybe @feathersax or another POTS member can chime in.
The original arrangement was by Barry McDonald. Dr. W.J. Julian noticed the crowd reaction to "Rocky Top" during a halftime show in 1972 in a game against Alabama.
With persuading from assistant band director and arranger Barry MacDonald, “Rocky Top” made it into the halftime show, a 50-second snippet tacked on to the end of a circle drill.
The crowd loved it. “It was up-tempo, fast and had a lot of energy,” Bill Connell (former P.O.T.S. Drum Major) said. “It was easy to manipulate if you had to change some counts a little bit with the drill. It just worked perfectly.” :cool:
 
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