|
4 Registered (9Volt, Derek_Esq, jofus, 1 invisible),
8
Guests and
7
Spiders online. |
|
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
31
|
|
|
|
|
4152 Members
81 Forums
13467 Topics
170871 Posts
Max Online: 722 @ 04/10/08 12:10 PM
|
|
|
#55025 - 04/14/06 01:18 AM
Re: Show Style snare chops vs. Corps Style snare c
[Re: MACKSnare519]
|
Registered: 04/14/06
|
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#55026 - 04/14/06 09:19 PM
Re: Show Style snare chops vs. Corps Style snare c
[Re: scpmp803]
|
Registered: 04/01/03
Loc: Raleigh, NC
|
It would be a lot easier to play clean if somebody tuned the drums carefully, especially the tenors!
What I've noticed is that some of these lines achieve stadium-rockin' volume by having an abundance of drummers on field. In the first clip above there are about 15 people playing the same "chest tom" part.
On the other hand, a good corps-style line can achieve the same volume with five guys playing well-tuned basses in perfect unison. However, five guys dancing around doesn't look that impressive, so.....
I think the price that show-style lines pay for having such fancy choreography is that you really have to cut down on the level of detail in the music. A huge, dancing line just isn't going to sound as good as a corps-style line, or play with as much rhythmic variation as a corps-style line would. I bet that if you were only allowed to listen to the show-style line, then it would get kinda boring after a while..
By contrast, corps-style percussion arrangements are some of the most rhythmically and melodically sophisticated music I've ever heard, and people remember "the greats" of Drum-Corps percussion arrangers because there really is an art to it.
That being said, I think the whole Corps-Style mentality can get a bit overbearing at times, and it can feel like the drummer's only function is to robotically play whatever the instructor says to play, with no emotion or even fun involved! That's a sad state of affairs, but sometimes the ends justify the means...I mean imagine how hard the '03 SCV line had to work to bring Gussek's "Double Beat" to fruition. Now it's a classic drumline jam that people will talk about for years...
_________________________
Rudimentary, my dear Watson...
EIRT #7
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#55029 - 04/16/06 01:53 AM
Re: Show Style snare chops vs. Corps Style snare c
[Re: cubanochulo]
|
Registered: 05/17/02
Loc: Athens, Ohio
|
It's all based on Taste-Taste-Taste... What did you grow up listening to? I grew up with country music all around me, but I expanded far beyond that into an eclectic collection. Same goes for corps and showstyle drumming. You cannot, I repeat, cannot say that one is more artistic than the other. Art, whether tangible Picasso portraits or visual and audio stimuli, are TRULY in the minds of the beholder. I find showstyle visuals to be wonderfully artistic and rhythmically enthalling; I find a corps line fantastic from cleanliness, precision, etc... But that doesn't mean everyone else feels the same. It's like me looking at a cliff face and seeing the beauty in the rock strata and the complicated formations, while most other people would just see rock and not care - art is everywhere and in everything. Just because you don't see, doesn't mean it's not there. Quote:
Find someone you know (or don't) that knows nothing about drumming. Take out an mp3 player and play SCV's Electric Wheelchair. Then play those infamous cadences at the end of the movie "Drumline". Which one would he enjoy more? Was he watching either of the lines?
Now, I may be a showstyle performer, but I defend both ends of the spectrum. Humans love rhythm. We all do. Yes, corps style is not well know for the down and funky, tap your toes beats as showstyle is. So a person with no prior exposure to the drumline world will most likely choose the "Drumline" cadence over "EWC". However, this is where knowledge of drumming becomes a key factor. IF the person knows about drumming, and how elegent and difficult it is, they appreciate the complexity of SCV's EWC, even if it may not have the same groove as the other. Complexity is beauty. Just ask Ian Malcolm and his fractals.
Now, by no means am I suggesting that us showstyle drummers are no more capable than corps drummers of throwing down EWC at a whim, it just goes with the general territory of our style to be different in the respect of HOW we present our art, style and beauty.
Drumming is beautiful. Leave it at that.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#55031 - 04/19/06 07:14 PM
Re: Show Style snare chops vs. Corps Style snare c
[Re: TuoPohc]
|
Registered: 12/30/04
Loc: Bergen County, New Jersey
|
I didn't claim that one was more of an art than the other. I said that was my opinion. [ "In my opinion,"; "I think"]
I didn't say show-style was better than corps-style. Actually I respect corps a lot more than most show-style bands. The topic at hand however, was listening to a show-style line, and it getting boring quickly. And the same is true with classical music vs. pop. Of course I respect Mozart more than I respect 50 Cent, but which one is going to be boring to the average American?
Also, I said "the art that drumming was supposed to be". Drumming doesn't always mean marching percussion. No one knows the origin of drumming, but I'm sure its pretty tribal, and after listening to tribal drums, I'm much more reminded of a show-style line than I am reminded of the Blue Devils. That's the point I was trying to make.
It really probably comes down to my outlook on life. I'd rather live for creativity and funk than to be come so sophisticated that I would no longer be able to appreciate simple syncapation found in show-style lines.
_________________________
Freshman - Learning to drum and read music Sophmore - DMAE Bottom bass for football season, snare for marching season. Junior - DMAE Snare section leader, highly requested drummer for many occasions and bands, paid in several situations. Senior - Teaching beginners drumming, Jazz Band drummer, proud DMAE Drumline Captain and Drum Major.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#55032 - 12/10/06 12:49 PM
Re: Show Style snare chops vs. Corps Style snare c
[Re: Bootsinating]
|
Anonymous
Unregistered
|
Quote:
tasty cake ho-ho's.
haha holy crap is that a real hybrid?
Man, the guy above me is quite a big-shot eh? Shiny resume. "Highly Requested"....
Quote:
Also, I said "the art that drumming was supposed to be". Drumming doesn't always mean marching percussion. No one knows the origin of drumming, but I'm sure its pretty tribal, and after listening to tribal drums, I'm much more reminded of a show-style line than I am reminded of the Blue Devils. That's the point I was trying to make.
^^^I very much definitely incredibly do agree with this.
Anyway, to me its not about comparing the chops of the two styles, its more about comparing the amount of understanding each style has for musical elements applied to percussion as well as the entire ensemble. I think the corps style has the leg up on that, but thats just a generalization.
Edited by CoOlNaMeHeRe (12/10/06 12:58 PM)
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
Moderator: Big_John, Cadet311, Divalish, drumcorpbc, drumholio, Hulka, Middle Age Man, MonkeyMan, multi-Thomm, Snare02, TBoneLaForge, Toe
|
|