• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

Me vs. The Ohio State University Marching Band (and its ardent followers)

OSUsushichic;1002329; said:
Hmmm, methinks Vince is just jealous he doesn't get to blow something for 3 hours straight during a game. :biggrin:

(my college didn't have a marching band but I was in the pep band :nerd:)


Hey, one of my great regrets is never joining the OSU pep band. I know I wasn't good enough for the marching band due to my complete lack of coordination, but I could have easily made the pep band. (I was first chair, first trumpet at my high school for three years :nerd:)
 
Upvote 0
NOTREDAMECHIEF;1002354; said:
Still doesn't change th fact that 98% of band members are GEEKS...
I sat right next to a junior high band last night and except for a few kids it did nothing but confirm my opinion.

How old are you? To be sitting there making judgements about the "coolness" of 13-year-olds says more about you than them. At least the band geeks are self-aware of their status.
 
Upvote 0
Could it be the all but total lack of a music/arts program in Catholic schools that causes Chief to be so upset by the presence of band kids?

Think Notre Dame football Chief and see if you don't start whistling that fight song...

I don't think anyone in any band seriously thinks that game day is about them, but music is intrinsic to a football game. OSU and the OSUMB create a larger bond for us, something beyond the game itself.

Let me 'splain: I grew up in a Unitarian church. Minimum of ritual and ceremony. I had been away from Ohio and Ohio Stadium for a number of years. My wife had never been to a college football game, had grown up Catholic, and loved ritual and had been trying to convince me to go to church and to understand the importance of ritual.

I laughed it off, "Just give me the sermon, a reading or two, let's talk it over (as we did in my childhood church) and then go home.

I talked her into going up for homecoming. We did it right. Beer at the North 'Berg and another at Larry's, watched the parade, walked around campus where I showed her all the buildings I'd had classes in, and the Sundial, Mirror Lake, and where the Armory had been and the Doughboy who never tipped his cap, blah, blah, blah.

The next day we got up early so we could see the skull session, hiked around U Hall and the library and then back to the last row of C deck where our seats were. The teams go off, the stadium grows quiet and then comes that buzz as everyone looks to see the drummers start down the ramp and I'm telling her about how each player on each side is going to hit the chalk dust marker and how they're going to start playing at 120 beats per minute and slow to 80 and then step off at 120 and how the drum major is going to run out, bend back and if he's really good he'll plant that plume in the turf, throw the baton over the goal post and catch it... blah, blah, blah and meanwhile everyone is standing and cheering and clapping and SINGING the fight song. then comes the National Anthem and again everyone is singing, then the band salutes Northwestern, then goes into the diamond Ohio formation and I hear the imitation of the Orton Hall chimes and the first notes of Carmen Ohio, and it's a perfect October day, the stadium is filled to capacity, I can look out and see Columbus and William Oxley Thompson and I'm thinking about how much I missed the school while I was away and how it will forever be in my heart and I lose it. I'm trying to sing and I can't and tears are rolling down my cheeks and my wife turns to me and says, "I thought you said you didn't like ritual."

So just as the stadium experience is not just about the band, it also isn't just about football. It holds the entire Ohio State experience together, the music, the ritual, the team, the colors, the school, the way everyone sings...

without all that around it, it's just a game.

Finally, dorks or geeks, homos or dillusional, I can think of more "band kids" I'd rather talk with than athletes, (and I taught and coached both) many of whom have a greatly exagerated sense of their value to life on earth.
 
Upvote 0
buckeyegrad;1002383; said:
How old are you? To be sitting there making judgements about the "coolness" of 13-year-olds says more about you than them. At least the band geeks are self-aware of their status.



PWNED.jpg
 
Upvote 0
Buckeye86;1002238; said:
I was in my high school marching band my 8th grade year and always thought the band took themselves way too seriously to a degree that was unbelievably obnoxious to someone who didn't buy into it (aka me). The whole band culture is extremely over the top, and even at my tiny high school they touted the whole "fans are here to see the halftime show not the game" bullshit, I can imagine it's the same in tbdbitl. So while I'm sure the band is full of some over the top people who are extremely obnoxious and take themselves way too seriously, to each their own, and as long as I don't have to be a part of that culture I can still enjoy watching them perform.

Ditto. Almost to the letter--only I was in concert band through middle school.

Cinci: I did, do, and will continue to play that game. And yes, the music is a big part of the experience. I said that a number of times. The center of all this is what 86 said. It's the culture. Many of the band people to whom I've spoken really, truly, honestly believe that they are just as important and entertaining as the teams for which they perform. There may be some schools at which that's true, but Ohio State damn sure isn't one of them. Or maybe we should axe the main football forum and put Ohio State Marching Band Discussion in its place. Takers?

MolGen: I'm not trying to date you, but when were you in? Because (and I could just be completely wrong here) I feel like the band has ballooned into what it is now just over the past fifteen years or so.
 
Upvote 0
buckeyegrad;1002383; said:
How old are you? To be sitting there making judgements about the "coolness" of 13-year-olds says more about you than them. At least the band geeks are self-aware of their status.

I seriously doubt that any of you former band members still consider yourself's to be a geek although it is still probably true. :biggrin:
 
Upvote 0
I play a drumkit. I was in band from 4th to 8th grade. Yes, some members are full of themselves (as occurs in most any accomplishment).

My work does not permit me to pull up YouTube, so just let me recommend that the Top Secret Drum Corps is well worth the watch. This is where the rubber meets the road when it comes to band competing.
 
Upvote 0
vrbryant;1002488; said:
MolGen: I'm not trying to date you, but when were you in? Because (and I could just be completely wrong here) I feel like the band has ballooned into what it is now just over the past fifteen years or so.

No problem. I was in the band in the '95-'97 football seasons, so I suppose it would be early in that fifteen year window. I can't really speak to the ballooning, because I don't exactly know what you mean by that, but I'm happy to provide whatever perspective I can.

I do think the marching band forum sounds entertaining, though. "Who else thinks Ned Finn is really out of place at 2nd trombone? A top-flight snare drummer is way more important, and that's what he was recruited for."
 
Upvote 0
La victoire a moi.

35. Zoe-

I respect what you are trying to do, but Mr. Bryant seems to be the type of person who's only real pleasure in life is hearing his own voice. I've stopped reading his ramblings and read everything that doesn't end with his signature. Nothing would make him happier, I'm sure, than if we just kept feeding him opportunities to talk about how great he is and, as much as I usually am up for debate, there are some people that intelligent discussion is wasted on. He is obviously one of them. So, after this post (thanking Zoe and everyone else that has expressed their view in opposition to Mr. Bryant's) I will not be returning to this article. I will not be reading Mr. Bryant's masterfully-crafted retort (which I'm sure will be there even though I'm not speaking to him). I encourage everyone else that is tired of hearing Mr. Bryant's ill-founded opinion (and yes, opinions can be ill-founded, ask anyone who has ever been stereotyped because of their religion, sexuality, ethnicity, etc.) to do the same. Thank you.

me for the last time | 2007-11-21 - 04:32:22 PM (CDT)
36. Good riddance, quitter.

V. R. Bryant | 2007-11-21 - 04:55:49 PM (CDT)
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top