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The Perfectionists

The History of Rudimental Snare Drumming


From Military Code to Field Competition
BY KEN MAZUR

A
percussion performance with- rolls will consequently be longer, which shell with a primitive timing fuse, Robert
out rudiments is like a lecture will make it appear much more elegant P. Parrott’s rifled 10-pounder, and Tyler
without syllables: the language is and intelligible.”1 Hardened Civil War Henry’s 1860 repeating rifle with a self-
primitive. No one will know what you veterans were entranced by their regi- contained copper cartridge shredded
are trying to say. Rudimental sticking ini- ments’ drumming skills. Phrasing was infantry. Samuel Colt added his pistol, a
tiated all percussive presentation: field not militarily useful, as openly spaced five-pound hand cannon, doubling
competition, drumset coordination, notes were best understood in battle. production for the war. Dr. Richard
and orchestral performance. Because This was music. “And when a dozen or Gatling’s hand-cranked machine gun
of physical, coordination, and mental more of the lads, with their caps set ended matters. With railroads and
demands, rudimental drummers saucily on the sides of their heads, led a steamships available, the drum would
learned to use mind and muscle like regiment in a review with their get-out- become the center of musical battle.
professional athletes to execute com- of-the-way-Old-Dan-Tuckerish style of Field days existed as early as 1874
plex individual solos or attain competi- music, it made the men in the ranks and 1875 in Connecticut, readying for
tive drumline uniformity. step off as though they were bound for the centennial celebration in 1876.
Accuracy was paramount, best a Donnybrook fair or some other plea- Prizes for individual drummers existed,
taught by a knowledgeable mentor, sure excursion.”2 but not the full line. A “best drum
similar to martial-arts training. Use of ru- Drummers were soloing before 1900, corps” silk banner was awarded in
diments in competitive military-styled but no one told the enemy. Lieutenant 1876, made by “ladies in Rockville.”
standstill and marching units allowed Hamilton Hodgson’s diary entry on Au- Newspapers announced best-drummer
for objective comparisons of skill, creat- gust 26, 1898 discusses a tired English awards such as Rockville’s 1877 pair of
ing the catalyst for developing tech- army: “I don’t think I ever appreciated gold-tipped sticks, though the dueling
nique. With technical maturity, drums more. They got a very long step, pistols and rocking chair were handy
rudimental drummers became time and soon the whole brigade was going too.4 Contestants wanted fair evalua-
painters, creating tension and release to the step. After each time they were tion, and prizes taken seriously. Rules
with nuances of proportion, volume, applauded and cheered vociferously. were discussed. Judges were blind-
accent pattern and their counterpoint, Drummer Hill, our show drummer who folded, faced the opposite way, or put
duration, endurance, and texture. prides himself on having a black mark in a barn listening to competitors out-
The snare drum is not a “pretty” in- the size of a penny on the center of the side. Contest quality control had al-
strument; it is an instrument of war. vellum, got his chance occasionally ready begun for 20 minutes or more of
Battlefield commanders desired the with a side drum solo. Poor chap, his individual performance.
quicker tactical maneuvering of smaller drumming days are over as he is An 1894 newspaper tells judges to
units, but were hampered by unreliable wounded in his wrists—bullet came stop being subjective! “Individual drum-
small arms and immobile cannon that through drum first.”3 ming: 1st Long Roll, 2nd 5 Stroke Roll,
needed up to 13 commands to fire. Advancing armies could not be 3rd Double Drag, 4th Treble
Short, simple drum codes better orga- stopped until the battle of Franklin, Ten- Ratamacue, 5th Flam Paradiddle, 6th
nized this effort. As more codes were nessee on November 30, 1864, when Three Camps, and One beat in 2/4 or
needed, space between quarter-note Confederates charged into a few 6/8 time. Judges will confine them-
beats of the early 16th century were pockets of seven-shot repeaters, caus- selves strictly to time and execution
filled with grace notes, flams, and taps, ing troops to impulsively pull their hats in and not the sweetness of tone of instru-
creating a need for qualified battle front of their faces. The Civil War was ments.”5 There was mention of sticking
drummers, whose coordination in- the last to depend on drums to address uniformity such as “four right – one left.”
creased with time. such tactics, although three of the Photos of Civil War vets show left-
By the early 19th century, drummers seven British drummers awarded the handers might not switch. It became a
were holding back or “sweetening” the Victoria Cross for gallantry did so be- judging issue. The Connecticut State
attacks of the prominent, left-hand tween 1914 and 1916 when thousands title was disputed in 1893, but judges
lead, Seven-Stroke Roll, “for in doing of drums went overseas for World War I. “claimed that their decision was based
this, the rests between the strokes and Lt. Henry Shrapnel’s 1784 exploding on points: Gerrish 26 points, Basney 25,

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 10 APRIL 2005


Moore 22. There was a kicking over the til out of breath with exertion.”8 Drum-
judges’ decisions, but that was to be mers still do this same exercise out of
expected among so many contestants. nervous habit to skittishly calm them-
Burns Moore of the Morris Drum Corps, selves—possibly a Civil War warm-up
whom was given 3rd prize for individual exercise.
snare drumming, was particularly in- Reverence to military code was dis-
censed, and said he would never beat appearing. Patrick Murray (Moodus Fife
a drum again.”6 and Drum Corps): “In the late 1880s
J. Burns Moore took out a newspaper and into the 1900s, fife and drum corps
ad challenging Basney and Gerrish to a drummers were mixing with those in the
drum-off. Sidney Basney, lead drummer schools. The kids wanted speed. They
for the Bolton Drum Corps in the late taught in a way that excited them. To
1890s and 1900s, was a black drummer go faster gave a livelier beat. It caught
who beat everybody of his time, re- on.”
ceived seven second places, yet curi- Ed Lemley took lessons from “the wiz-
ously never won. Meriden Ct. August ard of the drum” in the early 1900s:
28, 1895 – Individual Drumming: J. B. Frank Fancher won more snare titles
Moore 69, Sidney Basney 61, F. B. than anyone in history—over 120 in-
Bunnell 58. Moore wins a pair of sleeve cluding eight Connecticut champion-
buttons.7 ships between 1906 and 1924. Walter
Drummers were trying to get in shape Sprance says that the apprenticeship
to win. John Philip Sousa (1886): “A began with Ed arriving early to light
good plan is to hold the sticks together kerosene lamps. After some days, Ed
about three inches from the buttons asked, “When am I going to start drum-
and turn them, at first slowly, and ming?” The reply: “When you can put a
gradually increasing the movement un- drum together properly and work on a
til great rapidity is attained.” An 1897 drum right!” He first had to learn to tuck
book wants this exercise increased “un- drumheads, getting angry carrying and
replacing them. Fancher told him, “You
learn how to do it the right way or
you’re part of the problem.”
If you didn’t take care of a rope
drum, your sound and playing would
suffer. Time spent preening instruments
cost the drummers of yesteryear much
time and frustration. Bobby Redican:
“Fancher was a big powerful guy. He
didn’t play stuff as hard as we did. We
did our own rudimental applications
later—nice rhythmical things.”
To some, rudimental drumming was
doomed, surviving the Depression and
Vaudeville “contraptions” via William F.
Ludwig (1879–1973) and Sanford A.
“Gus” Moeller (1886–1960). While fife
and drum sternly held ground, Bill and
Gus fought rudimental “shortcuts.”
Ludwig had a drum company to influ-
COMPLIMENTS

ence events. Gus was just plain in-


censed, interviewing many old Civil War
drummers at their retirement homes
OF
LANCRAFT FIFE

while on tour with a band in 1925.


The 1927 “talkie” The Jazz Singer with
Al Jolson put “trap” drummers out of
AND

business, but the Depression soon fol-


DRUM CORPS, INC.

lowed. Bobby Redican: “You must un-


derstand that not too many were
dedicated at that time. There weren’t
many good instructors. Moeller played
J. Burns Moore in the Footguard Band in New York. You

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 11 APRIL 2005


had to know what you were doing to tempo, and they all come in together, I Jay Tuomey (Sons of Liberty): “Before
play there.” know the rest of their playing must be the war, Brooklyn is where rudimental
Bill Boerner: “Gus was a drum maker good too.’”11 drumming took off. It had been coming
later on. He would make you one for The Charles T. Kirk drumline (fife, for a long time and went through a
$25. But going up to get it was another drum, and bugle) was the best in the down period. Gus Moeller started it
story. He would have you play it, and if world in the middle and late 1930s, back up. George and Harold Ripperger
he thought you weren’t very good he playing many rudiments using dynam- played like no one else in the world
would ask you to take it off and ‘get ics. The Kirks did not have uniform tech- played. Kirks had a professional look
out of here.’” nique, yet executed a modern 120 and sound—a class act. We [Yonkers
Gus had more than attitude. The beats-per-minute sound via the City] only used 10 different rudiments
Spanish American War corporal per- Ripperger brothers, who went to Con- and played marches, which was not all
ceived prejudice against rudi- that difficult. Charles T. Kirk
mental drummers because of Corps used 25 rudiments just
military camp duty: “The false for one piece! Their instruc-
notion was conceived tor, George Ripperger, was
through rudimental drummers the best around and won
always doing this work, but New York State individuals
they were the only ones who many times. Earl Sturtze was
could do it. The difficult quick- also involved there with the
steps and the army duty are individuals in Kirk’s snare
the highest class of drum- line, a former champion
ming.”9 from the 1920s.”
Gus was very thorough and Al Linquity (Charles T. Kirk):
shockingly aware of “lead- “I played with Ginger
hand switch” coordination, Ploeger, Eric Peririlloux,
using “mind” and “thought” Harold and George
terminology: “This causes the Ripperger at Kirk. The tunes
mind to shift so often from were arranged by Pop
one hand to the other that Rippenger—many progres-
the correct hold and stroke is sion-type pieces and
sure to be neglected as it has themes such as the north
not yet become natural and and south, Scottish, and Irish
still needs thought.”10 music. I was 15 when I
Later in life, Moeller wanted joined. It was a senior
drumming included in the corps—18 was the limit—but
Olympics. Drummers were if you were good they let
adopting scientific methods. you march.”
The trick then was to play on Eric Perrilloux (Charles T.
carbon paper, looking for in- Kirk): “Frank [Martin] was in-
tensity faults and placement volved with Kirk before the
symmetry. Rippengers were there, but
World War I veterans return- it was a low style. Before
ing from “The Great War” in that, the Rippingers played
1918 joined service-organiza- much lower to the drum—six
tion bugle corps, learning the to eight inches. By 1932, the
craft as adults. Rules stipu- corps was doing real rudi-
lated a 45-degree drum mental drumming. In 1937, I
angle, observed in 1920s and Sanford A. “Gus” Moeller on his march from Mount Vernon, NY to was 16 at the time and
’30s Legion parade photos. Boston for the American Legion Convention 1930. youngest in the line. I re-
Everyone played “around the member going to watch
tree”: arms out away from the body necticut and brought back the high- the American Legion M&M finals in New
and sticks at 55- to 60-degree angles to handed style. You earned your spot be- York in ’37. The corps lines were pitiful!
center. fore drum sergeant Harold Ripperger They were really poor drummers. Rudi-
Your ticket into finals competition was on the family kitchen table. His six-inch ments were not common in 1937. Kirk
a good parade score judged only on “army style” questioned, J. Frank Martin had 12 fifers—that was big for a fife
appearance. Simple roll-offs were im- wrote a stinging letter of resignation. line—and 12 horns. At most Kirk had six
portant: “A prominent judge of bands Martin worried about historically au- or eight snares and two or three rudi-
and corps once told us, ‘I can tell just thentic “code,” considering Double mental bass [drums]. Contests at that
how good a drum corps is by their roll- Drags and Paradiddle-Diddles at 128 in time were judged on T, T, and E (time,
off. If they play that clean, up to 6/8 time not physically possible. intonation, and execution). There was

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 12 APRIL 2005


no separate drum sheet. You didn’t get They put him on timing. He didn’t judge
a drum mark. The Kirk corps introduced drums all that much.”
separate sheets for individual sections With Moeller’s wrath finding targets,
in 1938. It was voted on by all the units William F. Ludwig assembled drummers
and it passed.” on June 20, 1933 in Chicago at the
Ed Olsen: “The New York drummers American Legion National Convention
were more or less self taught. Connecti- to form the N.A.R.D., the National Asso-
cut had the famous names: Sturtze, J. ciation of Rudimental Drummers. Al-
Burns Moore, and others. New York had though popular, the gathering drew
Moeller and J. Frank Martin, who was yawns from the fife and drum crowd,
taught by two students of Gardner who were already king of the hill, never
Strube. Martin didn’t like the Connecti- to concede their perky anticipated
cut Ancient style. New York drummers phrasings for World War I vets whose
played with their arms close to their weak left hands couldn’t execute
sides. They drummed close to the head. Seven-Stroke Rolls at faster tempos.
Charles T. Kirk corps picked up the high Judges marked a mistake for every ru-
arm-swing motion because it looked diment, so drum and bugle corps
fancier coming down the street from a opted for the less physical (and in time)
distance. The New York drummers were Five-Stroke Roll. They did agree how dif-
becoming enthusiastic about the Con- ferent Civil War methods would come
necticut style. It affected them. I know forward, resulting in the Standard 26
cause I saw it. They would come from American Rudiments and a breakdown
all over the city by subway, go to Owl’s procedure for contest drumming with
Head Park, and play till the police an acceleration to peak, evenly retard-
came. New York drummers practiced ing to end. To gain membership, one
like hell to play the Connecticut style. had to pass an examination in front of
Eddy Fitzgerald and Jimmy Woods trav- a member.
eled from New York to Connecticut and Sid Skolnick: “I studied with J. Burns
walked ten miles to Sturtze’s house to Moore, and still have my certificate of
take lessons.” membership (#1168), a beautiful docu-
Gus Moeller watched Kirk’s rehearsals ment printed on American Bank Note
in 1931. His students were taught the paper—like money.”
loose right-hand-pinky fulcrum de- Gerd Summer: “I was taking private
scribed by Charles Ashworth (1812) as a lessons from Moore in 1934. It was 25
fencing technique—left hand with a cents for a 30-minute lesson. Those
gap between the thumb and index fin- were the first cuss words I ever heard!
ger. Moeller’s over-dramatic arm mo- We did breakdowns a lot. He always
tion—the arm moving before the bead said, ‘Get your hands up!’ I was told to
of the stick—worked with the slower practice an hour and a half every
Civil War cadence. However, his best day.”
Charles Dickerson FD&B students were Donald A. Fredrickson: “Moore was a
running headlong into economical tap- stickler for ‘sticks up!’ One time he im-
and-grace-note control of Earl Sturtze’s mediately knew I hadn’t practiced. He
young St. Francis students who were threw me out of his studio! Well, I
developing “super-speed” breakdown couldn’t go home, of course! That was
roll peaks at 132 to 140 beats-per- one wake-up call!”
minute. Moeller’s heart was in the right Drum and bugle needed the An-
place but it was already the wrong cients experience. Joe Hathaway, the
time. 1933 American Legion Champion,
Eric Perrilloux: “Moeller had a unique joined a fife and drum corps. “I had
style—a peculiar left-hand motion. been ‘throwing’ the sticks at the drum,
Imagine your left hand on a door knob without any regard to technique. It was
and then twisting it. Very odd. No one necessary to learn all over; I had to
ever played that way before. It didn’t teach my left hand to do its part as well
look like the other players in a line. as the right. I spent many hours before
[You] can’t have that.” a looking glass, practicing and watch-
Al Linquity: “Gus wasn’t the Earl ing my movements to get away from
Sturtze-type drummer. He had a loose ragged and careless execution.”12
style. You’d never win a rudimental Joe Mirsky (Post 95 FD&B): “We were
contest with it…but he judged a lot. encouraged to practice in front of mir-

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 13 APRIL 2005


rors. We had very slanted drums—had most touching to begin and end a biological particularities.”13 “Talent iden-
to wear cloth on the knee. Some tied breakdown. Period books show drum- tification is better before puberty
their drum to their knee. Judges were in mers—even J. Burns Moore—writing (Dragan, 1979) and includes (Kunst and
Marine uniforms—an eagle eye out for stick clicks into street beats and raising Florescu, 1970): motor capacity, psy-
everything. I can play very nicely on a the opposite hand for a visual while chological capacity and biometric
pillow—did it a lot in 1936.” playing one-handed forte quarter qualities, including physical build and
Competition was mostly breakdowns, notes. bone formations.”14
possibly 85 of 100 points. The solo Ed Lemley was involved with the Sturtze took over the St. Francis paro-
showed which rudiments you could NARD in 1933 and ’34. His most famous chial school students of Dan English, a
break down! Recaps show three to six “ahead of the times” drum beat is de- Lancraft Connecticut champion who
were required. All solos were judged for scribed by Walter Sprance, who is mar- died young in 1931. [Lancraft Fife and
tempo consistency of the “Ancient 110” ried to Ed’s granddaughter: “‘Crazy Drum represented by Connecticut
and “Modern 120,” a machine de- Army’ was written at Christmas time. It champions George Gallagher (1911,
signed by Moeller. The judging of 1890 was 1933 or ’34. Ken Lemley’s father 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915), Harold Kling
was more general commenting, and had built a crystal radio. He was listen- (1920, 2nd 1924), Earl Sturtze (1916, 2nd
timing could decide your fate, but soon ing to a station from Ireland at two or 1917, 2nd 1918, 1919, 1922, 1923, 1928
judges were counting the number of ru- three in the morning and in his mind he with Yalesville), Dan English (1925, 1926,
diments you played. Those who played got some parts going to the music. Ed 1927, 2nd 1928, 1929), and Nathan
less than ten had scores reduced by 20 used to be a blacksmith and a tool Marks (1933, 2nd 1934)]15 Sturtze disliked
to 30 percent. merchant. He built Ken a curved wasted arm motion and lower New York
Joseph A. Gillotti: “Eddie Keane and footboard on his bed that flipped over methods where rolls didn’t sound open.
the Hatter’s Drum Corps were open to practice on. You could adjust it to J. Burns Moore used high grace notes,
season for the likes of Sturtze. My father the proper height. He used to teach the remnants of military code. The
told me the story where Earl made a ten-year-old Kenny on it. Ed didn’t trust Sturtze kids could play pp to fff. There
comment on a contest sheet that the his memory so he had Kenny learn the was definitely a right and wrong way to
Hatters were not playing rudiments and part before he went to bed. It was not now spend practice time.
was subsequently disparaged by J. too well received. They would never Gary Pagnozzi (P.A.L. Cadets):
Burns Moore: ‘If they’re not rudiments, accept something that syncopated “Sturtze didn’t think much of Ludwig’s or
then what in the hell are they, Earl?’” back then.” Burns Moore’s breakdowns. They didn’t
Individual contests might be decided The father of scientific rudimental do them properly. Moore had a higher
by ancillary items. Joe Hathaway was technique was Earl Sturtze (1901–1984), note height and pounded his accents.
defeated soundly in his first contest a ten-year-old student of Carl Frolich (of Sturtze was lower.”
(1932) because of his “inspection” J. Burns Moore tutelage) who played Bobby Redican: “Sturtze pupils had
mark. He studied Training Regulations with the Zigfield Follies. His greatest the upper hand all over. Most of his stu-
No. 75-5 “Specialists” Field Music—The achievements were to adapt a style dents became fine rudimentalists—
Bugler, from the Government Printing template to individual physiology and quite a hardy reputation. Sturtze’s style
Office for 10 cents. In his second con- use the weight of the forearm for better was more practical. He had more suc-
test after practicing hours every day— power, dynamics, and control—more cessful methods of teaching—a lot of
uniform pressed and “putts” shined—in efficient use of the arms. motion with good execution. Rippergers
1933, he won. Hathaway describes Olympic coaches agreed years later: had tried to pick that up.”
1930s’ “flash” as “highly desirable,” “The coach has to properly correlate Eric Perrilloux: “All the top drummers
holding his sticks in a horizontal plane, the structure of a technical skill with were Sturtze drummers. They had speed
parallel to the ground, the beads al- each individual’s psychological and and power in their rolls and could go a
notch higher and faster than anyone
else. I could never get as closed or fast
as Quigley or Redican at their best. I
played harder stuff but Redican had
power and speed. PERFECT! I wish I
knew how they did it!”
They did it because there were more
potential players than instruments dur-
ing the Depression. Children improved
or were sent home. Sturtze was techni-
cally ahead of his peers, constantly
judging, running his own contests with
ribbons and awards, writing score
sheets and giving clinics.
Jack McGuire (St. Francis): “So many
kids were playing in St. Francis at that
time, if you goofed off you were out.

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 14 APRIL 2005


Ray Ludee and I were both cut the first Jack Tencza (Landcraft): “I used to decelerates. Breakdown length differs:
night! There were 30 or 40 of us trying pinch for faster rudiments. Flam grace Stone (1931): from three to six minutes.
out. A couple months later I came to notes were not even an inch off the Sturtze (1954): one-and-a-half minute
practice and told Sturtze I hadn’t been drum—a quarter, maybe an eighth of acceleration and a one-and-a-half
there before.” an inch. Very low! Redican more than minute ritard. McCormick (1965): two
Matt Lyons (St. Francis): “The 3rd- Sturtze would pinch the stick—grip minutes. This was carried forward to the
grade level was in competition. The girls harder at the accents.” beginning of DCI Individuals in 1973,
played bugle and the guys played Larry McCormick (Cavaliers): “You and eliminated in 1984. PAS has re-
drums. There were many contests, 20 to squeeze the stick. It helps control the re- cently used one minute but is changing
30 a year. Sturtze would teach three or bound. That’s what Frank [Arsenault] to a more representative test at 90 sec-
four corps in one day. Sturtze was a said to do.” onds. The discipline is similar to the ba-
better technician than others—a Ger- Hand placement changed. The im- sic instruction of skaters’ “figures” where
man type perfectionist; very methodi- portant item was not “from the end” judges go on ice to observe “edges”
cal. He kept a 3 x 5 card on me and but “how close to” the center of grav- (etchings). Similarly, drummers looked
even rated me after I was playing in the ity. Playing near the end of a stick tires for volume consistency, note spacing,
Stratford Legion corps with Arsenault! the muscle system; you’re moving more and a gradual change in tempo.
He would take me in his car with him— weight, causing more accent rebound. Breakdowns—like exercises—are a
5th, 6th, and 7th graders—to other Hold too far up and you lose wrist hinge musical simulation: “It has been only
corps rehearsals. We would go to a motion. History shows a movement over since the 1970s that [there has been] a
practice and then he would take me to 150 years toward the center of gravity. strong desire to link an athlete’s training
have supper. He did this with a lot of Potter (1815): Two and one half inches process through modeling. A model is
kids. You learn by watching others play. from the end (probably 19-inch sticks an imitation, a simulation of reality
Sturtze took a giant step.” 3/4 to 1-inch diameter). Sousa (1886): made out of specific elements of the
Jean Lyons (St. Francis): “At St. Francis Three inches from the end. Sturtze sport…[and] should incorporate only
there was an iron fence at the property (1930s): about four inches from the butt those means of training which are iden-
line. They would march us right off the end of the sticks. Toumey (1968): Hold tical to the nature of competition.”18
property to that fence. You step to the an eighth of an inch behind center of The transition from military technique
beat of the drum between classes. And gravity. Micah Brusse (2004), Blue Devil and march music to show tunes and
you stayed in line. If you got low grades snare tech: “We cut the stick into thirds other genres in bugle corps was due to
the principal would threaten to take and grip at the last third.” As tempos in- technically proficient breakdown drum-
you out of the corps.” creased, stick diameters reduced to a mers from fife and drum executing the
Drummers were closing their hands “3S” (.750-inch diameter) and beads “26” in new combinations having longer
around the stick more—“pinching”—to became much smaller. phrases. The pride-of-the-Ancients 7-
use more physical pressure, avoiding Champion drummers from 1875 to and 15-stroke rolls were whittled to 5’s
Moeller’s “pinky finger” pressure advo- 1983 built coordination and speed using and 9’s because drummers enjoyed
cated by early 19th-century authors. a difficult 300-year-old method of marching to faster tempos of popular
Flams have always measured a rudi- gauging progress—the breakdown— music. The threads that would sew
mental drummer’s coordination. Sturtze: where one gradually accelerates and code drumming to different music
“The instant the stick strikes the pad,
squeeze it with the fingers sufficiently to
prevent it from bounding up, since the
right stick must now stay down.”16
Rebound was now technically de-
fined: a more physical solution to bet-
ter-position interior notes between
accents; a small note placed with
economy of motion, not “lifted” by the
forearm. Military code needed volume.
This was musical efficiency.
Jay Tuomey: “You simply turn the
wrist. Nothing more need be done for a
flam grace note.” Such consistency de-
veloped professional-quality execution
and dynamics. “Pinching the stick in this
manner and keeping the last two fin-
gers closed around it will result in the
complete control which is necessary to
play firm, steady beats.”17
Bobby Redican: “I used a tight
squeeze for certain rudiments.”

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 15 APRIL 2005


genres were pleasing accent patterns There were great rivals. Some never ing Frankie. He would go fast—fast but
found in Flam coordination, Ruff-Rat- talked to each other. Redican and not steam clean. The judges that knew
Drag combinations, and mastery of Perrilloux would pal around together, him let him get away with it. He was
continuous accented rolls, items of but compete fiercely. Hugh Quigley someone to target. I watched him
technical superiority. How could this was very gregarious and was liked by quite a bit. I learned that way.”
happen breaking down only 26 varia- all. Les Parks could be aloof and arro- Better drummers wrote their own so-
tions? gant at times but was a great player. los, but New York had to pick selections
• A drummer’s greatest responsibility Redican had a very wide-open style— from military camp duty, allowing Con-
is to control time. Breakdowns require high and open. He was a perfectionist. necticut more difficult fillers. Redican
each note to be mentally, then physi- Frank Arsenault had big arm motion but used Flam Paradiddle Diddles and
cally, placed in time—no “guessing.” was very fast—a very open style with double accented Single and Double
They teach how to bend time and mas- high attacks. He was a human ma- Paradiddles to win 46 of 70 contests. So-
ter note separation—the ability to chine. Hugh and Frank both were per- los were usually 1:30 to 1:45. The long
make minute adjustments. This helps fectionists—drumming fanatics. Hugh roll was requisite with two more picked
the student master the art of concen- was very smooth with speed—great ex- out of a hat by the first competitor or
tration, the most important aspect of ecution. I would say it was Frank num- judge. One 2/4 and 6/8 piece was re-
professionalism. ber one and Hugh number two as the quired. Breakdown errors were be-
• Breakdowns establish a strong co- best I ever saw. Connecticut, New York tween one-fourth and two full points
ordination template with hand-to-hand State, and Hudson Valley Field Day depending on severity.
playing. Left-hand-lead practice im- brought out the snare drummers Charley Poole: “You could be
proves the normal right-hand-lead by against each other.” (Hugh Quigley awarded up to one more point for “su-
20 to 30 percent. won 60 snare titles, six Connecticut per speed” on your fastest breakdown
• Two wrist turns for a diddle pro- State Championships, two American speed. Many times, I would score over
duced more physical control of the Legion National Titles and 12 Northeast the maximum 25 points because of it. If
second note. Breakdowns force a Titles.) the draw was the Triple Ratamacue or
player to learn the difficult point at Al Linquity: “Redican was one of the Flam Paradiddle-Diddle, it was a killer.
which the brain must switch from two greatest students Sturtze ever had. He Most couldn’t do it well—kind of like
thoughts to one per diddle, an impor- was kind of aloof then. I mean every- Swiss Triplets hand to hand; a sign of
tant maturation of mental concentra- one got along but it was WIN THAT manhood. My father would drive me to
tion and coordination. MEDAL! Pretty fierce. Very fierce!” a contest in New York somewhere. Reg-
• Endurance. There is no “rest period” John Flowers (Reading Buccaneers): istration was at 8:00 p.m. It would go till
or “timeout.” Mental lapses place the “Redican was more powerful, but 4:00 a.m. We would go out and get
discipline of many simultaneous factors Arsenault was just a machine.” breakfast.”
in jeopardy: volume, position, accent Bobby Redican: “I always liked beat- North Branford Fife and Drum Corps
power, timing, coordination, fatigue,
and how to adjust to fatigue after peak
speed during a ritard. Changing your
grip due to fatigue is a risk. They played
strong through the head and were in
excellent physical condition.
• They learned perfect form at slow
tempos, therefore able to drive when
speeding.
• They learned to play with large mo-
tions, allowing their instructors a better
view of physical errors. Large motions
develop better coordination.
Breakdown drummers used the
weight of their hands and forearms
symmetrically, producing power and
balanced dynamic volume. They were
unbeatable except against each other.
Jay Tuomey: “All the great drummers
cordially hated each other. It was war!
Individuals were a dogfight! They were
all great players. The Sons of Liberty
had all the great rivals: Les Parks vs.
George Ripperger and Perrilloux, Bobby
Thompson vs. Hugh Quigley, Howard
Keanally and Bill Pace…just a war. Sons of Liber ty (l to r): Jay Tuomey, Bobby Thompson and Les Parks

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 16 APRIL 2005


As M&M corps learned the same ru-
diments and competitive pieces; they
drifted away from centuries-old military
beatings. Perrilloux went to the Skyliners
in 1953, liking the freedom of swing
rhythms. During the 1930s and 1940s,
most field drum lines marched eight or
nine snares with four or five bass drums
because regulation TR75-5 stipulated
two bugles or three fifes for every snare
drum.
Gabarina Post—the Skyliners—were

COMPLIMENTS OF
last of the large champion lines before
a 3-3-2 snare-tenor-bass ensemble be-
came most efficient with harder rudi-

CAROL HOOTEN
ments and faster tempos under the tick
system. A method had not yet been
developed to train eight snares to ex-
ecute difficult rudiment combinations
1958 Reilly Raiders
cleanly.
won best drumline at the New York novice players filled bugle corps ranks, Ed Olsen: “It was the fife and drum
World’s Fair competitions of 1939 and the metered roll became standard. An- drummers that taught the M&M corps.
1940. Five J. Burns Moore students were cients called it “cut drumming.” Stop They didn’t get the fife and drum in-
using dynamics like the Kirks. Ralph Col- cheating! The Ancients 7- and 15-stroke struction until after the war. Then
ter: “We were the first line to do shad- roll attacks were delayed after the Garbarina came.”
ing. The initial strokes of a seven were “and” of the beat without mathemati- Bill Boerner (Gabarina/Skyliners): “It
crescendoed into the accent. Eighth- cal subdivision. They also held releases was the tempos that pushed 7-Stroke
note flams after this were very soft. Well, back to play 24th-note singles Rolls into 5’s. We played many 7-Stroke
it caught on. There was no credit on quicker—and out of meter—at phrase Rolls, but at 128, those two extra notes
the sheets for it, though, but for exhibi- endings. Bugle corps tried this to no would be crushed in. We had to drop it
tions, it was very effective.” avail. to 5’s. We had eight snares in 1946, ’47,
Bill Reamer: “We played solos like John Pratt: “I saw the Geneva and ’48, Philly in ’49, California in ’50,
‘Downfall of Paris,’ ‘The General,’ and Appleknockers in the 1948 and ’49 sea- and Missouri…actually till ’54. We were
‘Connecticut Halftime.’ Some made up sons. They were doing 7’s and 15’s. Ev- winning: seven state and two national
their own. There must have been over a eryone else was doing 5’s and 13’s. titles. We played all the 26 rudiments.
hundred drummers there that day. It They got killed for it.” Drum instructors were now in demand. I
was dominated by Connecticut. I took
13th place. It started early in the morn-
ing and went all day.”
The 1940 American Legion National
Junior Snare Drum Championship was
an invitational contest of east versus
west sponsored by Ludwig. George
Lawrence Stone was the drum judges
chairman, flanked by William F. Ludwig
and J. Burns Moore. Connecticut domi-
nated the order of finish: Bobby
Redican, James Ryan, Mickey
Stefonowitz, Sigmond Trybus, and Frank
Arsenault. Vincent Mott was the highest
placing western drummer, defeating
William F. Ludwig Jr. Redican was 17,
winning a $75 red, white, and blue
mother-of-pearl 12 x 16 drum, a lot of
money at that time.
Recordings of the 1953 Charles T. Kirks
and early 1950s Blessed Sacrament and
Reilly Raiders make it very apparent
that timing was skewed to add that
little bit of superior Ancient flavor. As

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 17 APRIL 2005


ended up teaching 15 to 20 corps my- Connecticut style back to Pennsylva- musters would attract all the great
self.” nia, resulting in a national American Le- drummers from the past. At Westbrook,
Don Friesing (Skyliners): “At Sky we gion junior championship for the there would be a jam session after the
would get our drums level using string McCall Bluebirds in 1947—the first junior corps performances with the younger
stretched across the line. There was an bugle corps to play Ratamacues—and kids trying to play faster and outdo
American Legion rule that stated the the Osmond Hurricanes in 1948 and ’49 each other. The old cats simply ‘got the
drums should be on a 45-degree angle. for his students’ line, John Dowlan. Fife nod’ and retired to Bobby Thompson’s
It’s not physically possible to play with and drum corps played Ratamacues car. Hugh Quigley, Ken Lemley, Bill
that severe an angle! We marched in before 1812. Pace, Bobby Thompson, Tuomey,
two rows of four with the better drum- Ed Olsen: “The fife and drum corps’ Redican, Perrilloux—the boys—started
mers to the outside. Colo- their own music. It wasn’t
nel Pierce, the instructor of long before there were 20 or
Skyliners, would add syn- 30 kids gathered around star-
copation to the parts be- ing at their drumming idols.”
tween snares and tenors.” Bill Reamer: “J. Burns Moore
In 1947, Bill Reamer (VFW and Sturtze students were
individual champion 1938, picking the hands up. They
1941, and 1946), did as the also were the ones who usu-
Ripperger brothers and ally won. In 1947, we did rudi-
packed his McCall Blue- mental drum solos. I had Bill
bird students and 8mm Maling and Don Mihok at
movie camera into his Osmond. Many of the lines
Volkswagen van to see the back then were doing 10 or
greatest players in the 12 snares. It was not clean.
world at Connecticut mus- They had to cut it down. They
ters, where Sturtze’s win- didn’t play well. I cut the line
ning students were on to four and four with two
display. Earl had kept their bass. We did breakdowns in
phone numbers and the Burns Moore style and
called them after the war. used Stone book examples.”
Reamer brought the high Bill Reamer Bill Bernert (McCall Blue-

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 18 APRIL 2005


birds): “In 1947, Pop Martin [J Frank threw that stick about 20 yards. That
Martin] saw that Reamer was doing same season, Bob took another guy
‘Connecticut Halftime’ and ‘Downfall who was not a tenor and had a doctor
of Paris’ as drum solos on the field. No put his arm in a sling. It was done up
one had done that before. Martin went perfectly! They got that rule changed
berserk! He couldn’t believe what he because of him.”
was seeing! A lot of the lines were still National titles won by Reilly Raiders’
playing rump-da-dum stuff. We were 1947 line (John Dowlan, Harry Ginther,
playing Ratamacues! We won drums. and Charlie Cornilius), and Reamer’s
Reamer was way ahead of his time. He McCall Bluebirds (Bill Maling, Don
put rudiments in drum corps.” Mihok, Jack Corey, and Jack Kasm)
Don Mihok (Osmond Cadets,1949 ended the World War I influence. To
VFW Jr. Snare Champion): “Reamer earn a snare spot in these senior and
taught us ‘Troublemakers.’ It was a tap junior champions, you now needed ru-
six-stroke roll. No one had seen or done dimental style training, preferably when
them then.” young. Reilly would tear through the
The “Rodney Dangerfield” of rudi- 1950s, winning six national titles behind
ments was the Six-Stroke Roll because the strength of a serious and dedicated
Ancients thought it sounded like a drumline that went to show sites a day
Ratamacue. Why play a “6” when you early in their Irish green hearse. Drum
can switch hands? It does not appear major Wild Bill Hooten threw second-
in historical military instruction books, place trophies over the fence.
and if it does, only as “practice mate- Bobby Redican: “Reilly Raiders in the
rial,” which is odd considering its gener- early and late 1950s was a hell of a
ous charging downbeat and easy good line. Their tenor drummers were
execution. As tempos increased after equally as competent. They could all
the war, everybody learned the rudi- duplicate parts so it sounded like the
ment with no respect. original recordings. Corps were playing
Before 1950, a judge could not pick the Boston Pops pieces then. Their drum
up a dropped stick. Enter Bob Cotter, solo was in the middle of the competi- ❅ ❅
director of the Jersey Joes, Legion tion. You better believe they were
champions in 1948, second in ’49. Nat clean!”
Garratano (Jersey Joes): “At one con- Charlie Cornelius (Reilly Raiders): “The
test at New Jersey State, one tenor first thing we would do at practice was SINCE 1988
drummer was not that good. Bob took go through all the rudiments. We did
an extra horn player and put him on the open roll and broke it down. Doing VINTAGE & CUSTOM DRUM MAGAZINE
tenor. He was to drop his stick and go breakdowns helped us interpret the ru-
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E: NSMDjohn@aol.com
Eric Perrilloux, Bobby Redican and Ken Mazur (October 2003) ❅ ❅

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 19 APRIL 2005


the drum was now so you could beat pinky on the left hand. Les brought dy- a much lower drum. It was the last
into it instead of off it, especially the namics to the Sons in 1950. Competi- piece of the physics puzzle. With it,
left hand.” tors thought this a bad idea, but Bobby Thompson’s Blessed Sacrament
Bob Adair (Reilly Raiders): “Many of everyone was using dynamics next junior line immediately started to domi-
us were raising families, so we had to season. Tuomey says that Sturtze used nate in 1954 with their first national title.
practice at home. For a big show we to “scalp” them because they were Bill Reamer believed Audubon’s 1954
had extra practices. It was a weekend not dynamically “by the book.” Parks— all-girl corps had raw talent. The
thing. You had a job and raised your the innovator—was turning pages Audubon Bon Bons won the drum
family.” faster than Sturtze wanted to read. quartet competition in 1956 and took
The extended endurance of Harry Jay Tuomey (Sons of Liberty): “Parks high drums at the ’57 Atlantic City na-
Ginther’s “Grey Ghost” (1958) Reilly was very inventive using Swiss, Lesson tionals. A female line of 18-year old
Raider drum solo, influencing Fred 25 and Pada-fla-fla rudiments in the high school seniors gained peer re-
Johnson’s “Magoo” (1959), the Cabal- early 1950s. My dealings with Sturtze spect by beating everybody. Everyone
leros “The Bomb” (1960), and others were informal. He played with a [left] says you could set your watch by the
broke tradition. A 13 1/2 minute show half thumb. This was not as precise as breakdowns of 1957 National Snare
had time for two short drum solos and Les Parks, who used all index finger and Champion Rita Macy.
one long one. The famous “Grey no thumb. The [curled] pinky acts like a Rita (Macy) Bernert: “We were al-
Ghost” solo had extended rolls and pendulum, turning the left hand down. ways together and liked to be on top.
Drags supported by tenor and bass It changes the center of gravity of the We really hated band. In corps you al-
notes. entire hand and keeps the left hand ways try to do better than your last
Paul Mosley: “The ‘Grey Ghost’ was from going flat. Les would stand on show. You needed dedicated prac-
the national anthem of rudimental table-tops and look down at all the tice. I always practiced one or two
drumming. That kicked it off. You did styles. He used a big mirror as well and hours a day. The people next door
not have drum solos with rolls and spent hours on the perfection of the weren’t too happy! My brothers were
drags in those days.” Palettes now wid- left-hand turn. So did Sturtze. One ready to shoot me! I liked it. It’s in you. I
ened so no two percussion arrangers common element was to move the wanted to be perfect. Bill Reamer
would sound the same. Reilly didn’t like sticks in the same plane; VERY IMPOR- wrote my snare solo, ‘The Rita Macy
tradition anyway, presenting a drum TANT!” Special.’ It had fancy 6/8 stuff in it. Dan
solo at the front of the field and sneak- Marty Hurley (Blessed Sacrament): Mihok in the seniors used the same
ing rudiments in not from the “26.” “When the pinky finger is back it forms solo. Reamer wrote some rudiments
Jay Tuomey: “The best M&M corps a better bridge for the stick to rest on. that didn’t even have names! I beat
up till 1950 was the Reilly Raiders. There The ring finger is less likely to move. Les John Flowers and all those from the
was nothing west of Philly at that time. and Bobby spent hours perfecting the west—the guys from Cavies. Men are
They introduced new rudiments—very technique. They wanted a method always cocky! I lost by two tenths in
sharp. They had some guy they called that had the left hand under more ’56. St. Vinnie guys said that their guy
Ghost as a drum sergeant.” Harry control.” won on his hand salute—that mine
Ginther named “The Grey Ghost” solo Jack Cassidy (Reilly Raiders): “The didn’t look as good. Were they kidding
after Jimmy Giles. Reilly Raiders played similar to Bobby or was it true? Who knows? You have
Jimmy Giles: “We had two different Thompson’s style but without the left to pay some dues, you know?”
drum instructors. Ginther was there, but grip. We didn’t do the pinky thing. We John Flowers: “I saw Rita in ’57. She
Perrilloux was coming in from New Jer- didn’t see a benefit to it until we sat wiped my socks! Man, she had excel-
sey. Eric Perrilloux was the tops! The down with Bobby and he showed us lent rolls!”
three snares didn’t like each other all the benefit of the style. We tried it and Charles Ellison (St. Vincent Cadets,
the time. Sometimes we would com- it works!” 1956 National Snare Champion):
plain and moan. We had different Parks reduced stick angles from 55 “Bobby Thompson got Les [Parks] to
styles. After three or four years of play- degrees to 45 degrees or slightly less, come over to our corps. He was with us
ing together you get to know each taking better advantage of the human from 1954 to ’58. Les kept the arm in. It
other. We would argue about who muscle and bone system, much closer was all forearm. We practiced all 26 ru-
made a mistake! No one ever made to the center of gravity of the body, re- diments. The middle finger was straight
them! There were marks on the score sulting in more power and control. El- on the left hand. The right hand had a
sheet but no one made them! It wasn’t bows are now at the back of the back, grip between the thumb and forefin-
me!” not extended “around the tree.” An- ger. We all learned drumming before
Unlike Kirk and Reilly, the Sons of Lib- other Sons of Liberty contribution is the Les came, so our styles were a bit dif-
erty Fife and Drum Corps (1947–1968) hand angle on the wrist hinge. The “S” ferent. Les had a dry sense of humor.
demanded everyone play one style in or “power train” is formed when a flat He was very scholarly about drumming.
the early 1950s. Juilliard alumnus Les right wrist moves to the right, from the He approached it as music. There was
Parks ran the corps and taught the tip of the thumb to the wrist hinge and no backsticking then—no twirls—but
drum line, assisted by Bobby Thomp- the wrist hinge up the forearm, then you could improvise in your solo.”
son. They used Sturtze’s arm motion straight to the shoulder. Go left and The plastic heads used by the 1957
with a rigid middle finger and curled you play more like they did in 1920 on Cavaliers to win a very humid Miami fi-

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 20 APRIL 2005


nals would save many hours of tuning Veronica (Bentze) Sturtze (Winner, 17. Sturtze, Section 1
and practice time, yet have a similar Feminine Class—1940 New York World’s 18. Bompa, p. 40
sound and technique. Calfskin could Fair, Connecticut Senior and Northeast-
lose its tension in eight measures, “turn- ern States Champion): “In the contests, Ken Mazur was mentored by Jay
ing into pizza.” Plastic kept its tension. we did breakdowns and you didn’t Tuomey of the Sons of Liberty Fife and
Sort of… know which rudiments would be Drum Corps and John Wallace of
Ron Marcquenski (Cavaliers): “We picked. So I took my drum to school. Detroit’s Johnny Wallace Big Band and
were a test corps. When Frank The principal would send up notes tell- Orchestra. He received further instruc-
[Arsenault] got there he would bring ing me to stop. Teachers would say, tion from Bobby Thompson, Mark Petty,
new stuff over—plastic heads. We ‘She doesn’t know when to stop! She and Marty Hurley. Ken won many
ripped them and cracked them—too doesn’t know how to stop!’ When I was Michigan drumset and snare titles, then
hard, too soft. We were denting them, 17 years old, the Lyrics Theatre had tal- captured the 1976 DCI World Snare
splitting them.” ent shows. There were 35 more people Drum Championship representing the
The metal hoop for plastic was much in it! I played the long roll and solo. My Phantom Regiment. After instructing in
lower than the wood of a rope-tension father cried; ‘That’s my daughter!’ This Rockford and authoring books, he
drum. Now John Dowlan’s “stretching was during the Depression. I won five served as percussion caption head
exercise” could be used, something dollars and gave it to my mother. I and president of the Michigan judges
called “backsticking.” A girl might get went into [individual] competitions. A circuit. His book, The Perfectionists: The
to play snare if she could find another few times I beat the guys. I had many History of Rudimental Snare Drumming,
girl to “balance” the line on each side. second prizes. I can still drum. It gets in will soon be complete. PN
Devon Grammar School had such an your blood, you know.”
occurrence. It certainly does.

ENDNOTES
1. Robinson, Alvan. Massachusetts Collec-
tion of Martial Music (Hallowell: E.
Goodale,1818), p.8
2. Miller, Delavan S., Drum Taps In Dixie
(Watertown, N.Y.: Hungerford-Holbrook),
1905
3. Barty-King, Hugh. The Drum (London, En-
gland, The Royal Tournament Horse
Guards, 1988), p.106
4. Compliments of The Company of Fifers
and Drummers, Ivoryton, Ct.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid.
8. Jean White’s Edition of Flockton’s New
Method for the Side Drum, Xylophone
and Timpani, 1897
9. Moeller, Sanford A. The Art of Drumming
(Chicago: Ludwig Drum Company), 1925,
p.10
10. Moeller, p.7
11. The Ludwig Drum and Bugle Manual
(Cleveland: Ludwig Music Pub. Co. n.d.),
p.22
COMPLIMENTS

12. The Slingerland Drum and Bugle Corps


Digest, Spring 1933, p.11 (Compliments of
Lancraft Fife and Drum corps, Inc.)
OF

13. Bompa Tudor O. The Theory and Meth-


LANCRAFT FIFE & DRUM CORPS, INC.

odology of Training, (Dubuque, Iowa:


Kendall/Hunt, 1988), p.71
14. Bompa, p. 336, 337
15. Compliments of Lancraft Fife and Drum
Corps, Inc.
16. Sturtze, Earl. The Sturtze Drum Instructor
(Ivoryton, Ct.: reissued by The Company
Veronica (Bentze) Sturtze of Fifers and Drummers, orig. 1956), p.25

PERCUSSIVE NOTES 21 APRIL 2005


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