Feature from "The Class" Magazine
VocalMotion
Alexis Merrell,
Valley HS
Some students wish to be in
band or choir outside of or in addition to school.
Las Vegas Marching Arts is giving those students
the chance to do just that. It has been started by
Randy Warner, animal rights activist and musician,
to give the students of Southern Nevada something
to do. The high school students in Las Vegas do
not have much of an opportunity to work as part of
a team and to develop themselves. Once again, here
is their chance. With LVMA, Randy Warner is
working to develop a strong and impressive
infrastructure for growth and expansion into a
multilevel youth music education organization. He
can be contacted by e-mail at
21stcares@citlink.net. Here is what he has to say
about his program.
What exactly is Las
Vegas Marching Arts?
Las Vegas Marching
Arts is the newest and one of the most creative
youth music education organizations. Our goal is
to become the sponsor and supporter for a world-
class competitive Drum and Bugle Corps by 2010.
And we also will be having competitive dance teams
and percussion teams through Winter Guard
International and Color Guard competitions. One of
the most creative ideas that we are going to be
doing is working with our choral experience called
VocalMotion, one of the programs that we have
already started. It will entail large numbers of
very creative and talented singers that can come
to us at any level. We will bring the staff to
help them become the singers and entertainers they
hope to be. We will be a choir that doesn’t stand
on risers and look over our left shoulder with an
artificial smile. Rather we will be in motion or
performing without being called a show choir at
all.
Not being on risers, what are you
expecting to do?
For example, if you were
at a convention with your best friend in the world
and you were looking at the exhibits through the
different aisles that go just like a checkerboard
and all of a sudden at a cue, all of the
performers would start singing a capella
throughout the convention center, bringing all the
attendees right into the middle of a musical
production. It’s something that just doesn’t
happen everyday. What we’re trying to do with Las
Vegas Marching Arts, especially VocalMotion to
start with, is to gather ideas to where each one
of our programs and performers can offer in Las
Vegas something very unique and different that you
could not get any place else in the country. We
will be performing in parades, and we will not be
marching, but will be strolling down the street as
they do in the Disneyland Parade, as an
idea.
What are your plans for
VocalMotion specifically?
We want these
kids to become entertainers, more confident within
themselves, to learn public performance and
speaking. We want these performances, instrumental
and vocal, to enhance and enrich the currently
existing programs of Clark County and other
Southern Nevada School Districts amongst junior
and senior high schools and colleges. We do not
have a minimum age requirement. We also do not
have a maximum age requirement in most of our
programs. We want them to learn how to become
individuals and perfect their individuality while
learning to be creative, stand on their feet and
also work as a team.
Why did you start
Las Vegas Marching Arts?
Well, I’ll tell
you a little short story. Everyone has their own
gimmick, something they’re just born with.
Whenever my parents would go to parades, I would
kick and scream with joy when the marching band
would go by. By the time I was three and we would
go to the Ohio State Fair, my parents would go and
sit at the tent to visit with people from our
church and all of a sudden they would realize that
I wasn’t beside them anymore. Anyway, they knew
where to find me. They would call the police and
say, “Our little boy is lost. We don’t know where
he is, but we know where you can find him. You can
find him behind whichever marching band is
performing at the moment anywhere on the
fairgrounds.” I could hear the bass drum and the
band playing. It was a requirement that I be there
to help them. So I’d run across the fairgrounds.
It didn’t matter where they were. I could find my
way to where that band was and I would start
following them. So I have been thinking about this
for 51 years to answer your question. I have been
in marching band every minute I could, in high
school and college. I have been involved with 12
or 13 Drum and Bugle Corps in the last 35 years in
every aspect including Board of Directors, food
preparation, bus driving, T-shirt sales, housing
kids, and working their bingo games for
fundraising. I thought it would be fun to try and
do something like this. I have been successful in
my life. It’s amazing to me that with the
entertainment and the gross that Nevada has that
there has never been even a Drum and Bugle Corps
competition held in Nevada. In perspective, Oregon
has two competitions a year and three Drum and
Bugle Corps. It shouldn’t surprise me saying that
Las Vegas is an extremely adult-oriented town and
the kids are just here and don’t really
matter.
How many youth are you looking
to join?
It would be perfect if we had 150,
for the simple reason that the bigger
parades--such as the Fiesta Bowl, Hollywood
Christmas Parade, and the Rose Parade--that have
asked us to sing or send in applications require
large groups. For Disneyland and Huntington Beach,
we can easily squeeze by with 50. Not a problem at
all, but obviously the more, the better.
We
even have means for the singers to earn full
scholarships in a variety of ways. We just want
them to enjoy this unique experience and take some
marvelous education away with them,
too.
Thank you very much for your time.