By Joe BrownRandy Warner has
always heard the beat of a different drummer. Now,
after 27 years as a very vocal animal protection
activist, Warner is a man with an all-new mission.
And he wants Las Vegas to march along with
him.
In formation.
Here’s the
vision: Nevada’s first drum and bugle corps "Las
Vegas Blvd", which
Warner hopes to develop into a world-class
competitor by 2012. The ambitious plans also
include a 150-voice “marching choir” called VocalMotion.
But wait, there’s more! —
percussion teams, a color guard and a dance
troupe, even a prospective reality show that would
theoretically fund the venture.
Warner has
the uniforms drawn up already — in a nod to
vintage Las Vegas style, they are an updated
version of the pinstriped zoot suit and
fedora.
To drum up support and sponsorship
for his dream — his really loud, colorful,
precision-drilled dream — Warner has created a
nonprofit organization, Las Vegas Marching Arts.
Since August he has been building a board of
directors and raising seed money. He estimates the
entire venture, which will involve 500 students
and include a 20,000-mile summer competitive tour,
will cost approximately $2 million to start up and
$1 million annually to continue and keep 150
kids.
Many Nevada high schools already have
marching bands. But a drum and bugle corps, Warner
says, is “the major league of marching music. To
compare a drum and bugle corps to a marching band
is like comparing the U.S. Marines to a Boy Scout
troop. It’s a different level of responsibility
and respectability. It’s Broadway and precision
and phenomenal music on a football
field.”
• • •
Recently popularized
by the hit movie “Drumline” and the Broadway show
“Blast!” the modern drum and bugle corps is a
marching musical unit consisting of brass,
percussion and color guard that falls under the
auspices of Drum Corps International and other
groups.
Organized into three competitive
classes — world class (up to 150 members), open
class (minimum 30 members) and international class
— drum corps compete for top national and
international honors against other corps in their
class or division. The annual Summer Music Games
Tour and more than 35 world championships in 16
U.S. cities are televised live and simulcast to
movie theaters across the
country.
According to DCI.org, more than
8,000 students audition each year for the fewer
than 3,500 positions available in top-tier DCI
member corps.
• • •
No arts
organization could wish for a more passionate
advocate than Warner, 54, who wants it known that
he “hails from Pleasant Hill, Ohio, home of the
great Newton Marching Band.”
A trumpeter
since sixth grade, Warner says his home is filled
with videotapes and DVDs of drum and bugle
competitions and performances. The passion began
at an early age.
“When I was 3, I went to
the Ohio State Fair with my parents and I kept
running away from them because I heard marching
bands and I just had to be behind them. And it’s
never left me.”
In hope of getting more Las
Vegans on the bus with the drum corps experience,
Warner is chartering coaches for a one-day round
trip to the Rose Bowl on July 4 to see the Blue
Devils, the Phantom Regiment and the Santa Clara
Vanguard perform on the field, complete with
festival and fireworks display.
All ages
are welcome; seating is limited; $75 includes
round-trip transportation and admission to the
show. Visit www.lasvegasmarchingarts.org or call
(928) 767-4895. Email
randy@lasvegasmarchingarts.org