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Wearing hearing protection during an indoor practice, percussionist Jeremy Friedrichs feels the beat through his bass drum Tuesday at Dakota Meadows Middle School. The Lancers are holding their annual weeklong preseason training to prepare for the summer season.
John Cross / The Free Press


Precision and perfection are the standards this week as the Mankato Area 77 Lancers look to follow up on last year’s record-breaking season. Pictured are Lancers working on a drill routine Tuesday at Dakota Meadows Middle School.
John Cross / The Free Press


Published June 09, 2009 10:43 pm - In marching band competition, precision and perfection are the standard.

Lancers gear up
Preseason camp kicks off competitive summer for marching band

By Tanner Kent
The Free Press

NORTH MANKATO

To the untrained eye, the drumline was looking fine on Tuesday morning.

Tone and tempo were metered and sharp. The beat was fluid and appropriately chest-thumping. Just hours into its weeklong preseason training session, the drumline appeared ready for competition.

Not quite, barks percussion director Louis Delatorre.

“All I’m seeing are staccato strokes,” he says, stopping practice to demonstrate a fluid motion of his wrist. “I want legato strokes. It’s all in your fulcrum.”

Another spin through the music, and the drumline’s sound is again pulsing and toe-tapping. With such booming notes being held in one small room at Dakota Meadows Middle School, every drum stroke excites a surge of adrenaline.

Yet Delatorre stops his percussionists once more. Amid the bass drums and snare drums and cymbal crashes, he can hear the tenors are too flat. He demonstrates the correct note with a quick rap of his drumstick.

“We need the sound to shoot right out of those tenors,” Delatorre says before turning to the rest of the group.

“No lazy drumming today.”

This is preseason camp for the Mankato Area 77 Lancers. And, to say the least, laziness is not tolerated.

In marching band competition, precision and perfection are the standard. If band members’ feet are not at 60-degree angles in a rest position or if members march with “low toes,” points are deducted. If transitions aren’t smooth or if the color guard mishandles a flag, points are deducted.

And for the most decorated marching band in the state, such infractions are not taken lightly.

“This week, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., we’ll work until we sweat,” said senior cymbalist James Blaschko. “And then we’ll work some more.

“We pride ourselves on being a high-class band. It’s our goal every year to be the best in the state.”

A hundred area high school students will spend 12 hours a day this week preparing for the Lancers’ grueling summer competition season, which includes more than a dozen performances and a trip to St. Louis.

Training days begin at 9 a.m. sharp with a morning stretch, followed by group practices. The day continues with captain’s practices, marching exercises, coordination drills and more practice sessions.



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