FAMU Marching Band: Florida Classic 1972

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2019
  • FAMU Marching Band with band staff of William P. Foster, Lenard C. Bowie, Charles S. Bing, John H. Daniels, Aaron Horne, Shaylor L. James, J. Lee McHugh, and Richard J. Powers. Tony Whidbee, announcer. Drum majors Edward Johnson, Ronald Butler, Herbert Richardson, Martin Robinson, and Carlyle Webb. Florida Classic. Tampa Stadium. Tampa, Florida. 1972. Digitization courtesy of a grant from the Bernard and Shirley Kinsey Foundation.
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 119

  • @QueenShe99
    @QueenShe99 10 месяцев назад +6

    Straight lines, BEAUTIFUL formations and BIG sound!

  • @melvinpayne9065
    @melvinpayne9065 4 года назад +18

    Yes , I was a sophomore and I’m now
    68.

  • @hperd1
    @hperd1 4 года назад +40

    I think it would be a big hit to recreate this show. I love how Dr Foster catered to both sides.

  • @errolmcwhite2019
    @errolmcwhite2019 4 года назад +19

    This performance brings tears to my eyes. Perfection, musicianship, and marching at its finest! Hubba 100!!!

  • @alfredwatkins2994
    @alfredwatkins2994 3 года назад +31

    I was a freshman in this band. It was extremely deep in talent and very well taught. This video, although a good representation of the movements and choreography of the band, does no justice to the quality of sound. The album "FAMU Spirit" is a better reproduction of quality of the sound, which in my estimation, was the finest playing marching band in America (in any style). Marching bands at universities of Michigan and Illinois also had quite good musicianship during that era but not like the "100." FAMU innovated the dance routine in 1952 and the precision was still there 20 years later.

    • @lilliansteele7165
      @lilliansteele7165 2 года назад +1

      I agree. Just listen to the impeccable sound and how the band seamesly flows into one song after another. Where is the showmanship today?

    • @hillandhillpress726
      @hillandhillpress726 2 года назад

      Hey old man! I wanted to be YOU when I grew up! 😂 Didn’t quite make it, but I did alright. Nice hearing you! - Bill Hill

  • @DBerry757
    @DBerry757 4 года назад +13

    That’s a very different level of execution. Every phase of this drill was beautifully executed. The attention to detail is shocking.

    • @AGB32805
      @AGB32805 Год назад

      shocking to who?

  • @jermaine2211989
    @jermaine2211989 4 года назад +27

    That drill was AMAZING!

    • @stargellwilliams1311
      @stargellwilliams1311 4 года назад

      I agree it would be good to do this show again in 2019

    • @sociallychallenged5963
      @sociallychallenged5963 4 года назад

      That drill was crazy stupid, I was like wow why we didnt do some of this for the 50th Renown World Tour in 96. It would have been more meaningful than just traveling 30 states.

  • @brainysmurf11
    @brainysmurf11 4 года назад +26

    Hubba. This is what our legacy was built on

    • @chocolatebunni
      @chocolatebunni 4 года назад +1

      A legacy indeed!!!🐍🐍🐍🐍

  • @5339ecci
    @5339ecci 3 года назад +5

    This Was My Era...My Husband Baritone Horn Class Of '73....We Were There...Awesome...And I'm From Tampa...Love This!!!

  • @freddyJ13
    @freddyJ13 4 года назад +50

    Gotta get back to picking their feet up like this when they rattle, it looks AMAZING and INTENSE

    • @brandonlarkins5330
      @brandonlarkins5330 4 года назад +7

      Freddy J. Yes indeed this new generation is okay but I love how intense they were back in the day but now its something missing with these new Trap music mumble rap kids who dont put the intesity into the Rattle like generations before

    • @rooseveltb9892
      @rooseveltb9892 4 года назад +3

      Yes indeed. They were very intense. I wish they would get back to this standard from playing to marching.

    • @kelliharper5346
      @kelliharper5346 4 года назад

      Brandon Larkins what does the type of music one listens to have to do with the intensity of their rattler? Ever think that maybe the band staff gradually changed the concept???? Not saying it doesn’t need to be more intense but there just wasn’t any correlation between what music you listen to and the intensity of your rattling. The focus of the rattler back then was apparently bringing the leg up while rattling whereas now the focus is on locking the knees back and driving the foot into the ground. That is what takes the intense bicycling-look away. Come to one of our practices and listen to how they teach the concept for yourself. Just food for thought.

    • @rooseveltb9892
      @rooseveltb9892 4 года назад +4

      This gives more of a fast march appearance than it does now. The Rattler is not as clean as it used to be.

    • @mrfamu
      @mrfamu 4 года назад +2

      Fall 2003 not throwing shade it’s good to talk it but we have to come present it talking about it online won’t make it any good

  • @mrbigg151
    @mrbigg151 4 года назад +7

    That sound and that drive had me in awe! That transition to concert formation was MOTIVATION!!! Hubba "100"

  • @samuellawson599
    @samuellawson599 Год назад +5

    No offense to the bands I marched in but would have love to March at FAMU. And under Dr Foster. So many innovations, drive for perfection and overall showmanship. History too.

  • @AtlantaOlSkoolDrummers
    @AtlantaOlSkoolDrummers Год назад +4

    This was a perfect field show. Hubba 100!

  • @kofihemmingway6695
    @kofihemmingway6695 4 года назад +13

    I have been listening to this album since 1975, and NOW, I finally SEE IT!!!

    • @Shortyfatts
      @Shortyfatts 4 года назад +3

      So have I and I wouldn't have guessed they played these years prior!

    • @bayshawnmalik
      @bayshawnmalik 6 месяцев назад

      RIP Kofi 😭

  • @robwilliams2670
    @robwilliams2670 4 года назад +17

    Wow! I remember doing this halftime show. Baritone Section.

    • @hillandhillpress726
      @hillandhillpress726 4 года назад +1

      rob williams what ever happed to Cecil Simmons? Section leader

    • @thanosave7112
      @thanosave7112 3 года назад

      Wow amazing you were a part of thus master piece !

  • @jazzlife1
    @jazzlife1 4 года назад +38

    WOW!!! In all my years of being a "HUNDRED" member I never seen the audience give a standing ovation for doing the Rattler into Concert band formation. We need to get back to that type of excitement.

    • @sociallychallenged5963
      @sociallychallenged5963 4 года назад +10

      I notice that too, but back then the 100 was a force and they were the creator of all the things we see today in other HBCU BANDS, so that style marching was unique and amazing. Now every other band does it so its expected, if that makes sense. #Fall96'

    • @roboque88
      @roboque88 4 года назад +9

      @socially challenged and @jazzlife1 - Very true, but also notice how fast, energetic and creative the Rattle is compared to what the 100 is doing today. Today, it's very slow and methodical as if the kids are just going thru the motions. I was a toddler running thru the Rattle when my father was in the 100 in the late 60's - you better move or get run slap over!!!

    • @jazzlife1
      @jazzlife1 4 года назад +6

      @@roboque88 that's how we did when I marched you either move it or get run over. And trust when I tell you it ain't running either it's marching.

    • @docwoc7903
      @docwoc7903 4 года назад +5

      I remember this when I was a little boy. My brother was in the band from the late 60s to the early seventies. This is the level of marching and musicianship I know to be the REAL MARCHING 100. What these kids are doing now during the "rattler" is a messy, sluggish misrepresentation. It hurts to say that, but it is the TRUTH

    • @roboque88
      @roboque88 4 года назад +1

      @@docwoc7903 - Your Brother and my father may have been in the band together.
      His name was Alonzo Edward King, but he would know him as "Pookie" if their time overlapped. He played clarinet.

  • @dscott92979
    @dscott92979 4 года назад +9

    Wow, I heard this concert selection on a cassette tape I found in the back of my aunt's car my freshman year in the band. I've been looking for it every since. So glad its up for all to see! 🐍🐍🐍

  • @otislockhart9385
    @otislockhart9385 4 года назад +19

    Hubba! Love my band, Sounds of Thunder 86. In all the land no other band can outmarch, outplay, out dance the Hundred of FAMU!

  • @btone03
    @btone03 2 года назад +2

    It’s so cool to look back at classic footage like this and see where original nuances came from and evolved over time into the traditional nuances of band programs today.

  • @Moont706
    @Moont706 4 года назад +14

    This is why they are the standard for all hbcu bands..

  • @roboque88
    @roboque88 4 года назад +9

    @Freddy J - So true about the rattle. It was so intense, fast, and powerful in the 70's and 80's. Alot of creativity and showmanship also.

  • @conductorperry
    @conductorperry 4 года назад +4

    Great video!!! My Jr High band director Clarence Pinkney was a drum major that year.

  • @BEKINGCURTIS
    @BEKINGCURTIS 4 года назад +6

    This would have been a Great Drill for 2019 Florida Classic so Clean... This is From a Fan of FAMU and a Marching WildCat

  • @roboque88
    @roboque88 4 дня назад

    Look at that Concert Formation!! Lines, Angles and Corners so straight they will cut you!!

  • @chidori9249
    @chidori9249 2 года назад +6

    I'm a freshman at Miramar Highschool and I just joined band in August. The first time I saw FAMU perform and it was live was at the Orange Blossom Classic. That was the first time ever that I saw a HBCU band or just any band at all. I immediately fell in love with the way they perform, I even got to see them march in. I have hopes of being apart of an amazing band.

  • @MarchingsportHD
    @MarchingsportHD 4 года назад +5

    Thanks for uploading. Classic FAMU Show.

  • @shannland5857
    @shannland5857 2 года назад +2

    Wowww ! The best drills I have ever seen

  • @b.millsj2401
    @b.millsj2401 3 года назад +3

    This brings back fond loving memories for me, as a child growing up my Dad would take me to see the University of Tampa vs. Famu game. My cousins from Tallahassee would come down to go to the game and I had so much fun with them I would cry on Sunday morning when they left to return home. My cousin Bruce was in charge of the "flag boys" at Famu. Lol I remember 1 year the University of Tampa Marching Spartan Band did their dance during their halftime performance.

  • @coolgeorgiaboy
    @coolgeorgiaboy 4 года назад +4

    That drill was beautiful

  • @michaelhead4472
    @michaelhead4472 4 года назад +6

    FAMU should bring back this arrangement of where is the love. Perhaps the entire drill for that matter.

  • @MrWilson1972
    @MrWilson1972 4 года назад +4

    Wow..... I first heard this "audio cassette" in 1985. It made me wanna go to FAMU and NO FUCKING WHERE ELSE. Never thought I'd see this show. Thanks for pulling this one out. New school pay close attn.
    Mighty Mouse/Speedy Gonzales
    Fall 91' Oh so sweet.....(u know the rest).

  • @coolgeorgiaboy
    @coolgeorgiaboy 4 года назад +21

    Wow those people marching are like 65 -70 years old now

  • @richard7930
    @richard7930 2 года назад +4

    Loved those 70’s bands, to me more precision, than the other bands did you see them going into concert formation gave me chills, man that was sweet had to watch several timesand those tunes prof sarge was a Master, never heard any other band rendition of the song we played even come close to SARGE on anything he did I did like the bands of the 80s and after, the 80’s band and after had more funk in the dance routines, do you have any more films of the 72-78 bands. Thanks

    • @jessewilcox1569
      @jessewilcox1569 8 месяцев назад

      in 72 . Powers was the arranger. Sarge started 73/74 year

  • @Patrick-si1hd
    @Patrick-si1hd Год назад +1

    For those who are wondering, my grandfather Dr. Lenard Bowie (Prof. Bowie) is responsible for this drill routine and so many others from the 60's and 70's. If you was in The 100 from 1954 to 1973 then you know the story. If you dont know then do the knowledge.

  • @lilliansteele7165
    @lilliansteele7165 2 года назад +1

    The drum cadence was also used as Livingstone Colleges old cadence in the 1970s. Thought that I would never hear this again.

  • @NobleOmarBey
    @NobleOmarBey 4 года назад +13

    There were no GMOs back then. People were generally healthier. More energy!

    • @docwoc7903
      @docwoc7903 2 года назад

      I’ve been saying this for years… it’s just the truth!

  • @lilliansteele7165
    @lilliansteele7165 2 года назад +5

    No suggestive dance moves to insult all. Just good quality music.

  • @hyperdriven08
    @hyperdriven08 4 года назад +2

    Lots of Energy & Drive!!!

  • @terrancemacklin417
    @terrancemacklin417 4 года назад +1

    Bring back this kind of drilling FAMU!!!

    • @AGB32805
      @AGB32805 3 года назад

      Bring back Marching!

  • @hillandhillpress726
    @hillandhillpress726 4 года назад +7

    When I saw and heard the 1972 FAMU Marching 100, I only applied to ONE college! - Bill Hill, Sounds of Thunder, Fall ‘74.

    • @richard7930
      @richard7930 2 года назад +1

      Did you know that was Doc Whites first year also and mine too. The original Z28 Crow on cymbals Fall 74.

    • @hillandhillpress726
      @hillandhillpress726 2 года назад +1

      Hey Crow! I remember the way you touched the ground with your hat as we entered the field! Cymbals & Z28 were tight!!

  • @geraldmack8840
    @geraldmack8840 4 года назад +1

    This is awesomeness 💯💯💯 show...

  • @albertharper2195
    @albertharper2195 3 года назад

    Amazing The Year I Was Born '72

  • @miami1911
    @miami1911 4 года назад +4

    The arranger Mr Powers was the truth and Mr Sarjaent continued that sound. I wish they would go back to the upright euphonium. That was a distinct sound.

    • @Tigerwarhawk
      @Tigerwarhawk 3 года назад +1

      100% agree, especially about the euphonium!

    • @rorschach162
      @rorschach162 2 года назад +1

      @@Tigerwarhawk is there much difference in the marching euphoniums/baritones and the uprights?

    • @Tigerwarhawk
      @Tigerwarhawk 2 года назад +3

      @@rorschach162 the euphonium (in the marching form and concert "upright" form) has a bigger bore and is more conical shaped, resulting in a deeper, heavier tone. The baritone (in both forms) has a more cylindrical bore, but not as cylindrical as the trombone. Its sound sits between the euph and trombone on the spectrum. That said, the marching horns project forward, potentially causing the band to be out of balance ESPECIALLY if there is a trombone section present.
      In marching band, there are large numbers of baritones/euphs and trombones, which is one reason why the bands are oftentimes unbalanced. Dr. Foster had the right instrumentation in my opinion.

    • @freamonmcnair3743
      @freamonmcnair3743 7 месяцев назад +1

      Rich Powers was a genius

  • @Shortyfatts
    @Shortyfatts 3 года назад +1

    Anyone know what the song is at the beginning of the dance routine at 8:49 mark?

  • @seanholness9978
    @seanholness9978 4 года назад +2

    Dope

  • @petalpink_s7038
    @petalpink_s7038 4 года назад +2

    ...do you have more footage from the 1970's?

  • @JB-ty8mv
    @JB-ty8mv 2 года назад

    100 Band member from 72,73 and 74. Would love to see footage of 73 and 74. Points and Drive with knee lift and marching during the fast march. Would love to see a throwback show with those black uniforms. Playing the 20th Century Fox Fanfare built the anticipation of something big that was about to happen.

  • @queen_j1422
    @queen_j1422 4 года назад +4

    Even back then....THE 100 IS THE BADDEST IN THE LAND!!! #RattlerPride

  • @evanmercer4399
    @evanmercer4399 3 месяца назад

    What was the concert piece?

  • @director1914
    @director1914 Год назад

    Listen to the crowd

  • @MegaHavana1
    @MegaHavana1 Год назад +1

    Anybody know what was the last song they played while marching towards the endzone ???

    • @johnnylaidler7184
      @johnnylaidler7184 Год назад +2

      SUPERFLY BY CURTIS MAYFIELD

    • @johnnylaidler7184
      @johnnylaidler7184 Год назад

      IM BOKAT TUBA FANFARE OF TOP OF THE STACK WRITER N PLAYER 1970 G.O.A.T TUBA LEGEND

  • @SupervillainDW
    @SupervillainDW 4 года назад

    👍🏿👍🏿🔥🔥🔥

  • @smiley-dr5qn
    @smiley-dr5qn 4 года назад +1

    Amazing how you can find clips of FAMU this early but there are so few of GSU who started all this shit

    • @Diggitydammit
      @Diggitydammit 3 года назад +2

      Started what shit? You certainly can’t mean anything that’s going on in the show

    • @docwoc7903
      @docwoc7903 3 года назад +1

      Delusional...LOL

    • @samuellawson599
      @samuellawson599 Год назад

      Know everyone's history... not just yours. Be a real student. You can learn a lot of things. Not just hearsay. Referring to the first comment. FAMU started many things...bought in innovations too. Uniquely together.

  • @dperfect28
    @dperfect28 4 года назад +10

    👀👀 And Southern actually think FAM be copying them😂😂 #GreatShow

    • @hasanx4637
      @hasanx4637 4 года назад +2

      there is footage of Southern doing the same thing in 1969. they had been doing it for years. unless you can prove FAM did it first, shut up. not saying SU did it first.

    • @dperfect28
      @dperfect28 4 года назад +2

      @@hasanx4637 Pull it up👀👀

    • @hasanx4637
      @hasanx4637 4 года назад +2

      @@dperfect28 Super Bowl IV. They did the full 20 minute halftime show with Link Hampton, Al Hirt and other stars.

    • @dperfect28
      @dperfect28 4 года назад +1

      @@hasanx4637 Ok they got footage of FAM going back in the early 50s..what is your point?

    • @hasanx4637
      @hasanx4637 4 года назад +3

      @@dperfect28 lol. dude that's not the current version of a ft cadence in the 1950's . That's called a scramble drill and it was used to go from one formation to another. common in the 40's and 50's. my original point is no one knows who started that first and unless you have indisputable proof that you guys invented that- please be quiet about someone "copying" you guys. SU doesn't go around accusing FAMU of copying a fast cadence. Many bands did it. Every band can be accused of copying if that's the case.

  • @ericcarswell1789
    @ericcarswell1789 4 года назад

    Hubba 💯💯💯💯🐍

  • @jazzlife1
    @jazzlife1 4 года назад +2

    Hubba!!!

  • @dandresingleton6621
    @dandresingleton6621 4 года назад +2

    I see the flags doin the drill too

    • @richard7930
      @richard7930 2 года назад

      No offense ladies, I’m not sure when the ladies started be on the flag corps, aka 1974 the dirty dozen but I don’t think the way they did the flags in 74 they would have been able to keep up. The they popped band swung them flags they could have done it. Just saying.

    • @richard7930
      @richard7930 2 года назад

      They couldn’t have done it

    • @richard7930
      @richard7930 Год назад

      Sorry for the typos in original post, but I’m saying girls could not have been in the flag corp aka the Dirty Dozen in 74,

  • @hasanx4637
    @hasanx4637 4 года назад +5

    what ever happened to this FAMU? no way remotely resembles the big sloppy unit of today. knees up, driving, tight collegiate level tunes not simple and over the top. Actually exciting. was it still all male at this point?