Before the fall of my eighth grade year, I believed in a lot of principles that I didn't have the courage to do anything about. My Just-an-Old-Country-Lawyer father was committed to civil rights, and he taught me and my brother to value justice for ALL people. But he didn't teach me how to put those principles into practice.
I don't know whether or not our father taught my brother how to actually stand up for what he believed in, but he didn't teach me how to, perhaps because I was a girl. Girls were supposed to be seen and not heard. Girls were supposed to be nice and not make waves. I know this because my mother told me so. Repeatedly.
So until the fall of my eighth grade year, I was nice. I had principles to which I was committed, but I lacked the know how- or the courage- to do anything about them.
Then came The Day That Everything Changed.
My junior high band director, Mr. Phillip Wilson, had reserved the football field for first period so we could practice our half-time show for the game that night. The rest of the week, we practiced on the old marching practice field north of the football field. But we always practiced on the football field on game day.
When we marched out to the field, we were met by a large PE class with their fearsome teacher and monstrous student teacher. Mr. Wilson politely told the PE teachers that we had reserved the field for that morning. The fearsome teacher refused to leave and told the students not to give up the field to the band.
Mr. Wilson stormed back across the field to us like MacArthur, Montgomery, Marshall, and Patton rolled into one. Face crimson with the little patches of white he got when he was mightily riled, he shouted, "People, you are the Marshall Junior High School Band! This field is reserved for you this morning. Those people refuse to yield it to us. This field is ours, and we are going to take it!"
We woodwind players stared wide-eyed. The brass players squared their shoulders. The drummers whispered, "Hot Damn!"
Then General Wilson said, "People, you are to march straight ahead. Do not look to the right or left. Do not step to the right or left. If those people don't move, you are NOT going to march around them. You are going to march right over them. Do you understand me?"
We understood.
Mr.Wilson signaled the drum major who counted us off. Then the snare drums started to roll, the bass drum shook the earth, the brasses straightened the pipes, and we woodwinds shrieked until we split the heavens. The irresistible force began marching toward the immovable object.
In an instant, I understood what I was part of. My fear evaporated, and I realized that this was a watershed moment for me. I not only believed in justice, but I was going to act on that belief for the first time. I was going to stand shoulder to shoulder with my band of brothers and sisters and confront the enemy. I was brave.
As we marched across the field, the PE students scattered, and even the fierce old PE teacher headed for the sidelines. But the monstrous, murder-in-the-eyes student teacher wasn't going to move and squared off with us. So our feisty little trombone player followed orders and plowed right into that immovable object. Then he stomped hard on the foot that was in his path and kept moving forward. He was the hero of the hour.
That day, Mr. Wilson taught the entire band that we could fight injustice. That we could be brave.
That moment was such a hallmark in my life that I have fought abusive authority ever since. That moment was the reason that decades later a respected colleague told me, "You've got brass balls, you know that?"
Yes, I knew that. Because I earned those brass balls on the football field at Marshall Junior High School as part of the Marshall Junior High School Band. I earned them because my band director, Mr. Wilson, taught us that we had brass balls by expecting us to act like we did. He taught us courage.
So I thank you, Mr. Wilson, for what you did for all of us.
But I thank you especially for what you did for me. You took me, an eighth grader who believed in justice, but who was too scared to do anything about it. And you gave me brass balls that have lasted for the rest of my life.
And for that, Sir, I am eternally grateful.
.
Musings from a professor emeritus on autism and other disabilities, social responsibility, music, and living life as a joyful Episcopalian
Showing posts with label Band Director. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Band Director. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Lessons My Band Director Taught Me: # 2 Never Be a Prima Dona
My junior
high band director, Mr. Phillip Wilson, grew up in the moving business. Founded by his late father, Wilson Transfer
and Storage in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is still family-run nearly a century later.
Mr. Wilson, who gave up his share of the business to be a band director, told
me about one of the family's notable customers.
“When I was
a little boy, we had three enormously rich and important clients: Mrs. Cyrus
McCormick of International Harvester, Mrs. Frank Rand of Remington Rand/Sperry
Rand fame, and Mrs. David Lippincott of the eponymous publishing company.
“All three
were lovely women, but Mrs. McCormick and Mrs. Rand always came to the transfer
to conduct their affairs in their chauffeur-driven limousines. Mrs. Lippincott, who was probably the richest
of the three, drove herself in her Studebaker.
“Once our
foreman asked Mrs. Lippincott why she didn’t have a chauffeur drive her around in
a limo. She said, ‘I like my Studebaker
because no one else likes them.’” Then
he added, “Mrs. Lippincott never gave a hoot about what other people thought.”
Then Mr. Wilson told me a story.
“Because our
house was on the property in front of the company headquarters and warehouses,
we had an enormous driveway where the moving vans could come and go. Addresses were not clearly marked on houses in
those days, so taxi drivers would come to our house to find out where someone’s
address was. As long as they came to the
door and knocked, we were happy to tell them what they needed to know. But invariably while we were eating dinner, a
taxi driver would pull up in the driveway and blast on his horn. He expected us to come out of our house, go
to his car window, and tell him what he wanted to know.
“Whenever
that happened, one of my big brothers or sisters would stick their head out the
back door and holler, ‘We don’t offer curb service!’ If the taxi driver got out of his car and came
to the door, we were happy to help him.
“I was a
little pitcher with big ears, so one day when I was about six, Mrs. Lippincott
drove up to the loading dock in her Studebaker and honked her horn, I stuck my
head out of the warehouse and hollered, ‘We don’t offer curb service!’
“The foreman
across the yard came running as fast as his little short, fat legs could carry
him scolding me all the way. ‘That’s
Mrs. Lippincott!’ he cried. ‘We don’t
say that to Mrs. Lippincott! She can
honk her horn for us to come out any time she wants!’
“Then Mrs.
Lippincott climbed out of her car, and the foreman fell all over himself
apologizing.”
“’Nonsense,’
said Mrs. Lippincott to the foreman. “The
child is right. I am a perfectly
able-bodied woman capable of getting out of the car to ask for assistance. Don’t you dare scold him. Leave him alone.’
“That endeared
Mrs. Lippincott to me forever after,” said my band director. “She was immeasurably rich, yet she was
humble and never expected any special treatment.”
The point of
this lesson my band director taught me? You may be a first chair, but be an humble
first chair. Don’t expect special
treatment and never be a Prima Dona.
Thanks, Mr.
Wilson, for that life lesson. Thanks,
too, Mrs. Lippincott. Rest in peace.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Lessons My Band Director Taught Me: #1 Be Careful What You Ask For
My junior high band
director, Mr. Wilson, taught me more life lessons than anybody else ever
did. One lesson he taught me was: Be sure
you want what you ask for. You just
might get it.
Fifty years ago, Mr.
Wilson was forced to deal with a narcissistic cheerleader coach. Mrs. Gundershoot thought the school existed
to serve her, and through her largesse, the cheerleaders, and through them, the
football team.
Mrs. Gundershoot
didn’t politely ask people to do things.
She demanded it. You didn’t demand things of my band
director. If you did, you might get
exactly what you asked for—on HIS terms.
One day, Mrs.
Gundershoot marched up to Mr. Wilson and demanded, “We have a pep rally in the
gym in a half hour. I want your band in there, and I want them to make a LOT OF
NOISE. Got it? Your band’s job is to get the kids all riled
up by making a lot of noise.” Out she
marched.
Now first of all,
music is not noise. Music is the antithesis
of noise. Even music by Paul Hindemith. Music
has structure, rules, logic. Music is
mathematically beautiful. Even music that
sounds like cacophony has an underlying structure.
Telling my band
director that his band is supposed to make a lot of noise was equivalent to
telling Gordon Ramsay, “Put some crap on the table.” Chef Ramsay wouldn’t take kindly to that, and
when you came to the table, you’d find a steaming pile of horse manure garnished
with a sprig of parsley. Crap you want?
Crap you get.
Noise you want?
Noise you get.
Mr. Wilson
rounded up his band. He had an enormous
brass section that year: 16 trumpets; 9 trombones; 4 baritones; and 4
tubas. Big boys. Most of them ninth-graders. We’re talking HEAVY on brass.
“Ladies and
gentlemen,” he said, “Mrs. Gundershoot wants noise at the assembly. She told us to ‘make a lot of noise.’ We are going
to give her what she wants.” Then, “Brass,
I want you to STRAIGHTEN THE TUBES.” Translation: “Blow so hard that you unfurl the
twists and turns in your horn.” All 33
brass players grinned from ear to ear. “Oh,
yeah.”
The he said, “Play
March Grandioso.” The band understood the subtext. Think about the name. March. Grandioso.
March Grandioso is a Sherman tank.
The idea of straightening the pipes on March Grandioso is the equivalent of Patton blasting his way
through Bastogne at the Battle of the Bulge.
The band entered
the gym and Mr. Wilson lined them up at attention in block formation. The drum major gave a roll off. And the room exploded in sound. Kids in the bleachers shrieked and covered
their ears.
Mrs. Gundershoot
ran up to the choir teacher and screamed, “That band is too Goddamn loud!”
The choir teacher
yelled back, “You told him you wanted the band to make a bunch of noise! Well, you got it!”
That’s when the fun
started. The first gym light popped and
went out. The band played louder. The second gym light exploded. The twists and turns on the trumpets began to
unfurl. The third gym light popped. The drummers pounded till they split their drumheads.
The fourth gym light went out. By the
time the tubas finished hurling their grenades, the filaments of 16 gym lights
had exploded, and Mrs. Gundershoot was purple with rage.
I don’t know whether
the football team won or lost that game. I do know that nobody learned anything
at school that day except that the band could blow 16 lights out in the gym.
So what was the
lesson that Mr. Wilson taught me from that story? The Story of The Day the Band
Blew 16 Lights Out of the Gym Ceiling? Be
careful about what you ask for. You just
might get it.
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