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Be a Good Audience for Marching Band CompetitionsA Marching Band competition is not quite a concert, and it’s not quite a sporting event. There are some elements of each which are encouraged, while others are discouraged. Some schools bring a whole cheering section of fans, while others have only their Pit Crew to cheer the band on. Many parents (especially those new to the activity) are unsure as to when it is appropriate to cheer or applaud. Below are some tips to help you become contributors to a performance, without being a distraction. If you’ve never attended a marching band competition, you’ll be surprised and amazed at how quiet and attentive most people are during performances. This is very different from football games where the halftime performance is just background noise for peoples’ conversations. For this reason alone, you should try to get to as many competitions as possible. We add and perfect things all the time, and many of the nuances are lost at the ball games. The best marching band fans are those who cheer for every band. Sure, you’re going to cheer loudest for our band, but every band is out there to entertain or move the audience in some way. They all deserve your applause, and every band should get a standing ovation at the end (which also gives you a chance to stretch every fifteen minutes. Those bleachers are hard!). You may notice some groups acting a bit more partisan, but we NNHS Marching Huskies fans are the “class act”. Here are some basic Dos and Don’ts:
Do get to the show early to get a good seat. Sit as high and centered in the bleachers as possible,
so you can get the full effect. Try to sit with other NNHS parents, so you can feed off each others’ energy.
Do wear your school colors proudly!
Do share and converse with those around you (even those from other schools) between bands.
Do find the positives in each band’s performance, and applaud their efforts.
Do watch everything that’s going on in our program.
Do applaud often. It’s not like a concert, where you wait until the end to applaud. It’s appropriate
to applaud for stirring musical moments, cool visual effects, soloists, or anything else that strikes your
fancy! Even the occasional “Yeah!” or “Woo!” is great, where appropriate.
Do concentrate on what is going well in each band’s performance.
Do applaud each band’s placement at the awards ceremony (whether you liked their show or not).
Do take your gloves off to applaud at cold-weather shows.
Do trust that the adjudicators are professionals who are doing the best they can, to judge
what is ultimately a very subjective activity. On any given Saturday, with any given judging panel,
anything can happen. |
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Copyright 2008, NNHS Friends of Music, All Rights Reserved. |
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