The Phnom Penh Post

Trombones and trumpets get ready for the inaugural stage

- Michael E Ruane

BEFORE the nine trombones, the 27 clarinets and the trumpets, saxophones, sousaphone­s, euphoniums and drums, 6-foot-6-inch (1.98metre) Marine Corps Master Sergeant Duane King will be marching in his bearskin hat.

He’s almost 8 feet tall in the hat – a giant in a red tunic. He’ll be carrying an ornate signalling staff, known as a mace, and a ton of responsibi­lity.

King, 40, is the drum major for the Marine Band, “the President’s Own”, and on Friday he is schedulled to lead the legendary 218-year-old band, for the first time as its drum major, in the Inaugurati­on Day parade.

“Easily the biggest performanc­e I’ve ever done,” he said recently.

Behind him, if all goes as planned, will march 99 musicians, in 11 rows, whom he must start, stop, speed up, slow down, help execute two turns, start playing, stop playing, mark time and keep in step.

“It’s a huge role,” he said. “The band won’t do anything if I don’t give them the commands,” he said. “If I don’t tell them to play honours when we pass by the president then we don’t play honours when we pass by the president.”

King, a former trumpeter in Marine bands, must decide when to signal the two tunes between which it will alternate along the parade route – John Philip Sousa’s marches, Semper Fidelis and The Thunderer – and when to start the Marine Corps hymn, reserved for the White House reviewing stand.

He must decide when to rest the musicians as they march.

“I’ll let it go a certain length of time, in between playing the band,” he said. “That way, everyone in the crowd gets to hear the band play. But we’re not killing the band trying to play every single step of the way.”

There’s the potential for bad weather and protests, both of which must be ignored, he said: “I just kind of block it all out and focus on what I have to do.”

As the band’s 40th drum major, King walks in history’s footsteps.

One early drum major, John Roach, is said to have helped capture abolitioni­st John Brown at Harpers Ferry in 1859. Another, Richard Johnson, was a drummer, blacksmith and chain welder in the 1860s and ’70s.

Another, Hiram Florea, headed the band in four inaugural parades – one for Herbert Hoover and three for Franklin D Roosevelt.

During this parade, King must count cadence and keep a proper distance – six to 12 paces – behind the unit marching in front of him as they move along Pennsylvan­ia Avenue and past the White House.

That’s “a lot closer than I’m comfortabl­e with”, he said.

He signals the band with the mace, a handmade, specially balanced, 5-foot-long staff of lightweigh­t malacca wood wrapped in a gold chain and topped with a golden orb.

To stop the band, he twirls the mace like a windmill – the initial cue – and turns and faces the musicians. He holds the mace horizontal­ly at head level, then SemperFide­lis raises and lowers it four times.

The Marine Band, establishe­d in 1798, also provides music during the swearing-in ceremonies on the west terrace of the Capitol, starting at 10am. There, it will be conducted by its director, Lieutenant Colonel Jason Fettig.

After the swearing-in, scheduled for 11:50am, the band leaves the dais and prepares to join the parade. “Then it’s my show,” King said.

As the parade forms, the band will be inserted at the head of the second of five divisions. The parade, expected to include about 8,000 participan­ts, is set to start at 3pm.

King will lead the group along Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, following a blue line in the middle of the street that marks the way.

At 15th Street, the musicians must execute a right-hand “gate turn” to head north for three blocks, then turn left back onto Pennsylvan­ia Avenue for the critical pass before the president at the White House reviewing stand.

“Once you make that turn, you get everybody straighten­ed out it’s like a different part of the parade. It’s like, ‘OK, we’ve finished the parade for the audience. Now here’s the part for the president. Now we’re passing by him’.”

A native of Jacksonvil­le, Florida, King has been the band’s drum major since 2014 and a member of the band for six years. He started playing trumpet in the sixth grade and joined the Marines as a trumpet player after high school.

He’s been in the Marines for 22 years, and in 2007, because of his height and bearing, was switched from trumpeter to drum major, a job that requires music and leadership skills.

King said he admires renowned trumpet players such as Phil Smith, formerly with the New York Philharmon­ic, the late Adolph “Bud” Herseth, the principal trumpeter with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and jazz greats Miles Davis and Wynton Marsalis.

Despite King’s obsession with perfection, there will be one flaw in the works he can do little about. The gold head of his mace has a tiny dent in the surface of the metal, because of a transport mishap.

However, if King turns the mace just right, his thumb fits into the imperfecti­on and conceals it.

“That dent is in a perfect spot,” he said.

 ??  ?? A ceremonial baton, given to the late John Philip Sousa, rests on his original sheet music for at the US Marine Band museum in preparatio­n for Inaugurati­on Day.
A ceremonial baton, given to the late John Philip Sousa, rests on his original sheet music for at the US Marine Band museum in preparatio­n for Inaugurati­on Day.

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