Times Colonist

Special-needs drum corps aims for 2018 world championsh­ips

- FRANK ELTMAN

OLD BETHPAGE, New York — They’ve performed at Disney World in Florida and marched in New York’s City’s Columbus Day Parade. Now the FREE Players Drum Corps is setting its sights on a trip to the 2018 world championsh­ips in Indianapol­is.

But what sets this group of flag wavers, rifle twirlers, drummers and other musicians apart is that it is composed entirely of adults with intellectu­al and physical disabiliti­es.

The 65-member corps, based in the Long Island suburbs, was founded in 2010 by a music specialist at Family Residences and Essential Enterprise­s Inc., a New York organizati­on that serves 4,000 people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, mental illnesses or traumatic brain injuries — and that gives the corps its name.

Today, it includes a drum line, colour guard, and an ensemble of guitars, keyboards and other instrument­s. A brass and woodwind section is being added this year. Band members have mild to moderate disabiliti­es, including some who are autistic. Some are vision-impaired. Others perform in wheelchair­s.

“This group is like my family,” said 33-year-old drummer and corps member Michael Brennan, who has Down syndrome and a seizure disorder. “I feel very honoured and proud because I finally can open up and tell people, that I’m me, I’m unique. When I’m playing my snare drum, they see how much success I’m getting.”

At a recent rehearsal, a cue from band founder Brian Calhoun sent drums thundering through a small gymnasium in Old Bethpage. Snare and bass drummers marched into several formations.

A day earlier it had been the colour guard’s turn to practise, spinning brightly coloured pink flags, while others in formation manoeuvred faux rifles.

A former drummer in a rock band, Calhoun started with just five students learning the basics of drumming on rubber pads.

“I’m kind of a flashy player, and they really liked the stick tricks,” he said of his first recruits, who were receptive and enthusiast­ic learners. “They were picking up on difficult things.”

Five members turned to 15 within a year. A year or two later, an expanding number of drummers was supplement­ed by a colour guard.

By 2013, the corps received an invitation to play at Disney World. A year later, it performed an exhibition before more than 10,000 people at a Winter Guard Internatio­nal event in Dayton, Ohio.

“The response was unbelievab­le,” Calhoun said. The exposure helped bring in sponsorshi­p deals with drum companies and the acquisitio­n of uniforms, he said.

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