Special-needs drum corps aims for 2018 world championships
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.