Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps
{{Short description|American World Class competitive drum and bugle corps}}
{{use mdy dates|date=December 2022}}{{redirect|Bluecoats||Bluecoat (disambiguation)}}{{Infobox drums corps
| name = Bluecoats
| logo = File:Bluecoats Drum & Bugle Corps Shield Logo.svg
| location = North Canton, Ohio
| division = World Class
| founded = 1972
| director = Mike Scott
| titles = {{plainlist|
- DCI: {{hlist|2016|2024}}
}}
}}
The Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps, or simply The Bluecoats, is a World Class competitive drum and bugle corps. Based in Canton, Ohio, the Bluecoats are a member corps of Drum Corps International (DCI). The Bluecoats are the current World Class Champions, having won the title in 2016 and 2024.
History
The Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps was founded in 1972 by Canton businessman Art Drukenbrod and Canton police officers "Babe" Stearn and Ralph McCauley (the head and assistant directors of the Canton Police Boys' Club). The corps members chose the name both because of their sponsorship and to honor the city's police officers, particularly those who had retired from the ranks. The corps made its competition debut in 1974, and in their first major show, finished 32nd of 37 corps in the U.S. Open Class A preliminaries in Marion, Ohio. The corps improved year by year, and began touring in both the U.S. and Canada and making U.S. Open finals in 1976, taking second place in 1977 and third in 1978, and making World Class Finals for the first time in 1987. The Bluecoats made their first DCI appearance in Denver, Colorado, in 1977, scoring 35th place among 45 corps.{{Cite news |last=Carbetta |first=Tallie |date=1989-02-05 |title=Bluecoats keep step with success |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-akron-beacon-journal-bluecoats-keep/160456082/ |work=The Akron Beacon Journal |pages=AA1–AA3}}
Although the corps was maturing musically, it was struggling to survive financially. In 1979, the corps only performed at local parades, as it attempted to reorganize its financial situation. With the return to the field in 1980, the corps was competitive in Class A competitions, but only managed a 38th-place finish of the 44 corps performing in Open Class at the DCI World Championships. In the next two seasons, the corps attempted to compete exclusively in Open Class, but they met with small success. In 1983, the Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps announced it would cease operations.{{Cite book |last=Vickers |first=Steve |title=A History of Drum & Bugle Corps: Vol. 2 |publisher=Drum Corps World |year=2003 |location=Madison, WI |pages=186–187 |oclc=54892759}}{{Cite web |title=Our History |url=https://bluecoats.com/history |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220818142855/https://bluecoats.com/history |archive-date=18 August 2022 |access-date=2022-04-23 |website=Bluecoats}}
At the time that the corps' folding was announced, present-day corps President Scott Swaldo was a marching member. When he told his father, Canton industrialist Ted Swaldo, the elder Swaldo took over as director. Under the new director, the corps returned to the field after only a one-year hiatus. As a full-fledged Open Class corps, the Bluecoats improved with each passing year, until in 1987, the corps became the first corps from Ohio to earn a place in the DCI World Championship finals, finishing in 11th place. Since then, the corps has failed to make finals only once, in 1999.
In 2010, the corps medaled for the first time at the DCI World Championships, taking the bronze with their production "Metropolis: The Future Is Now". In 2014, they once again took home the silver medal for their show "TILT", which is now cited as one of the most influential shows in the marching arts.{{Cite web |last=Kano |first=Sarah Ann |date=2020 |title=Innovative Marching: A Look Into the Innovation of DCI |url=https://digitalcommons.csumb.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1847&context=caps_thes_all |website=Capstone Projects and Master's Theses |publisher=California State University, Monterey Bay |page=15}}
In 2016, the Bluecoats won first place in World Class Finals, becoming only the 10th corps to be DCI champions since the competition began in 1972. The winning show, "Down Side Up", earned the corps' highest score (at the time) of 97.650, while winning the General Effect and Music captions. For 2016, the Bluecoats abandoned their traditional uniforms in favor of a more informal costume designed with the show's near-constant motion in mind; the brass and percussion sections wore white and the color guard wore yellow, both with a swirling, sequined blue accent stripe running from the left hand to the shoulder, across the chest, and down the right leg; Bluecoats also became the first corps to win the DCI title while not wearing any type of headgear.{{Cite web |last=Boo |first=Michael |date=2018-02-12 |title=Spotlight of the Week: 2016 Bluecoats |url=https://www.dci.org/news/spotlight-of-the-week-2016-bluecoats |access-date=2022-04-23 |publisher=Drum Corps International}} This trend of nontraditional uniforms has continued since then, and has been emulated by numerous other corps since.{{Cite web |last=Leiser |first=Savy |date=2019-10-01 |title=The Uniqueness of DCI Uniforms |url=https://halftimemag.com/september-october-2019/the-uniqueness-of-dci-uniforms.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220714080404/https://halftimemag.com/september-october-2019/the-uniqueness-of-dci-uniforms.html |archive-date=14 July 2022 |access-date=2022-04-23 |website=Halftime Magazine}}
At the 2019 DCI World Championships, the Bluecoats came in second place while scoring the corps' highest ever score (at the time) of 98.238.{{cite web |title=Bluecoats: Repertoire |url=http://dcxmuseum.org/index.cfm?view=corpslist&CorpsID=32 |access-date=2022-04-23 |publisher=DCX: The Drum Corps Xperience}} Post-COVID, the activity resumed competitions in 2022, with Bluecoats landing in second place for the third time since 2014. They also attained medalist standing for the sixth time in seven competition years, a feat to which only one other corps can currently attest.
Celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2022, the organization also produced an Alumni Corps that performed at the DCI semifinals.{{Cite web |last=Knapp |first=Amy L. |date=July 1, 2022 |title=Canton Bluecoats celebrate 50th anniversary |url=https://www.indeonline.com/story/news/local/2022/07/01/canton-bluecoats-celebrate-50th-anniversary/7756870001/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221216083514/https://www.indeonline.com/story/news/local/2022/07/01/canton-bluecoats-celebrate-50th-anniversary/7756870001/ |archive-date=16 December 2022 |access-date=2022-12-16 |website=The Independent}}
In 2024, the Bluecoats won their second DCI World Class Championship title, and finished the season undefeated for the first time in the corps' history. The winning show, "Change Is Everything", earned the corps' new highest score of 98.750, while winning the General Effect caption and Visual and Brass captions for the first time in the corps' history.{{Cite news |last=Almeida |first=Chris |date=August 21, 2024 |title=A 12-Minute Show, Played Only Once, Just Might Live Forever |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/21/style/bluecoat-drum-corps-championship.html |work=The New York Times}}
Show summary (1974–2025)
class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%;"
|+Key |style="background-color:#d0f0c0"|Pale green background indicates DCI World Class Semifinalist{{efn|name=World Class}} |
style="background-color:#add8e6"|Pale blue background indicates DCI World Class Finalist{{efn|name=World Class|From 1977-1991, the Bluecoats competed in Open Class, from 1992-2007 in Division I, and since 2008 in World Class. These are the same tier, just renamed.}} |
style="background-color:#d4af37"|Dark gold background indicates DCI World Class Champion |
{{notelist}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; font-size:95%;"
! scope="col" rowspan="2" | Year ! scope="col" rowspan="2" | Repertoire ! scope="col" colspan="2" | {{nowrap|World Championships}} |
scope="col" | Score
! scope="col" | Placement |
---|
scope="row" | 1975
| Fanfare & Coronation March by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky / Variations On America by Truman Crawford / Gospel John by Jeffrey Steinberg / Livin' for the City by Stevie Wonder | colspan="2" rowspan="2" bgcolor="e5e4e2" | Did not attend |
scope="row" | 1976
| Quejada by Kenneth Snoeck / Drum Fugue by Richard Janes / I Believe by Ervin Drake, Irvin Graham, Jimmy Shirl & Al Stillman / Turkey in the Straw (Traditional) / Theme from Gold by Elmer Bernstein / Theme from S.W.A.T. by Barry De Vorzon / Bridge Over Troubled Water by Paul Simon |
scope="row" | 1977
| The Golden Cockerel by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov / Porgy and Bess Medley by George Gershwin, DuBose Heyward & Ira Gershwin / Carmina Burana by Carl Orff / Bridge Over Troubled Water by Paul Simon / Fanfare from Quejada by Kenneth Snoeck |65.500 |35th Place |
scope="row" | 1978
| Farandole by Georges Bizet / Corazón by Carole King / Sweet Inspiration by Dan Penn & Spooner Oldham / Oklahoma Crude by Henry Mancini / Where He Leads Me (Traditional) / Stony End by Laura Nyro / Big Noise from Winnetka by Bob Haggart & Ray Bauduc / New York, New York (from On the Town) by Leonard Bernstein |68.500 |28th Place |
scope="row" | 1979
| colspan="3" bgcolor="e5e4e2" | Parade corps only |
scope="row" | 1980
| Farandole by Georges Bizet / Left Bank Express by Pete Jackson / Encore in Jazz by Vic Firth / Friends by Al Jardine, Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson & Dennis Wilson / Exodus by Ernest Gold |52.050 |38th Place |
scope="row" | 1981
| Barnum by Cy Coleman & Michael Stewart / Aquarius (from Hair) by Galt MacDermot, James Rado & Gerome Ragni / Encore in Jazz by Vic Firth / Porgy and Bess Medley by George Gershwin & DuBose Heyward |59.600 |31st Place |
scope="row" | 1982
| Compendium by Ray Crawford / Carnival by Maynard Ferguson & Nick Lane / Aquarius (from Hair) by Galt MacDermot, James Rado & Gerome Ragni / Root Beer Rag by Billy Joel / Pavanne (from American Symphonette No. 2) by Morton Gould |56.250 |33rd Place |
scope="row" | 1983
| colspan="3" bgcolor="e5e4e2" | Corps inactive |
scope="row" | 1984
| Run Back to Mama by Bill Chase & Jim Peterik / Night in Rome by Doc Severinsen & Jeff Tyzik / Bugle Call Rag by Billy Meyers, Jack Pettis & Elmer Schoebel / Magnum Opus by Kerry Livgren, Steve Walsh, Phil Ehart, Rich Williams, Dave Hope & Robbie Steinhardt (Kansas) / For Your Eyes Only by Bill Conti & Mick Leeson | 66.600 | 29th Place |
scope="row" | 1985
| Run Back to Mama by Bill Chase & Jim Peterik / Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?) by Jimmy Davis, Ram Ramirez & Jimmy Sherman / Walk Between the Raindrops by Donald Fagen / Sunrise Lady by Bruce Johnstone / Race with the Devil on Spanish Highway by Al Di Meola / One Voice by Barry Manilow | 70.200 | 28th Place |
scope="row" | 1986
| Hungarian Dance No. 5 by Johannes Brahms / Doodletown Fifers (Kingdom Coming) / Salt Peanuts by Dizzy Gillespie & Kenny Clarke / Everything Happens to Me by Tom Adair & Matt Dennis | 80.300 | bgcolor="d0f0c0" | 15th Place |
scope="row" | 1987
| Bye Bye Blues by Fred Hamm, Dave Bennett, Bert Lown & Chauncey Gray / Autumn Leaves by Joseph Kosma & Jacques Prévert, adapted by Johnny Mercer / Body and Soul by Johnny Green, Edward Heyman, Robert Sour & Frank Eyton | 85.700 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 11th Place |
scope="row" | 1988
| That Old Black Magic by Harold Arlen & Johnny Mercer / Take Five by Paul Desmond / Autumn Leaves by Joseph Kosma & Jacques Prévert, adapted by Johnny Mercer | 86.700 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 11th Place |
scope="row" | 1989
| Johnny One Note & My Funny Valentine (from Babes in Arms) by Richard Rodgers & Lorenz Hart / Sing, Sing, Sing (With a Swing) by Louis Prima | 90.300 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 8th Place |
scope="row" | 1990
| Caravan by Juan Tizol / I Got It Bad (and that Ain't Good) by Duke Ellington & Paul Francis Webster / Don't Get Around Much Anymore by Duke Ellington & Bob Russell / It Don't Mean a Thing (If it Ain't Got That Swing) by Duke Ellington & Irving Mills | 89.200 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 8th Place |
scope="row" | 1991
| Nutville by Horace Silver / Palookaville by Larry Kerchner / A Whiter Shade of Pale by Gary Brooker, Keith Reid & Matthew Fisher | 84.400 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 11th Place |
scope="row" | 1992
| A Day in the Life | 84.600 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 11th Place |
scope="row" | 1993
| Standards in Blue: A Tribute to Dizzy Gillespie | 87.200 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 9th Place |
scope="row" | 1994
| Blues | 84.300 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 9th Place |
scope="row" | 1995
| Homefront: 1945 | 89.500 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 7th Place |
scope="row" | 1996
| American Celebrations | 86.300 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 7th Place |
scope="row" | 1997
| Midnight Blue... Jazz After Dark, The Bluecoats' Way | 85.600 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 11th Place |
scope="row" | 1998
| The Four Seasons of Jazz | 87.100 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 10th Place |
scope="row" | 1999
| Music of Chick Corea | 83.000 | bgcolor="d0f0c0" | 13th Place |
scope="row" | 2000
| Threshold | 84.400 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 12th Place |
scope="row" | 2001
| Latin Sketches | 90.750 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 8th Place |
scope="row" | 2002
| Urban Dances | 91.500 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 7th Place |
scope="row" | 2003
| Capture and Escape | 90.750 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 7th Place |
scope="row" | 2004
| Mood Swings | 92.125 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 6th Place |
scope="row" | 2005
| Caravan | 94.450 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 5th Place |
scope="row" | 2006
| Connexus | 93.175 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 4th Place |
scope="row" | 2007
| Criminal | 94.050 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 7th Place |
scope="row" | 2008
| The Knockout | 93.175 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 6th Place |
scope="row" | 2009
| Imagine | 93.150 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 6th Place |
scope="row" | 2010
| Metropolis: The Future is Now | 96.400 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 3rd Place |
scope="row" | 2011
| Brave New World | 92.050 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 7th Place |
scope="row" | 2012
| Unmasqued | 92.550 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 6th Place |
scope="row" | 2013
| ...to Look for America | 93.350 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 5th Place |
scope="row" | 2014
| TILT | 97.175 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 2nd Place |
scope="row" | 2015
| Kinetic Noise | 96.925 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 3rd Place |
scope="row" | 2016
| Down Side Up | 97.650 | bgcolor="d4af37" | 1st Place |
scope="row" | 2017
| Jagged Line | 95.163 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 5th Place |
scope="row" | 2018
| Session 44 | 96.950 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 3rd Place |
scope="row" | 2019
| The Bluecoats | 98.238 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 2nd Place |
scope="row" | 2020
| colspan="3" bgcolor="e5e4e2" | Season canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic |
scope="row" | 2021
| Lucy | colspan="2" bgcolor="e5e4e2" |No scored competitions |
scope="row" | 2022
| Riffs and Revelations | 97.325 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 2nd Place |
scope="row" | 2023
| The Garden of Love | 97.738 | bgcolor="add8e6" | 2nd Place |
scope="row" | 2024
| Change Is Everything | 98.750 | bgcolor="d4af37" | 1st Place |
scope="row" | 2025
| The Observer Effect | | |
{{notelist}}
Caption awards
At the annual World Championship Finals, Drum Corps International (DCI) presents awards to the corps with the high average scores from prelims, semifinals, and finals in five captions. The Bluecoats have won these captions:{{cite web |title=Caption Winners |url=https://fromthepressbox.com/captionwinners |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221217211247/https://fromthepressbox.com/captionwinners |archive-date=17 December 2022 |access-date=2022-03-22 |website=From The Pressbox}}
Don Angelica Best General Effect Award
- 2016, 2019, 2024
John Brazale Best Visual Performance Award
- 2024
Jim Ott Best Brass Performance Award
- 2024
Fred Sanford Best Percussion Performance Award
- 2022
Traditions
= Blooooo... =
At the Bluecoats first appearance at DCI Finals in 1987, their over-the-top arrangement of the "Autumn Leaves" brought forth the spontaneous long shouts from the audience of "Bloooo..."– a crowd reaction that began with one former member during the 1985 and 1986 seasons and amplified by Drum Corps Midwest announcer Joe Bruno and grew throughout the 1987 season. This has since come to be the audience's traditional greeting as the corps enters the field and response as they finish their show, which has become one of the most recognizable acts of audience participation in the drum corps activity.{{Cite web |last=About Staff |date=2016-12-21 |title=People of the Year: The Bluecoats |url=https://www.aboutstark.com/features/people-year-bluecoats/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220102065008/https://www.aboutstark.com/features/people-year-bluecoats/ |archive-date=2 January 2022 |access-date=2022-04-23 |website=About Stark County}}{{Cite web |last=Mavroudis |first=Christina |date=2008-07-25 |title=A top 10 of audience participation in drum corps shows |url=https://www.dci.org/news/a-top-10-of-audience-participation-in-drum-corps-shows |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221213190853/https://www.dci.org/news/a-top-10-of-audience-participation-in-drum-corps-shows |archive-date=13 December 2022 |access-date=2022-04-23 |publisher=Drum Corps International}}
=Corps song=
The Bluecoats' corps song is, "Autumn Leaves", which became the corps' song after the 1987 season, in honor of the corps making its first Finals appearance. The song has remained a part of the corps' repertoire since 1987, and it reappeared in their 1988 and 1998 shows.{{Cite web |last=Byer |first=Kelly |date=2016-07-22 |title=Bluecoats remain fan favorite after nearly 30 years |url=https://www.cantonrep.com/story/news/local/canton/2016/07/28/bluecoats-remain-fan-favorite-after/27419879007/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221215080752/https://www.cantonrep.com/story/news/local/canton/2016/07/28/bluecoats-remain-fan-favorite-after/27419879007/ |archive-date=15 December 2022 |access-date=2022-04-23 |website=Canton Repository}}
=Home show=
Like most drum corps, the Bluecoats hold an annual home show near their hometown, usually in Massillon, Ohio. Through 2018 it was a local tradition that the Bluecoats' home show is a part of the induction festivities for Pro Football Hall of Fame, which is located in Canton. In 2019, the corps performed during halftime for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game.{{Cite web |last=Lee Cortese |first=Jamie |date=2019-10-01 |title=Bluecoats at Pro Football Hall of Fame Game |url=https://halftimemag.com/september-october-2019/bluecoats-at-pro-football-hall-of-fame-game.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220519000019/https://halftimemag.com/september-october-2019/bluecoats-at-pro-football-hall-of-fame-game.html |archive-date=19 May 2022 |access-date=2022-04-23 |website=Halftime Magazine}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.bluecoats.com Official website]
{{Drum Corps International}}
{{authority control}}
Category:Drum Corps International World Class corps