Teamwork: Marching Band

Words: 518
Pages: 3

Casey Stengel, “It’s easy to get good players. Getting them to play together, that’s the hard part.” This is not only with baseball, or any other sport, but also with Band. Especially during Marching season, that’s when band is a lot of dedication, and time commitment. To be willing to give that up, there has to be some kind of talent. Despite having the best players, band is a whole ensemble, not just individuals. Everyone has to be able to work together to have success. Although despite the most technical pieces of music, and demanding drills, the worst part is trying to get everyone to work together, and make music.
In a personal experience, teamwork has taken toll’s on my own school’s marching band that I’m a part of. The main problem I have found with teamwork is one’s ego. As Ellen Criss said in her article Teamwork in the Music Room, “They [members of the band] take ownership of the ensemble experience in a unique and personal way”. Therefore when someone criticises something I do wrong, or try's to correct me, I automatically take it to heart. I especially can't stand it when someone younger than me
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Such as a girl in a line with me on part of our drill. As having complete straight lines in the end of the song would be a "make it or break it" point in our competition show, me and her made it a priority to atleast have our line straight. She seemed to always correct me first among anyone else, and even when I was proven correct by other elders in the band, she still refused to believe I was right part of the time. Her ego was made up just by the fact that she had been in marching band one year more than me, although her first year she was only a manager. Therefore whenever me and her would get into a fight over it, we affected our whole line. It affected my mood for the rest of the practice, especially when the first year marcher right next to me tryed to correct me for