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Boumpani, the Wise DUMB Director
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| Boumpani: striking up the Pep Band |
| Photo: John Gardiner |
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n
a leil Boumpani grew up very quietly in Middlesex, New Jersey,
where, as a boy, he hardly made a peep, and this was odd both because
Boumpani is Italian and because he was born with an passion for
making music. His mother was worried, he says. She did her best
to push him into "social environments."
First, he tried cross-country, but that was just as lonely as standing
still. Then, in the seventh grade, she took him to meet the band
teacher at his school, Mr. Pirone, a gentle, silver-haired man
whose passion for making music was as contagious as chickenpox
,and who persuaded Boumpani to join the band. "I am eternally
grateful for that," he says. "The band made me who I
am today."
Today Boumpani is the director of the Duke University Marching
Band (DUMB), which he has been for sixteen years, and which has
made his adulthood, by contrast, very loud. Music has left its
mark on the man: a feeble voice, constant ringing in both ears,
sudden blinding migraines--"all the muscles in my head tense
up," he says. But Boumpani is the instrument of his own decline.
He wants it loud. Volume is all-important to the marching band,
he says, because the band represents the team, and the team represents
the university. It's sound logic: We associate thunder with a powerful
storm. Why shouldn't we associate thundering music with a powerful
team?
That was one idea behind the creation of the military band, the
forerunner of the halftime show, which was not quite as lethal
as the cannon, but had an effect of some note. Trumpets blasted.
Drums pounded. Tubas shook the air. "During the Crimean War," writes
the musician and historian Henry Farmer, "the French delighted
in repeating the bon mot that their band did as much to drive the
Russians back as their bayonets." The Civil War was also a
contest of cadence and a battle of brass: "Dixie" terrified
Union troops; the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" was not
music to Rebel ears. Music then, and long before, was a warning
and a weapon. And music now, in the form of a marching or a pep
band--and via "March King" John Philip Sousa--is something
we have come to regard as the sound of team spirit. It is what
drives Cameron crazy and gives football fans a reason to clap.
During rehearsal the day before a game, Boumpani stalks the formation,
inspecting posture and movement and keeping time with one hand.
He wears a mustache and smokes a pipe. He nods when things are "tight" and "full" (amplified)
and seems to delight in the magnitude of his voice over the microphone
clipped to his collar. In order to make certain a star formation
looks like a star, he will stand high above in the bleachers that
overlook the practice field, like a general overseeing his troops.
But for all his removal, Boumpani is still in the band. Students
call him the "Godfather." They rib him about things he
says and the way he says them. Usually, Boumpani will ignore the
jokes, but sometimes he will just appear to when, really, he's
thinking of a comeback. And when he delivers, usually deadpan and
usually golden, everyone laughs. Then he half-smiles and says, "okay,
okay, enough." It is Boumpani's belief that, while the band
is a musical organization, it is, perhaps more important, a social
one. "Long after you forget the shows we do, you will remember
the people with whom you marched," he tells them.
Sarah Peden, a senior, is the size of a piccolo. She is from South
Africa, and she moved to the United States just in time to see
Christian Laettner hit "the shot" in 1991. "I ran
over to my dad and said, 'I want to go to Duke!' I thought since
I play an instrument, I could be in the band and actually go to
those games."
A clarinetist does not do a lot for volume. But Peden says she
adds to the depth of the sound, which is important, too. People
might not hear every note, she explains, but without the woodwinds,
the band would have an awful blaring sound. "I have a role.
I'm part of a group. It's nice."
Marching bands fall into one of two catagories. The Duke version
is the most common: A director plans and outlines marches and music
weeks in advance. Boumpani charts the way the formations should
move, using a map of the field. Last season's Jupiter drum solo
called for a complex pinwheeling motion that looks something like
the football team's double-reverse but requires that no one run
into anyone else. Coordinating the foot speed and direction of
a hundred people while listening for weak spots requires extreme
focus, and can be, as one might imagine, a bit unnerving.
However, says Boumpani, planning formations is nothing compared
to arranging music. You cannot play the first twelve minutes of
a piece and call it a show. You have to reduce it to scale. Boumpani
spends days cutting away, excising clarinet and flute solos that
don't carry well in a stadium, inserting transitions and parts
for instruments not included in the original. He listens, rearranges,
listens again, rearranges--much like making a mixed tape--and then,
somehow, emerges with a compact, all-member-inclusive, halftime
show that half the audience misses while waiting in line for a
hot pretzel. "Few people really understand how much work goes
into one halftime performance," he says.
Then there's that other group. "Scatter bands," Boumpani
says, which Duke is definitely not, because Tom Butters, former
athletics director, and Joe Alleva, his successor, don't want to
see stuff like that. "They go out there and run around and
maybe make a form, and maybe one person decides to run around like
a moron. The athletics department decided that we're either going
to do it the right way or we're not going to do it at all. We're
the only band in the ACC with so little resources that hasn't resorted
to silliness."
In the Sixties, before there were Cameron Crazies, marching-band
members were the school's clever enthusiasts. They upheld the notion
that they were in college to raise hell and the best way to do
that was to join the band. They spelled "PUKE" on the
field, played "welcoming shows" (visiting team's fight
song outside visiting team's hotel at 3 a.m. the morning before
a game), and distributed an internal manual, still extant, known
as the DUMBook, "printed annually by the DUMBpress, slingers
of DUMBull since 1235." The manual is the band member's bible,
with instructions and advice on everything from proper marching
technique to keeping the uniform clean. "Shine your belt buckle:
It won't take you five minutes with a blitz cloth, which you can
purchase for two bits in the Dope Shop or steal from one of those
NROTC fellas." In it, just as in most everything DUMB, there
is a faintly risible undercurrent: the uniforms, the military pomp,
the exaggerated movements.
Yet, today's members display a certain reserve. They enjoy themselves--but
they work hard. They show respect for authority, for the drum major,
and for Boumpani. "They want to be good," he says. "They
take it very seriously. We had a guy named Brian Mangum who just
graduated. He came in and he turned the drum line around. He would
make them stay after practice for an hour and he would yell and
curse and throw his drum stick when they messed up."
The new attitude doesn't mean the band has lost its sense of spirit--it
is the spirit. And the antics--like belly-crawling on the sidelines
at the Army game while trombones provide cover fire--will continue.
It just means the band won't be going by its initials anymore. "We're
trying to move away from the whole DUMB thing," says Nick
Superina, the band president. "We took it off the shirts.
But it's still on the hats." The hats are next.
So be careful who you go calling "DUMB" around here.
He could have a tuba on him.
--Patrick Adams
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