At the Booker T. Washington vs. Westwood game at BTW Stadium in South Memphis, 8/31/12
The Booker T. Washington Drumline Performs at BTW Stadium
#011 BTW Drumline (by jdoggtn7)
The Booker T. Washington High School drumline performs in the stands at their game against Westwood at Booker T. Washington Stadium in South Memphis, 8/31/12
Westwood High School Drumline Plays a Cadence at BTW
#010 Westwood Drumline (by jdoggtn7)
The Westwood High School drumline performs at Booker T. Washington Stadium, Memphis TN, 8/31/12
Booker T. Washington Drumline Marches Into BTW Stadium, South Memphis
#008 BTW Drumline (by jdoggtn7)
The Booker T. Washington High School band marches into BTW Stadium to the cadence of their drumline, South Memphis, 8/31/12
Westwood High School Drumline at BTW
#007 Westwood Drumline (by jdoggtn7)
The Westwood High School drumlines plays a cadence toward the BTW stands at Booker T. Washington Stadium in South Memphis, 8/31/12
The Westwood High School Longhorn Band Marches Into BTW Stadium
#004 Westwood Drumline (by jdoggtn7)
The Westwood High School drumline leads the band into Booker T. Washington stadium in South Memphis, 8/31/12
MIAA Football: Westwood at BTW, Memphis
Memphis’ Booker T. Washington Stadium is arguably the second-oldest in the city after Crump Stadium, behind Central High School, although the latter has had a complete renovation in recent years. Much has changed in the surrounding neighborhood, including the demolition of Cleaborn Homes and Foote Homes, but crowds still turn out to support the Booker T. Washington Warriors, the oldest Black high school in Memphis. This year, BTW seems to have a decent marching band, with a first-rate drumline. Westwood, on the other hand, is a pathetic shadow of its former life, when, in the 80’s and early 90’s, it used to march over a hundred band members. Open enrollment, and outmigration from the neighborhood have devastated it. Still, the Longhorns have a small marching band that seems well-trained and which might become the foundation of a rebuilding. Only time will tell.Â
Bernstein – 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. – To Make Us Proud (Finale) (by Romanov76110)
Bernstein and Lerner did not close their musical 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue with the disillusionment of “American Dreaming.” Instead, the actors come to realize that they love America despite its many flaws and challenges, and sing of the need for love to be the basis of America’s pride. This lovely finale later resurfaced as Bernstein’s “Olympic Hymn”.
Leonard Bernstein-“American Dreaming” from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Bernstein – 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. – American Dreaming (by Romanov76110)
Leonard Bernstein and Alan Jay Lerner created the very operatic musical “1600 Pennsylvania Avenue” as a celebration for the Bicentennial in 1976. With financial backing by Coca-Cola, fans expected a celebratory work, but instead encountered a somber and somewhat bitter work about the difference between America’s philosophy and its actual practice. Reviewers at the time proclaimed it a failure, and Bernstein soon withdrew it, using portions of it in the Slava! overture, the Songfest and the Divertimento for Orchestra. For many, little of the wonderful music of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue would be heard until the recording of the heavily-cut White House Cantata of the late 1990’s. But much great music was excised from the cantata, including this powerful and cynical excerpt, in which the characters playing the American presidents and the White House’s main servant express a disillusionment and bitterness that seems to be pulled right from this year’s electorate. Although the Bernstein estate does not allow performances of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, there are signs that this musical might not have been “impossible” or “problematic”, simply ahead of its time.
#038 Fairley High School Drumline (by jdoggtn7)
The Fairley High School drumline leads the band out of J.P. Freeman Stadium after the Whitehaven game Saturday night, 8/25/12

