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Carolina Crown : ウィキペディア英語版
Carolina Crown Drum and Bugle Corps

Carolina Crown Drum and Bugle Corps is a World Class (formerly ''Division I'') competitive junior drum and bugle corps. Based in Fort Mill, South Carolina, Carolina Crown is a member corps of Drum Corps International (DCI).〔(Drum Corps International :: Marching Music's Major League™ )〕 On August 10, 2013, Carolina Crown won the 2013 DCI World Class Championship, also becoming the first former Open Class/Division II corps to do so.〔(DCI.org News: A New Champion is 'Crowned' )〕
==History==
The Carolina Crown organization was founded in 1988 as the Charlotte Drum Corps Association, a group of local drum corps fans who gathered on an irregular basis to talk about drum corps and watch drum corps video. After organizing themselves with Bill Loelius as president, Kevin Smith as vice president, and Luanne Bialecki as Secretary-Treasurer, the group hosted two drum corps shows, Southern Gold Classic at Davidson College and NightBEAT at Charlotte's Memorial Stadium. Southern Gold Classic drew a small audience and lost money. NightBEAT was much better attended, but the group was unable to pay the stadium rental. When NightBEAT Chairperson Doug Madar, Bill Loelius, and Kevin Smith met with Charlotte Parks & Recreation Department Superintendent Marvin Billups to discuss working out some sort of payment schedule, they were surprised when Billups not only wrote off the bill for the 1988 NightBEAT but offered the Department's sponsorship for future shows. In 1989, a gift of $1000 was offered by the Queen City Optimists with the proviso that the organization start a performance group; after discussions initially centered on starting a drum line, Carolina Crown Drum and Bugle Corps was born.〔http://carolinacrown.org/web/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=83&Itemid=96〕〔(corpsreps.com - The Drum Corps Repertoire Database )〕〔A History of Drum & Bugle Corps, Vol. 2; Steve Vickers, ed.; Drum Corps World, 2003〕
After the corps bought a complete set of drums from a defunct drum and bugle corps only to discover that they were seriously damaged, John Cummings of Ludwig Drums offered to repair the drums as part of an informal sponsorship of the corps. The name Carolina Crown was adopted to recognize the groups' desire to represent the Carolinas region while still recognizing Charlotte, the Queen City, which has a crown in its logo. The leadership group met, in the fall of 1989, with a number of young band directors who were also alumni of Suncoast Sound, Spirit of Atlanta, and the Madison Scouts drum and bugle corps to tell them of their efforts to start a new local corps. From this group, Don Flewell, Cecil Adderley, Bill Register, and Van Mathews volunteered to be the corps' first instructors. After locating and purchasing the horns of the defunct California Dons, Carolina Crown began recruiting members. The corps also formed a partnership with the Mecklenburg Council of the Boy Scouts of America as Explorer Post #588, which aided them in finding school space for auditions and practices.〔〔〔
In 1990, fielding a corps of only sixty-one members, Carolina Crown elected to compete in the Open Class (now known as World Class) in DCI. However, not only was the corps out-classed by the other, larger corps in Open Class, but it was also bested in DCI prelims by seven corps that had advanced from Classes A and A60, finishing thirty-third of 33 corps at their first DCI World Championships in Buffalo.〔http://www.fromthepressbox.com/19900815div1prelims.htm〕 In 1991, the corps dropped down to Class A. At the DCI Championships in Dallas, Carolina Crown finished in second place in Class A and advanced to Open Class prelims, where they placed twenty-fifth, earning DCI Associate membership. Carolina Crown was third in the 1992 Division II championship in Whitewater, Wisconsin, once more finishing in twenty-fifth place in Division I (which had been re-named from Open Class) prelims in Madison, Wisconsin. At the 1993 DCI Championships in Jackson, Mississippi, Carolina Crown won the Division II Championship title and finished in twenty-first place in Division I prelims.〔〔〔
After winning Division II in 1993, Carolina Crown opted to compete exclusively in Division I in 1994. That year, the corps finished seventeenth in DCI semifinals in Boston. In 1995, in only its sixth season, Carolina Crown earned a spot as one of DCI's Top Twelve Finalists, taking eleventh place in quarterfinals and holding that position through Finals. Since that first Finals appearance, Carolina Crown has failed to make DCI Finals only once, finishing in fourth place in 2008, 2010 and 2011, in second place in 2009, 2012 and 2015, and winning the World Class DCI World Championship in 2013 after a season-long battle with the Blue Devils, with "E=MC²",〔 and in the process the horn line scored the first perfect score in DCI Finals history,〔http://www.sfgate.com/business/press-releases/article/Carolina-Crown-Drum-and-Bugle-Corps-Wins-First-4738023.php (accessed Sept. 3, 2013)〕 and earned the Jim Ott Award for best brass performance for the 4th time in the past 5 years.
In 1995, the corps moved from Charlotte to Belmont, North Carolina. Following the 1997 season, the corps relocated to its present home of Fort Mill, South Carolina.〔〔〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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