If none of our shows this year were outstanding, part of the blame for that can be put on the schedule. It sucked-- and that also had some influence on the frustration of the leadership. On the other hand, we didn't have any particularly crappy shows this year. The videogame show a snooze-fest? Maybe it wasn't the greatest show ever, but the crowd certainly seemed to like it. (Of course, that may have had something to do with the fact that we were losing to Western Michigan and they would have loved anything that cheered them up a bit.
Last year, when we didn't have a schedule that sucked, we had two very good shows-- the patriotic show and Bohemian. I base "very good" on two main points, I guess: the crowd's reaction and the band's attitude. These were shows that the band was excited and motivated about-- like the last show in 2002, and Frontiers in 2003, which you referenced.
Yes, some members of the crowd liked Western's show better than the show we put on for the same game. But ours was a repeat show, full of music that a lot of the crowd didn't recognize, and it wasn't one of our better shows that year. That isn't to say that it sucked. It didn't. The mood of the crowd plays a LOT into whether or not a show is successful, regardless of its inherent worth.
Most of your points, I don't have any idea about-- I readily admit I don't know anything about the drumline.
I liked Dr. Toney. I did. He was an extremely nice, funny, and likeable guy, who tried to be fair and tried to be liked by everyone. But it seemed to me-- and I was only a freshman, so my point of view may be different-- that he didn't really try to motivate us to be the best we could be. Remember the speech he gave us at Homecoming 2002, about the band being nothing but the "commercial break" for the football game?



