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Tippecanoe Ancient
Fife & Drum Corps


Fifes and Drums
 
...an historical perspective...

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Fifing and drumming at the annual
Spirit of Vincennes Rendezvous in the
oldest French-founded town in Indiana.

The music of the fifes and drums is the earliest form of military music in America. The early colonizing forces of Britain, France, and Holland, and perhaps even Spain brought with them their fifes and drums. During long marches, battles, and daily life in camp, the music of the fifes and drums played a very functional part in every phase of the foot-soldier's existence. During the marches, drummer boys used a variety of beatings to keep the men moving along in some semblance of order. During the battles the thundering of the drums could be heard above the musketry and was the commanding officer's way of signaling to his men. During camplife each duty of the day from sun-up to sun-down was signaled by the fifes and drums. But not only were the drummers and fifers signalmen, they were also entertainers as their merry music was welcomed during the long hours of encampment.  Learned by rote, the music they played to boost the morale of the troops portrayed the spirit of the soldier, be it religious, patriotic, or folk music.

Fifing and drumming reached a height during the American Revolution, was carried on throught the War of 1812, and into the Civil War. It was during the Civil War that fifing and drumming was all but lost as bugles and cavalry units replaced them.

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Les Compagnies Franches de la Marine
recreated in 1969 on the banks of the Wabash by
The Tippecanoe Ancient Fife & Drum Corps

P.O. Box 1121
Lafayette, IN 47902
wmd@Virtual-Indiana.com

Copyright ©1988, ©1997, ©1998, Denise Wilson, Deidre Duncan, Malcolm Duncan, and
The Tippecanoe Ancient Fife and Drum Corps