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Noisy
Neighbors
by Barry
Owens
In the lead-up to their May 8 performances, drum instructor Polar Levine
worked the young members of the Battery Drumline until blisters developed
on some of their small fingers.
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"We're trying to build up their endurance," he said.
Meanwhile, Tom Goodkind, conductor of TriBattery Pops, a gazebo-style
brass band, went shopping for straw hats.
"We don't want to practice too much," he explained. "The
more screwy we are, the more we will be loved."
Both grassroots Downtown groups -one earnest, one less so-took to
the main stage of the Tribeca Film Festival's giant street fair
last month. And both have more appearances to come.
"Now that we are getting gigs, we tell [the kids] they are
professional musicians and are expected to act like it," Levine,
a percussionist and composer, said during a break of one of the
drumline's recent rehearsals.
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The chairs and music stands in the band room of Borough of Manhattan
Community College had been set aside, making room for the group's
swivel-hipped young dancers and the percussionists who pounded out
infectious samba rhythms on their Brazilian drums.
When those rhythms faltered, Levine blew his whistle and went to
the chalkboard.
"Think of a waltz. 1-2-3, 1-2-3, 1-2-3," he said, drawing
a string of triplets onto the board.
"Or, straw-ber-ry, straw-ber-ry, straw-ber-ry," offered
a tamborime player in the back row.
But in the hands of the ensemble of more than two dozen 11-to-17-year-olds,
the sound was anything but delicate. Rim shots rang out, the low
toms rumbled, and the tiny
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tamborimes in the hands of the line's youngest members somehow
popped the loudest. Finally, a mallet broke and the band took a
break. A few members peeled off their batting gloves and compared
blisters.

"All right. Who's got battle wounds? Let me see them,"
said instructor Curtis Watts, a studio musician who leads the line
with the dry, snapping sound of his snare drum.
"Oh, that's a good one right there, through the glove and everything.
You're a drummer now."
With dancers and drummers, the group now numbers around 30, but
Levine hopes it will expand to 50 kids. He said the goal of the
free program, started with funds from the Downtown Community Resource
Center of New York City, is to foster among the young players a
sense of "music as a professional and creative vocation as
opposed to simply a vehicle for stardom."
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Goodkind, a Battery Park City resident and Community Board
1 member-and an accountant who, in an earlier life, was a
member of the folk group Washington Squares-has high hopes
for his latest project.
"This is a hit. I mean, I can't believe no one has done
this down here yet."
The brass band, modeled after traditional small-town community
bands, is made up of Downtown residents, some of them former
new wave, punk and folk rockers. Others had musical careers
that peaked with their high-school marching bands.
"My mouth hasn't touched a sax in so many years, I wasn't
sure I could even make a sound," said Carla Rupp, a Tribeca
resident and one of the first to sign up for the band after
seeing a newspaper ad seeking members.
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"But I think we're really cookin' now," she said.
From tuba to trumpet, accordion to glockenspiel, the band now boasts
10 members. It rehearses twice a month at Church Street Music School
and hopes its future proceeds can benefit the school's programs. Its
next gig is set for July 4 at the Washington Market Park gazebo. An
album is also in the works.
Moments before their debut during the film festival, the band warmed
up backstage, bleating through a surprisingly tight rendition of "Stars
and Stripes Forever."
Goodkind gathered the band around him and passed out the straw hats.
"This band is going to last 100 years," he shouted. "This
is our first gig. Let's make it good and sloppy and fun-like Downtown."
For more information on joining the Battery Drumline, go to www.polarity.com/battery.html1
. For TriBattery Pops, go to www.tribatterypops.com.
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