What does phantom regiment suta mean
Posted December 7, edited. I know prop bag, but mello chest? Abbevillekid26 Posted December 7, Lance Posted December 8, Posted December 8, I always thought it was about pushing something upward into a certain cavity. But then again, I don't really care if I'm right or wrong. Malambo13 Posted December 8, The people I spent my summer with were more impactful than any other aspect of my experience.
From members, staff, and admin, to volunteers, the people I spent every day with showed me the importance of selflessness, humility, and hard work. Being a member of the Phantom Regiment is a privilege that started as a dream. I look forward to sharing that privilege with my fellow members in For now, we keep pushing.
We pick up our horns, our mallets, our drums, and our equipment. We wake up and go to work. We Are The Phantom Regiment. Previous Next. View Larger Image. Facebook Twitter Reddit LinkedIn. SUTA At a certain point during everyday rehearsals, the members of Phantom Regiment are initiated into the corps family. Part of this initiation is the sharing of several key concepts that the corps has long held. Among these are individual section traditions, and the famous full corps "slogan," SUTA.
Many ideas have been given in speculation over SUTA's supposed meaning. Some think of it as an acrostic of sorts, while others try to identify its characteristic as a word or statement said in pop culture or the study of the origin of the word itself. Two popular ideas held by fans is that it spells out a statement of defiant enthusiasm and contains vulgarity - which obviously would reflect poorly on the corps, it's members, and staff.
Others believe in the theory that it started in the 70s after the lyrics to the popular Queen song "Another One Bites the Dust". Either way, fans will remain speculative as the Regiment's SUTA remains a highly mysterious drum corps artifact. Posted: Fri Apr 22, am I hate this idea. One of the cool things about joining a corps. Many of the members did not feel the name "Rangers" was appropriate for their corps. Some of the members had been listening to Stetson D. While the corps was in its developmental stages, a substantial emphasis was placed on the competitive guard aspect of the activity.
Almost overnight, the Phantomettes became very successful in their own right. An all-male comp guard made up of members of the Regiment horn line, called the Raiders, also had a brief success story. The drum and bugle corps itself, however, struggled competitively. Fortunes began to improve only when in the corps bought a set of high quality bugles from the Commonwealth Edison Drum and Bugle Corps. A new brass arranger also sped the growth process.
Also in , the original Phantom Regiment Cadets was formed, using the old set of bugles. In , the Regiment fielded an all-male corps, including the color guard, with mixed results. The all-girl guard returned in and, with the help of a very successful recruiting drive, the Phantom Regiment, sporting a new set of military uniforms, had its most successful year to date. The corps' competition color guard, the Phantomettes, was memorialized on vehicle registration stickers by the City of Rockford in But just as it looked as if the Regiment was on its way to becoming a championship-caliber corps, a fire in the corps hall took away the corps' home, along with the uniforms and the instruments.
The Phantom Regiment tried to field a corps in , but eventually was forced to cancel the season due to lack of finances. After spending the year- planning their resurgence, a board of directors comprised of former members and staff of the original corps incorporated the Phantom Regiment on Sept. The original board of directors could not have imagined that 30 years later their corps would have a budget of well over half a million dollars, nor that Phantom would be competing for the drum and bugle corps world championship.
The reorganized Phantom Regiment began its first season in three years as a small corps that signed its first roster on Jan. There were 28 charter members. The first season for the corps included many parades and a few contests. The corps uniform included black pants with a red windbreaker and a black and white vertical stripe on the left side of the windbreaker.
The equipment truck was a red step van, the only vehicle the corps owned. As the years passed, the number of contests grew, the distance traveled in the tour increased, and the Phantom Regiment began to creep up the ladder of drum corps success. New in were cadet-style uniforms, including black pants with a white stripe, and a jacket with a diagonal sash of red dividing the black right side from the white left side.
White bucks were worn on the feet and new shakos with inch plumes decorated the head. The corps included 40 horns, 24 color guard, 14 drums, 10 rifles and one drum major in , for a total of 89 members. By , the first hints of Phantom's ultimate classical style were beginning to appear.
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