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Remarks
to Redcoat Band Annual Banquet
Georgia Hall, Tate Student Center
November 27, 2005
By Tom Jackson
Being
a part of a great institution is one of the most important things
we can do in life – because institutions outlive us.
For
31 years, I have had an extraordinary vantage point to view the
Redcoat Band pre-game and half-time shows. As I sit in the
public address booth of Sanford Stadium and stadiums all over the
southeastern U.S. watching the Redcoats perform, I usually am sitting
side-by-side with the announcer for the other band performing before
or after the Redcoats on that particular day. I must say that
last night in Grant Field, sitting beside the Georgia Tech announcer,
I never have been prouder to be associated with the Redcoat Band.
You folks were extraordinary in your performance on the field
and in your performance in the stands. And you were outstanding
representatives of the University of Georgia.
I’ve
been announcing for the Redcoats since well before most people in
this room were born…and even since before both my own two
sons were born – they’re now 21 and 26. My wife
and I celebrated our 30th wedding anniversary this past week, and
that’s a milestone I’m truly proud of and grateful for.
But I’ve been announcing for the Redcoats since the
year before we were married. Sherry is here with me tonight,
and she has spent a whole lot of second quarters of football games
sitting alone in the stands while I make my way to the stadium p-a
booth.
The
first game I announced for the Redcoats was the Tangerine Bowl in
Orlando in 1974. We lost that game to Miami of Ohio, an inauspicious
start to say the least. The regular Redcoat band announcer could
not make the trip for some reason, and Roger Dancz asked me to fill
in for just that one game. I’ve just been filling in
ever since.
I’ve
never really kept track, but in preparing my remarks tonight, I
looked back over the schedules and over the years to realize I’ve
been on 22 bowl trips with the Redcoats, another 91 out-of-town
games on top of the bowl trips, 186 home games in Sanford Stadium,
plus, after this week, three SEC Championship games. This
week will be my 302nd game announcing for the Redcoats, and I sincerely
thank you for the opportunity to be associated with such a great
organization over that period of time. That’s a lot
of Spell Georgia cheers. I don’t think we’ve spelled
it wrong yet.
There
are many landmarks along the way. Perhaps you’ve heard
of some of them, and perhaps some of my memories will be new information
for you.
I
have an old film of a 1970s show in which the Redcoats formed a
large train on the field, complete with wheels that turned as the
train moved goal line to goal line with steam coming out of the
smokestack.
There’s
the infamous wedding show during which a couple was actually married
on a large cake in the center of the Redcoat formation.
There
was the James Brown show, in which the Godfather of Soul sang with
the band for a halftime.
There
was the visit of Prince Charles of England – Kentucky beat
us 33-0 that day. As President Fred Davison escorted Prince
Charles down the center of the field, walking from the bridge end
toward the east end through the Redcoat formation, behind them on
the bridge someone unfurled a large banner which everyone in the
stadium could clearly see. It said, “Prince Charles
does it Dawg style.”
For
some years, we had the electric squad with Steve Dancz and others
set up on a platform in the middle of the band, with electric guitars,
organ and a drum set.
There
was the trip to Washington DC in January 1977 when the Redcoats
were chosen to represent the state of Georgia at the inaugural parade
of President Jimmy Carter. As the home state band of the new
President, the Redcoats led the parade.
Through
those years in the early-to-mid 1970s, at any number of games there
was an airplane circling Sanford Stadium pulling a banner with the
words, “Play Dixie, Fire Dancz.” It was a courageous
time to be a Redcoat, following a courageous leader in Roger Dancz.
I
think I remember all 31 Homecoming ceremonies, but it’s hard
to tell them apart, because the script hasn’t changed one
word in all those years.
At
the 1975 Cotton Bowl, back when my wife and I used to ride the buses
with the band, we got all seven buses down a narrow, one-way street
and could not make a turn at the end. All seven had to back
up four blocks to get out of that jam. I rarely saw Roger Dancz
get perturbed about anything, but that was quite a test.
I
remember at the 1980 National Championship game in the Superdome
in New Orleans getting to announce over the p-a, “Ladies and
Gentlemen, the President of the United States and Mrs. Carter,”
as our special guests were introduced.
I
remember an attempt to film a Coca-Cola television commercial at
half-time. The production company was all in place, the film
cameras were rolling. The Redcoats formed the famous Coca-Cola
script writing the length of the field – and that wasn’t
an easy feat. I was to get the crowd to sing along with the
Coca-Cola jingle, “I’d like to teach the world to sing
in perfect harmony…”, and then there was to be a giant
balloon release. Well everything went fine until the last
note, when the balloons got tangled up in their large plastic bags
along the sidelines. The band held the last note, and held
the last note…and the properties crew ran around trying to
get the darn balloons to come out of those bags….in the end,
it was a fiasco…and the commercial never made it to air.
I
remember the last home game of 1980 – the last year before
the east end zone was enclosed. As you may know, until that
time the railroad tracks outside the east end zone were a great
vantage point for a free view of the game, and the tracks were packed
with fans 24 hours before every kickoff. The Redcoats dedicated
that last show of 1980 to the track fans, playing the entire show
to the east end zone, and ending it by having everyone in the stadium
face that direction and wave goodbye to a great tradition.
I
used to announce for the spring concert tour and the Mother’s
Day concert, as well. At one year’s spring concert,
the band did a piece called “Tubby the Tuba.” If
you’re familiar with it, you may know that it has a solo part
in which the narrator sings. Yes, I sang with the Redcoats,
and I notice that we haven’t tried that again since.
I
remember especially in 1985, when the band surprised me by telling
me I was to be on the field for pre-game, not in the press box.
I had only been the announcer 11 years at the time, but the band
presented me with an honorary life membership plaque. It still
hangs in a place of honor in my office on campus.
These
were all important moments in our history as a great institution
– the Redcoat Band.
But
this is an important moment in history.
It
is highly unlikely that ever again this particular group of people
will be assembled together as we are tonight.
So
let’s appreciate this moment for what it is, and put aside
thoughts of other obligations and pressing needs.
Think
about the people around you, and what it means to be part of an
institution like this.
Why
do we invest our time, our talents, our blood sweat and tears, in
an institution like the Redcoat Band, or the University of Georgia,
or our church, or our civic club?
We
do it because institutions are unlike humans – if they are
built on strong foundations for strong purposes, they can live a
long, long time. Institutions will outlive us. They
are living messages sent out to a time we will not see. Our
children are part of those messages....and not just our children,
but the children of all of us...future generations. They will
continue to populate these institutions that we hold dear and carry
them forward, because we have built value into the institutions
for society, and the children of today will become the adults of
tomorrow who will carry those values forward through the institutions
we have left for them.
Ten
years from now, or 20 years from now, or 50 or 100 years from now...it
is not too hard to imagine that the Redcoat Band will be assembled
much like we are assembled tonight...celebrating their contribution
to another victorious UGA football season. We can believe
that is true because we believe in the value of this organization.
What will they say of the Redcoat Band of 2005? Will
they remember us as a strong brick in their foundation? Or
will they say – “if only those folks had held up their
part of the bargain?” We are willing to contribute so
very much to the Redcoat Band because we trust that it will outlive
us and will be part of our legacy to future generations. I
trust that those future generations will say the Redcoats of 2005
continue to make them proud...and they will be thankful for the
strong foundation you built for them.
We
live in a highly technical, mechanistic society. We are taught
how to work our increasingly complex gadgets. We know how
to make a dollar in business every day. We know the mechanics of
what to do. But do we know why we do it? If we don’t
know the why of what we do every day...why we do it...then we’re
missing the fundamental core values of life. And the why is
to help people, to make society better, to make our contribution
to that foundation for those future generations, by building a better
society and stronger institutions to carry that society forward.
All
the new technology in the world doesn’t bring us as much hope
and renewal as one little baby. Technology serves us. But
babies renew us...as individuals and as the family of humanity.
Our hope is not in the technology. It is in the children.
We
celebrate each year as a milestone by marking our own birthday.
Birthdays are important. It’s a good time to take
stock of what we’ve accomplished in the past year and what
we have planned for the coming year. But there’s one
birthday that just knocks you for a loop. No, it’s not
16 when you get to drive. And it’s not 18 when you graduate
high school and get to vote. And it’s not 21 when you get
to drink. Or 40 or 50 when you finally feel “old.”
For me, it was birthday #22. For on my 22nd birthday,
I suddenly realized that everything up to that point was prologue
– it had all been preparation for true adulthood, which is
getting out into the work-a-day world and making your own way by
making your own contribution to society.
A
good realization to have on or about your 22nd birthday is that
to live well you have to live with hope. You need a positive
outlook. As a venerable pastor of mine used to say, you have
to live every day on tip-toe, reaching for the very highest. Part
of that living on tip-toe is being a part of organizations that
make a difference – a strong church, a strong university,
an institution like the Redcoat Band...that will continue making
a difference in lives far beyond the lifespan of any of us in this
room today.
Part
of this living on tip-toe is the realization that by giving to others
we receive the most for ourselves. Philanthropy is not just
for wealthy people. Generosity is not just for tax planning
purposes. You have to have a heart for giving to others –
both your time and your resources. I hope that as you make
your ways in life, you will remember two particular institutions
that have helped form you and that you have helped form –
those being the University of Georgia...and the Redcoat Band. Do
your part to keep the foundation strong, so that the Redcoat Band
will be an institution that outlives us all providing value-added
to society for generations to come.
That’s
why being a part of the Redcoat Band is something so very special.
That’s why we say, “Once a Redcoat, always a Redcoat
– how sweet it is.”
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