• Latest
  • Trending
My Story

My Story

October 27, 2024

Headlines December 2025

December 10, 2025

Turn Rejection Into Success

December 10, 2025

Full Plate? Slow Down to Show Up

December 10, 2025

Tuning Ritual for Jazz Band

December 8, 2025

Why You Matter

December 8, 2025
2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

December 1, 2025
Using Repair Initiatives as a Strategy for Increasing Community Engagement

Using Repair Initiatives as a Strategy for Increasing Community Engagement

November 29, 2025
Benefits of Tri-M: Why and How to Start a Chapter at Your School

Benefits of Tri-M: Why and How to Start a Chapter at Your School

November 28, 2025
New Products November 2025

New Products November 2025

November 26, 2025
Dip Your Toes In: Practical Eclectic Styles Skills for the Classical Musician

Dip Your Toes In: Practical Eclectic Styles Skills for the Classical Musician

November 25, 2025
Guitar Tricks for Tricky Chords

Guitar Tricks for Tricky Chords

November 25, 2025
Three Characteristics of Leadership – Lessons for Music Teachers

Three Characteristics of Leadership – Lessons for Music Teachers

November 21, 2025
Sunday, December 14, 2025
SBO+
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
SBO+
No Result
View All Result

My Story

byStephen MorrisandSBO Staff
October 27, 2024
in October 2024, Archives, America's Musicians, Marching Band
0
My Story
Share on Facebook
ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisement
Bob Rogers Travel

By Senior Airman Stephen Morris

As long as I can remember, drums have been a part of my life. As a child, my uncle was a drummer and drove my mother crazy with his constant tapping on his instrument. Years passed, and on a hot Los Angeles afternoon imagine her surprise when she heard that familiar tapping coming from my car seat behind her as she put on her favorite big band tunes.

When I was four years old, my mother asked the drummer of the church we were attending if he was willing to give me lessons, and he agreed. After being bribed with McDonalds, I agreed to take the lessons. I continued drum set lessons throughout elementary school, but by middle school, I had other interests. My drum set sat untouched in my parents’ garage until one day when the local high school drumline performed for my eighth-grade class. I was headed to high school, and I was hooked.

ADVERTISEMENT

Throughout high school I was heavily involved in my school’s band and choir programs, but I didn’t have a clear direction. As season pass-holders, my family would often visit Disneyland during the summers, and it was there I finally found what I wanted to do for a living. I saw the Disneyland All American College Band perform their big band set on the Carnation Café’s brightly colored stage. Amidst the flurry of all of that is a Disneyland parade and hordes of people rushing to different attractions and shops, my attention was fixed solely on the drums.

Advertisement
Midwest Clinic Technology Pre-Conference

One Friday evening I plucked up my courage and introduced myself to the drummer, Mitch. He was a young and energetic college student who cared deeply about the music he performed. His enthusiasm was infectious. He was kind enough to take me under his wing and direct me to different drummers to listen to and study. That summer while other members of my family were on rides I was watching Mitch play, hoping to absorb as much of his skill and technique as possible.

After high school graduation I enrolled in the jazz program at my local community college. Armed with a determination to do whatever it took to make my dreams of becoming a professional musician a reality, I took advantage of my eighteen-year-old energy levels. Working the 11:00 pm closing shifts at the local Chick-Fil-A paid for my additional private drum lessons. Every other week I would wake up at 5:00 am to drive to Hollywood through the abysmal downtown L.A. traffic to those lessons.  It was worth it to me; I was pursuing what I loved.

At the end of my first year of community college, a guest saxophonist from the Eastman School of Music played with our jazz band. She was one of the most musical saxophonists I had ever heard, and it piqued my interest in her alma mater. After auditioning the following year and waiting with bated breath, I was fortunate to be accepted into Eastman’s jazz program as a transfer student. That same year I won a position in the 2014 Disneyland All American College Band, and Mitch was one of the first to congratulate me. I spent the hot California summer trying to keep up with some of the best collegiate musicians in the country and performing with talented guest artists. These experiences helped motivate and inspire me through the next several years at Eastman.

After five years of the coldest winters this Southern California native had ever experienced, I completed my bachelor’s and master’s degrees in jazz drum set. Graduating from Eastman in 2020 was bitter-sweet, as COVID had just become a world-wide pandemic and school immediately shifted to being online for my final semester. Graduation and other performances were cancelled, along with my degree recital.

ADVERTISEMENT

A year of living in a world with COVID went by, full of the sound of chips frying in hot oil and customers clamoring for burritos at the Chipotle where I worked. Prospects for my music career felt bleak until a friend of mine won a position as an arranger in one of the Air Force regional bands and told me about the job. Incidentally, a percussion audition opened right after our conversation.

The next few months flew by in a blur of mallet excerpts and drum set practice. I arrived at Travis Air Force Base, played to the best of my ability, and won the audition. I was excited to become a military musician. My grandfather had served in the U.S. Army in Germany during the 1960s and I am proud to carry on his legacy of service. The day I swore my first oath of enlistment was his birthday, and the day I graduated from basic military training was the anniversary of his passing.

ADVERTISEMENT

From touring the West Coast, to performing for the President and other world leaders, the past two years of service have been the most musically enriching years of my life. It is a privilege and honor to share the Air Force’s messages through the universal language of music, and I look forward to what the future holds. 

Music.AF.mil

Advertisement
ETI Nashville Giveaway

You may also like:

2013 ’50 Directors Who Make a Difference’ Report SBO Presents the 21st Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference SBO Presents The 19th Annual 50 Directors Who Make A Difference Report: 50 Directors The 22nd Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

So, You’ve Had Your First Performance, Now What?

Next Post

The More You Know, The More You Can Share

Next Post
The More You Know, The More You Can Share

The More You Know, The More You Can Share

Please login to join discussion
ADVERTISEMENT
  • December 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • November 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • October 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • September 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • August 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
© 2005 - 2025 artistpro, LLC
7012 City Center Way, Suite 207
Fairview, Tennessee 37062
(800) 682-8114

No Result
View All Result

© 2005 - 2024 artistpro, LLC 7012 City Center Way, Suite 207 Fairview, Tennessee 37062 (800) 682-8114

Advertisement
Wenger Endur Music Stand