The Hellcats

This group of 12 buglers and rudimental drummers traces its origin to 1775,
to the Continental fifers and drummers that Minutemen brought with them to West
Point.
Although the fife and drum were the first instruments at West Point, the
bugle followed shortly. Army commanders preferred the bugle’s bold, brilliant
sound, and used it to give camp and battlefield commands. During the
Revolutionary War, the War of 1812 and the War Between the States, the drum was
the primary source of battlefield communication. Throughout the day, it signaled
various orders, and its steady beat kept the rhythm for road marches and troop
movements.
The Hellcats’ main mission today is to provide musical support to
the U.S. Corps of Cadets. In addition to sounding reveille and retreat at the
garrison flagpole, the Hellcats play for marching drills, military reviews and
parades. Each weekday, they provide martial music as the cadets march into the
mess hall. As the football season brings the annual Army-Navy game near, the
group’s arrangements of traditional West Point gridiron songs fan the Army
fighting spirit.
Hellcat buglers and drummers also have the sad task of
performing muffled drums and taps during West Point funerals. Annually, a bugler
plays taps at the tombs of presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt
on the anniversaries of their deaths.
Pride, intense esprit de corps and a sense
of historical continuity inspire the distinguished service of today’s
Hellcats. With their precise marching, embellished by the twirls of silver
bugles and intricate rudimental drumming, the group delights thousands of
spectators each year. The Hellcats have been featured on every major network
morning show. In 2002, the group performed in Carnegie Hall with the New York
Pops Orchestra under the direction of Skitch Henderson and for the Fourth of
July with the Boston Pops Orchestra under Keith Lockwood.
Equipped with instruments designed and hand-made specifically for
them, the Hellcats enable the United States Military Academy Band to maintain
faithful renditions of traditional American military music, and day by day
provide the Corps of Cadets a piece of living history.
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