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DM Tom Brown
Tom Brown was
born in Whitburn, West Lothian, Scotland in 1940.
He was given his first pair of Drum Sticks and introduced to the
Art of Drumming at the age of nine by an Uncle, a drummer with a
local Pipe Band.
He got his first
Pipe Band Drumming lessons from Jack MacLeish of the Whitrigg
Colliery Pipe Band.
He eventually
took over as Leading Drummer at about the same time as they
changed their name to Polkemmet Colliery Pipe Band under the
Leadership of Pipe Major Johnny Barnes.
Other names of
note to emerge from that band were
PM. Robert Mathieson, Jim Kilpatrick, David Barnes (Johnny’s
son), to name but a few.
In 1969/70,
through a chance meeting with the famous Alex Duthart, he joined
up with Shotts & Dykehead Caledonia Pipe Band Drum Corps under
the leadership of the “Great Man” himself. Tom played under Big
Alex and along side other famous names such as Jim Hutton, Bert
Barr, Billy Stevenson and Ronnie Annan for the next six years
where they won every Band and Drumming Championship on numerous
occasions. Tom still credits Alex for making him the drummer he
is today.
During those
early seventies, Tom set up his famous “Tuesday Night” Drumming
class. One famous name to emerge from that class was his Nephew,
Jim Kilpatrick, who eventually ended up at Shotts with Tom.
In 1974/75, he
was asked by Pipe Major Robert Martin to supply drummers and
help out at the then Grade 4 Boghall and Bathgate Caledonia Pipe
Band. In 1976/77, he again supplied drummers for their new
Novice Juvenile Band. One of those young drummers being his son,
Gordon. Other drummers to go into the Novice Corps that year
were Neil Cranston and Tom Egerton. The young Novice Corps went
on to win every Major Drumming Championship and Competition they
entered into during 1977, including Grade 4 Competitions.
Tom had a year
out of playing with Shotts in 1977 and it was at that time that
Pipe Major Robert Martin asked him to take over the Boghall
Corps. Half the Novice Corps, including his son, Gordon, were
ready to go into the corps at the time and Tom took over as
Leading Drummer in 1978 when the band were upgraded to Grade 2.
This was to go on to become quite a famous friendship and
partnership with Robert Martin.
The Band and the
Corps went on to win just about every Major Championship and
Competition they entered into over the next two seasons in Grade
Two.
It was around
this time that Tom’s daughter, Sandra, started her first
Drumming lessons with Tom. Sandra steadily moved up through the
ranks of the highly successful Novice and Juvenile Corps and
joined the Grade 1 Corps in 1983.
In 1980, the band
was upgraded to Grade 1 and that first season saw the Drum Corps
lift the “Cowal Championship” Trophy. They were also fifth as a
band that day.
The following season (1981) saw them lift the “World Pipe Band
Drumming Championship” in Hazelhead Park, Aberdeen. It is
interesting to note that the average age of the Corps at that
time was only 14/15 years old. This was the first of a fine hat
trick of World Drumming championships, a task not easily done at
that time. During the eighties, the Corps went on to lift every
Major Drumming prize and was the first Corps to win the “Alex
Duthart Memorial Trophy” for Champion of Champion Drum Corps.
In 1991, Tom
decided to retire from the Grade 1 Band to spend more time with
the Novice, Juvenile and Grade 3 Corps (Boghall had introduced a
fourth band). His son, Gordon, took over as Leading Drummer of
the Grade 1 Corps. A year later, when the then Grade 3 Band were
promoted to Grade 2, Tom again was convinced to take over as
Leading Drummer. This he did and the History books were written
again. Over the next eight years, Tom and the Grade 2 Drum Corps
went on to win every Major Drumming award including three Grade
2 World Drumming awards. It also established another chain in
the Famous “Boghall” feeder system and to this day, all the
drummers pass through the Grade 2 Corps en-route to the Grade 1
Corps. It is interesting to note that all the drummers in the
present Grade 1 Corps have passed through the “Boghall” feeder
system.
To date, Tom has
won just about every Drumming award in every grade. Not just
with the Boghall organisation, but with other corps he has
coached. He has also taught more World Solo Drumming Champions
than anyone, including two Adult winners.
Tom decided to
retire from the playing side of things a few years ago but is
still as strongly involved as ever with the Boghall drumming
school and also other local Bands. He is still travelling the
World passing on his knowledge to various individuals and
organisations. |