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VIDEO: 63 years in, an upbeat youth pipe band continues to sound off in Surrey

White Spot Pipe Band rehearsals are Monday nights in Fraser Heights

One evening each week, classrooms and hallways at Fraser Heights Secondary look and sound a little like Scotland.

Drummers tap out beats with sticks, Highland dancers rehearse their steps and bagpipers make walls vibrate with their wind-powered drones.

Monday is practice night for the four dozen young members of , which has a long history in Metro Vancouver and has called Surrey home for close to a decade.

鈥淲e鈥檝e kind of been all over the place, but we鈥檝e been here for, I want to say, close to five years now,鈥 explained Kyla MacNeil, who snare-drummed in the band as a teen and later graduated to the role of instructor, back in 1991.

鈥淚 just haven鈥檛 gone away, and never wanted to leave,鈥 she said with a laugh.

Today, MacNeil serves as band manager and helps organize all the piping, drumming and dancing that involves 50 kids 鈥 some as young as eight, others ready to 鈥渁ge out鈥 at 18.

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The band has been a training ground for thousands of young musicians and dancers since 1956, when it was launched as the Optimist Junior Pipe Band by its celebrated founders, (who later served as a Vancouver city councillor) and . By the early 1960s, a new name was found to reflect the sponsorship and patronage of Nat Bailey and his restaurant chain, and ever since it鈥檚 been known as White Spot Pipe Band.

鈥淟earning to play, playing to learn鈥 is a motto splashed on the home page of , a portal for its history, programs and planned for a night in April at a church hall in Cloverdale.

A key corner of the website is the , established to attract new blood and keep everything piping along.

At Fraser Heights, many adults who鈥檝e been through the band ranks now bring their kids to the school to be part of this 鈥渁mazing organization,鈥 as band president Alisa Corscadden calls it.

鈥淏ut you don鈥檛 just have to have that family tie to come out and join us,鈥 she explained. 鈥淭here are some kids that have never been to a Highland games or know much about pipe bands, but they want to become part of this whole experience.鈥

Everyone is welcome to come see what they鈥檙e all about, Corscadden continued.

鈥淲e would love to show them around,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are always accepting new students as we want this organization to continue to flourish and continue for another 63 years. We take kids aged eight to 18 for our program and we teach them from the ground up.鈥

Two of Corscadden鈥檚 children are still involved in the band.

鈥淢y daughter (Kyla) has aged-out, and my sons, one is a piper (Aiden) and the other is a bass drummer (Ethan),鈥 explained Corscadden, a 91原创 resident.

For years, she鈥檚 witnessed the band鈥檚 rehearsal ritual, starting at 7 p.m. On their own and in groups, the pipers always start on their practice chanters, the fingered part of the bagpipe played to create the melody, and drummers play on practice pads, to nail down their rudiments. In another room, dancers step it up to canned music. Later in the evening, by around 8:30 p.m., everyone gathers in the school鈥檚 main hall for a full-band performance.

The practice has paid off over the years, resulting in gigs at the Calgary Stampede, Expo 86 and others, the USS Arizona memorial site in Hawaii, Beijing International Tourist Festival, charity runs, many Remembrance Day ceremonies and, of course, Highland Games far and wide.

For such opportunities around the globe, young people come from far and wide 鈥 well, from around Metro Vancouver 鈥 to learn from the 10 instructors employed by the band.

MacNeil, who lives in Coquitlam, recalled her own history with the band she now manages.

鈥淚 was kind of sucked into it because my dad played bagpipes and my brother played bagpipes and I was a highland dancer 鈥 hard to believe, but true, 8,000 years ago 鈥 and I wanted to go on and be in a band as well,鈥 she recalled.

鈥淪o there was a time there when my family was going to three different band practices on three different nights of the week, and then me and my brother both got to playing with White Spot, and it was just fun,鈥 MacNeil continued. 鈥淲e made friends with people in the band that we are still close with now, so more of less, for me, family is why I got in, but everyone seems to have their own reasons for joining. Lots of people do come because their family but lots of people come to us because they see us out doing something, a performance, and they鈥檙e like, 鈥楾hat looks really neat,鈥 you know.鈥

The number of band members can fluctuate in a given year, rising to 60 but rarely falling below 50.

鈥淏ut again, it鈥檚 all about recruitment,鈥 Corscadden said. 鈥淎nd after they graduate when they鈥檙e 18, hopefully a lot of them go to other pipe bands at that point, and they do. We鈥檙e trying to get those beginners in because we鈥檙e teaching these kids from very beginner level. A lot of them have never picked up any kind of instrument. So we teach them right, raw, from the beginning, which is kind of cool, and kind of unheard of really. We鈥檙e pretty unique that way.鈥

Meantime, the organization鈥檚 Spring Ceilidh is a reason for band members, parents and supporters to enjoy a night of music and dance, with performances by the band Blackthorn and, of course, White Spot Pipe Band. The social is set for the evening of Saturday, April 13 at , with tickets priced at $20 for adults and $10 for kids 12 and under.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a first-time fundraiser for us,鈥 Corscadden confirmed, 鈥渁nd we鈥檙e close to sold-out. We鈥檙e blown away by the response.鈥

For more event details and tickets, email alisafowler@shaw.ca or call Ken at 604-649-6482.

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From left, Jamin Kaiser, Allister Peden and Benjamin Bailly during a White Spot Pipe Band rehearsal night at Fraser Heights Secondary in Surrey. (Photo: Tom Zillich)
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Drummers hit practice pads during a White Spot Pipe Band rehearsal night at Fraser Heights Secondary in Surrey. Pictured in the back row, left to right, are Everett Ballum, Cooper Hossack, Chelsea Hossack, Ethan Fowler and Brandon Carlos. In the front row are Wesley Rowley, Kalum Tillmanns, Robyn Watts and Cameron Robson. (Photo: Tom Zillich)
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Teacher Curt Watts (left) with White Spot Pipe Band musicians Diego Martinez, Luke Lee, Oliver Watts and Kelsey Cressey during a rehearsal night at Fraser Heights Secondary in Surrey. (Photo: Tom Zillich)
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Teacher Hal Senyk (right) with young musicians during a White Spot Pipe Band rehearsal night at Fraser Heights Secondary in Surrey. (Photo: Tom Zillich)
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Teacher Hal Senyk with young musicians (clockwise from left) Sojeung Kim, Camron Robson, Brandon Carlos, Colin Richdale and Avery White during a White Spot Pipe Band rehearsal night at Fraser Heights Secondary in Surrey. (Photo: Tom Zillich)
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White Spot Pipe Band during a recent performance. (submitted photo)


Tom Zillich

About the Author: Tom Zillich

I cover entertainment, sports and news for Surrey Now-Leader and Black Press Media
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