Neil Armstrong

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bisontuba
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Neil Armstrong

Post by bisontuba »

From Facebook....Happy 50th Anniversary of walking on the Moon!

Neil Armstrong, Astronaut and musician

At a young age Neil received “his love of music from his mother”, Viola Armstrong, a pianist. She taught him to play the piano. When Neil Armstrong was 6 years old his father, Stephen, took him on his first plane ride on the Tin Goose, a Ford Trimotor airplane.

In the eighth grade Neil joined the band at the Upper Sandusky School in Ohio. He chose to learn the baritone horn.

Neil’s mother said, “I asked him why he chose such a big horn? He was such a little fellow and it seemed to be more than he could carry. But he said he liked the tone. So, of course, we didn’t discourage him. And perhaps the school band needed a baritone player. I never had to remind him to practice. He just naturally set aside time for that.”

Some evenings the Armstrong family children would join with their mother, Viola, on piano with Neil on baritone, June his sister on violin, and Dean his brother on cornet to enjoy playing music together as a family.

The Armstrong family moved back to Wapakoneta where Neil entered high school. He played in the high school band, for church events, and for the Boys Scouts. He completed his Eagle Scout training and by the age of 15, Neil Armstrong earned his license to fly, before receiving his driver’s license.

While in high school Neil formed a jazz band called the “Mississippi Moonshiners” to play at assembly intermissions and school dances. Jerre Maxon, the trombonist in the band said, “Neil was a very good musician. He had a strong driving after beat, you know, and really kept us going. He sure loved music. He said music contributed to ‘thought control,’ and he always tried to improve his playing.”

In the book "First Man" Armstrong said they got a gig for four nights for which they split a five dollar fee. He also said they were not so good. "When we played the Star-Spangled Banner only half the audience stood up"

In Wapakoneta high school of the 45 piece band members six were boys. Maxon said, “After the football game, when we went downtown to parade, Neil would turn his cap around and March backwards, just for laughs. Sometimes we would trade off instruments. I suppose we drove the band director crazy-but those were good times.”

Maxon says, “But with the exception of these episodes with the band and the “Moonshiners, Armstrong was a quiet, reserved young man, who said little. I think one of the hardest parts of the moon mission for Neil will be the public speaking.”

https://www.madelinefrankviola.com/the- ... uary-2013/" target="_blank"

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Neil Armstrong in his band uniform

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Neil Armstrong on tuba with the ‘Mississippi Moonshiners’

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Neil Armstrong...Purdue University Band?
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Re: Neil Armstrong

Post by paulver »

Not a musical post, nor am I trying to hijack this topic, but............ I was on a beach approximately 8 to 10 miles away from the Saturn V/Apollo 11 rocket watching Neil, et al, take off for the moon in July of 1969. My uncle owned a motel in Daytona Beach in those days, and while my family was visiting his family, we all got up at 3am to drive to Titusville, Fla., to get a really good spot on the beach to watch it. We could plainly see the rocket standing with the gantry tower, as clear as a bell. What an experience!!! I was 18 years old and had just graduated from high school a month before. Now I'm 68. I'll NEVER forget that sight, that sound, and the way the Earth and water were shaking as that rocket took off!!! My feet were in about a foot of water when the shock wave hit me. I looked around, and everybody was shaking the same way as I was, and the water was just slopping around "helter skelter".......... not in waves! Eventually, you just couldn't look up high enough without snapping your neck!!! Unbelievable experience!! Almost as good as a great performance when the crowd jumps to their feet for you!!
Mark E. Chachich
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Re: Neil Armstrong

Post by Mark E. Chachich »

Mr. Neil Armstrong proved that it took a euphionium/tuba player to be "spaced out" enough to be the the first human to step foot on the moon (my ultimate respect to Mr. Armstrong and all of our astronauts as well as all astronauts from any country). If anyone wants more proof that music education is important for the discipline for doing very important things non-musical or musical I would not have a clue for how to respond.

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Re: Neil Armstrong

Post by Mike C855B »

Wish I had known about the tuba thing with Neil back then. He was a friend of my father when the Apollo astronauts were training out at Edwards AFB; my Dad also worked for NASA. Neil and a bunch of other engineers would gather every week or so for poker, beer and whatever. I think he was at our kitchen table at least a couple of times for the "festivities", although I was too young at the time to understand the significance of what was happening around us, Mom shooed us off to leave the guys alone. What I do remember was the mourning for Ed White, also a family friend, killed in the Apollo 1 fire. Mom told me after Dad passed that Neil particularly respected Dad's skills in aircraft wiring, his commenting that Ed would have still been alive if Dad was in charge of the harness assemblies. (Oxygen-fed fire was started by a bad solder joint.)

Dad was out on the tarmac watching the action when Neil crashed the "flying bedstead" lunar landing trainer, barely ejecting in time.

This whole 50th anniversary thing is a big rush of nostalgia for "what was" while growing up as a NASA brat.
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Re: Neil Armstrong

Post by saktoons »

And Neil Armstrong was a proud member of Kappa Kappa Psi (as my daughter, an officer of Kappa at her university, has informed me multiple times).

https://kkpsiaa.kkytbsonline.com/neil-a ... 1930-2012/

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