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The
original Lincoln Minute Men were formed in January 1775. When
the alarm went out on April 19, 1775, the Lincoln Minute and
Militia companies were the first to arrive in Concord, to aid
in the defense of American liberty at the North Bridge. With
them as fifers were the Mason brothers, Joseph and Elijah,
whose house stood at the Bloody Angle on the Battle Road,
and Daniel Brown as their drummer.
It has
been said of the modern Fifes & Drums of the Lincoln Minute
Men that they play in the Massachusetts style, with a Gaelic
accent. Like all musicians, they play for the sheer
joy of it. But they also see their music as a path back
into history, to the times and lives of Joseph and Elijah Mason
and Daniel Brown. So the modern Fifes & Drums perform only
music from the era of the American Revolution. In the
spirit of brotherhood, the Lincoln fifers have embraced the
challenges and frustrations of performing with the same six-hole
fifes that Joseph and Elijah Mason would have used. The
rope-tension drums played by the Lincoln drummers would have
been familiar to Daniel Brown, right down to the gut strings
stretched across the bottom that give snare drums their crisp
snap.
The Fifes & Drums
of the Lincoln Minute Men invite you to follow them on their
musical path back into history. Each year on Patriots’ Day
weekend, the Lincoln Minute Men host “The Lincoln Salute:
A Concert of 18th Century Fife & Drum Music,” featuring
some of the best fife and drum groups from New England, the
United States, and abroad.
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