Florida A&M’s Marching 100 summer camp shapes next generation of musicians and leaders

By: Justin White

The camp, now in its 31st year, draws more than 400 middle and high school students from across the country to Tallahassee each summer.

For 80 years, Florida A&M’s Marching 100 has become one of the most recognizable bands in college athletics. But every tradition has to begin somewhere.

For one week every summer, the sounds echoing across Florida A&M’s campus don’t just belong to the Marching 100. Middle and high school students from around the country come to Tallahassee hoping to sharpen their skills — and maybe one day earn a spot in one of the country’s most celebrated marching bands.

“The Foster Five they called them. They started this summer band and we started with 80 students from around the country and now today we have 435 students who are here as far away as Detroit, Michigan,” FAMU Director of Bands Dr. Shelby Chipman said.

Among those students is Michelle “Silver” Garza, who traveled from Houston, Texas, to attend.

“I wanted to go to the number one HBCU in the nation. I shot my shot. I made it in and I aspire to be part of the marching hundred,” Garza said.

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