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When music marches down a different path

sara corry rappelling

DMA student Sara Corry prepares to rappel off a wall during basic training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. Photo courtesy basictraining.com

Waking up at 3:30 a.m., rappelling off a 60-foot wall and learning how to use a gas mask arenā€™t part and parcel of most post-music-school gigs. But then again, neither is the chance to work day-to-day with one of the top ensembles in the country.

For Sara Corry, though, itā€™s all just another day in the life.

ā€œIā€™m getting in shape, and I get to sit down at my desk every day and write music. Itā€™s pretty cool.ā€

Corry, who is in her final year of her doctoral degree in composition at the College of Music, is working full time as a staff arranger for the Army in Washington, D.C. Sheā€™s one of three arrangers working with

Though sheā€™s a musician by training, the newly minted staff sergeant says it wasnā€™t a stretch to see herself in the military.

ā€œI had military in my familyā€”Air Force and Marines on both sides. So Iā€™ve always wondered if I could make it through basic training.ā€

The California native says the unique opportunity to march in her grandfathersā€™ footsteps was part good timing and part good training. She came across the opening on the American Composers Forum job board and applied as part of a class project in a course taught by Dean Emeritus Daniel Sher.

ā€œThe course was called Teaching in Higher Education, and for one of the projects we had to apply for a job. I saw this posting and, with Dean Sherā€™s help, put together a separate application from the one I use for academic positions. These kinds of positions donā€™t come up very often, so it was the right time to be looking.ā€

It was after she landed the gig that Corry says the real work began. She started 10 weeks of basic training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, last fallā€”a whole new world for a musician.

ā€œBasic was really tough. I had to learn to tie a harness and fire a gun; I ran and marched a lot. Each member of my platoon had to dig a ā€˜fox holeā€™ and spend four days down there, with smoke grenades and blanks flying. It was a great experience to go through.

ā€œI also got to meet a lot of different people. Every active duty soldier goes through basic, so I was there with 17- or 18-year-olds who were going into combat roles.ā€

sara corry in uniform

Staff Sergeant Sara Corry (far left) poses with other Army arrangers. Photo courtesy Pentagram Military Newspaper / Francis Chung

After completing training, Corry set up shop at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Virginia, where she dove right into her training as an Army arranger for the bandā€™s annual holiday performances at historic . ā€œThatā€™s one of the bigger events that we arrange for,ā€ she explains. ā€œBut we also write for Twilight Tattoo and many outreach programs. Ģż

ā€œBasically any piece the band is going to need, they come to the arrangers and they tell us what they want to playā€”and we figure out how to do it. We cover everything from instrumentation to adapting for outdoor venues.ā€

Even though basic training is over, Corry says thereā€™s still plenty to remind her that sheā€™s a soldier first.

ā€œEvery day, weā€™re doing some kind of physical activity and training,ā€ she says. ā€œIt is much more relaxedā€”thereā€™s no one telling you to drop and give them 428 pushups, which was my drill sergeantā€™s favorite numberā€”but thereā€™s still that military aspect to everything.ā€

And there still are those reminders of just how lucky she is, as a musician, to be in the position sheā€™s in.

ā€œIā€™m working with some of the best musicians in the countryā€”and theyā€™re very involved in the community as a way to make the military more accessible. Right now, Iā€™m arranging for , which performs at the White House and for other notable military and government functions.

ā€œFor me, this position is the best of both worlds. I am kind of an outdoorsy musician, I like skiing and being active, so the Army is a surprisingly good fit for me.ā€

Though sheā€™s on active duty in Arlington, Corry hopes to finish her doctoral studies next fall.