Joe Colla - DCI Hall of Fame
Joe Colla
Inducted in 1991
A well-respected figure among judges during Drum Corps International’s earliest years, Joseph Colla went on to serve as the head of DCI judging in the mid-1980s.
"Joe has been an exemplary leader of drum corps youth. He does it truly for the kids," the late DCI Hall of Fame member Dr. Bernard Baggs once said. "His presence on the DCI contest field emanates confidence, assurance and security that all he touches will be done well and thoroughly."
Colla’s solid presence on the drum corps field is one that had its origins in the state of Wisconsin. He got his start in the activity as a snare drummer with the Racine Scouts before joining the Militaires of Milwaukee and later the Starlites run by fellow DCI Hall of Fame member Dave Richards. The two had an instant connection. When Richards was part of the Boys of ‘76 senior corps in Racine, he often had Colla along for his car rides to rehearsals.
As their friendship flourished, Richards encouraged Colla to become a percussion judge where he gained experience with the All-American Judges Association in Wisconsin as well as the Central States Judging Association which was a key body in the early days of Drum Corps International for supplying judges for DCI-run contests. With Richards leading the charge, Colla helped found the Wisconsin Federation of Contest Judges which quickly gained a trustworthy reputation and provided a number of the judges, including Colla, for the 1975 DCI World Championships.
“We became very strong,” Richards said of the Wisconsin Federation. “Mainly because of our drum judges like Joe. We had a raft of drum judges.”
Off the football field, Colla’s subject matter expertise and personal connections made him a regular part of the inner workings and administrative end of DCI judging. Led by DCI Hall of Fame member Jim Unrath, Colla was one of two percussion judge representatives who helped steer the 1972 DCI Rules Congress ahead of the organization's 1973 summer season, which became a landmark event in DCI history. Born from that meeting were the 1973 Drum and Bugle Corps Contest Rules that became the universally-accepted gold standard adopted by nearly every competitive circuit and association across the country from then forward.
After a year away from judging to serve a short stint as director of the Kilties of Racine, Wisconsin, Colla picked right back up where he left off. In 1978 he was tapped by DCI executive director Don Pesceone to serve as an assistant to Donald Angelica who at that time headed DCI’s adjudication arm as judge administrator.
Described as an “administratively-focused” individual, Colla had input into how DCI worked with various associations to recruit adjudicators as well as the DCI Judging Task Force which was formed in DCI’s early years to open lines of communication between the DCI judging community and the performing drum corps, both their directors and instructors.
“As a young instructor Joe was always encouraging of my efforts and shared my passion for the activity and the student members,” said DCI Hall of Fame member Charley Poole, who served as percussion arranger of the 27th Lancers in the late 1970s and ‘80s and also as a member of the Task Force. “As an adjudicator, he served as a role model and the infamous card games at DCI meetings were events of legend.”
Colla took over from Angelica as DCI judge administrator beginning in 1984, a position he held for five years through the 1988 Drum Corps International Tour.
“Joe was always one of the ‘good guys,’ always patient with those of us crazies,” said DCI Hall of Fame member Michael Cesario. “Even as he headed all DCI judging I can still remember him being able to take time for an extra ‘pat-on-the-back’ or a ‘kick-in-the-pants’ motivation to keep us all going.”
Colla died March 31, 2024, at the age of 80.
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