Well, I tried really hard to bankrupt my parents by switching instruments as often as possible.
Started piano lessons at age 5 or so. Never got really good, I have more of a one-note mind.
Started Cello in 4th grade.
Started Trombone in 5th grade.
Started percussion in 7th grade. I wanted to be cool, yaknow? It didn't work... I figured maybe it was that I was still playing cello and trombone, dropped those entirely in 8th grade. Still wasn't cool.
Freshman year of high school, I wasn't even going to sign up for band... Changed my mind about two weeks into the school year. Band director said I could play trombone or "baritone" but that if I played trombone I would need my own horn. And my dad played "baritone."
Pedantic music geek side note: I put "baritone" in quotes, because though I play the same instrument to this day, it is a euphonium. What we call a "baritone" here in the US, isn't a baritone. The British brass bands have both baritones and euphoniums, and they are significantly different. Baritone is straight bore and sounds more "tromboney" while the euphonium is conical and has a rounder, very beautiful sound. In fact, the word "euphonious" means "To have a pleasing sound."
That last instrument switch also proved to be a good one. I ended up sitting next to a guy who got me into drum and bugle corps, where I played a baritone bugle (keyed in G, 2 valves when I started, 3 when I aged out) - He brought me to a Madison Junior Scouts rehearsal and I marched there for a year before moving up to the
Madison Scouts and marching there for six years. Touring all summer every summer, rehearsing all day and doing shows at night, and busting my tail in a way I never had before was a transformative experience in my life. Since then, I've done a few Madison Scouts alumni gigs, including the famous Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade (got a pretty good TV shot too) and the Krewe of Orpheus parade in NOLA for Mardi Gras. (Flew the Mooney to both of 'em, too!
)
These days, I play in a tuba/euphonium quartet as the lead euphonium, and I play in the award-winning
Waukesha Area Symphonic Band with my wife and in-laws. (Wife plays trombone, MIL plays trumpet, FIL plays drums, BIL plays french horn.)