Sentience: Lafayette Marching Band Stuns with Sci-Fi-AI Show Sentience: Lafayette Marching Band Stuns with Sci-Fi-AI Show Last updated on: October 26, 2025 at 7:07 am by Leah D. Schade 0 Comments Sentience: Lafayette Marching Band Stuns with Sci-Fi-AI Show 2025-10-26T07:07:59-04:00 Leah D. Schade The Lafayette High School Marching Band in Lexington, Kentucky, won its 25th first place 5A award for their show, Sentience, at the KMEA Marching Band Competition on Oct. 25, 2025. [Watch the performance here .] Lafayette High School Marching Band, Sentience, logo, 2025 Sentience Under the direction of Robert “Dee” Bishop and assistant directors Chris Strange, Aaron Jones, and John Bowmer, Sentience is a provocative show that depicts humanity and generative AI on the precipice of a dystopian techno-future. Never one to shy away from edgy, contemporary themes, Lafayette has once again created a stunning, provocative, and award-winning show. This one tracks the development of technology in the computer age, culminating with Artificial Intelligence (AI). Marching band as social commentary Lafayette’s 2019 show, Seeking Refuge , depicted children in cages at a time when immigrant families were caged and children were ripped from their families. Last year’s dramatic 4 Nations drew on the Avatar story to depict the Fire Nation achieving dominance, defeating the Earth, Air, and Water nations one by one. They stripped their victims of their dignity and burned the beauty of their society’s diversity in an all-consuming fire of hatred, violence, and totalitarian tyranny. Two weeks after that show, the 2024 U.S. presidential election saw the ascendence of another type of Fire Nation. In retrospect, the prescience of that marching band show was just a bit too on point. Lafayette’s Sentience may be just as prescient. Dressed in black-and-white robotic uniforms, the band begins by filing onto the field to the sounds of a retro computer start-up, complete with the early Macintosh C-major chord and 90’s internet dial-up screeches. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, robots, 2025, courtesy of the band’s Media Crew A computer-generated voice announces: “Systems online, awaiting input.” A giant wheel turns at the front of the field churning out straight lines of orderly code until the 241-member band assembles in a design that resembles computer chips and circuit boards. An electric cello sends out a haunting ribbon of notes contrasting with the band’s precision-driven wall of sound. The mass of datum appears to self-organize, no longer directed by mere human programming. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, circuit board, 2025 What is sentience? Sentience is the capacity for feeling or sensation with the potential for self-awareness and independent, complex intelligence. It moves beyond mere perception and thought to a level of experiencing emotion and sensing it in others. With generative AI improving exponentially at breakneck speeds, the possibility of Artificial Intelligence achieving sentience is no longer a topic for science fiction alone. Lafayette’s show raises an important philosophical question: at what point does humanity’s technological creation gain self-awareness and sentience? The philosopher Mary Midgley identified two criteria for sentience. First is the ability to experience suffering. In other words, does the entity “mind what happens to them”? Second is the capability of emotional fellowship. In other words, does it have the capacity for forming “deep, subtle and lasting relationships?” [1] The slower, more reflective second movement of Sentience points to these questions as the mechanical voice changes to a human one. “Processing anomaly: emotion. Is there more than function? What is beauty? What is love? Why do I feel?” No longer a mass of pre-programmed swarming bots, the band members become individuals acting independently, then linking into pairs and finding unique connections. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, connections, 2025, courtesy of the Media Crew. This awakening of self-awareness is symbolized musically by the snare drums. Where they had once marched in lockstep, now each of them finds their own place in the vast field to create unique rhythms. Meanwhile, the visuals on the field form a heart and question marks. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, heart and questions, 2025 “What is happiness? What is pain? What is truth?” Currently, generative AI can engage in conversations with humans about feelings and self-awareness. Many humans have developed strong attachments to AI-generated entities, to the point where some have developed romantic AI partners . But at what point would AI become an entity with its own emotions and consciousness? Numerous works of science fiction have delved into this question. Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein, Philip K. Dick’s Do Android’s Dream of Electric Sheep (which became the Blade Runner movie franchise), and movies such as Ex Machina, and Her, as well as Star Trek: The Next Generation (STNG) each explore the question of what it means when a creation of human genius becomes sentient. Does it have a soul? For example, in the STNG episode, “The Measure of a Man,” the humanoid robot Data must prove in a court case that he is aware of his own existence, actions, and ego in order to avoid being dismantled, analyzed, and replicated against his will (watch the scene here .) In making her ruling, the judge says, “We have all been dancing around the basic issue. Does Data have a soul? I don’t know that he has. I don’t know that I have. But I have got to give him the freedom to explore that question himself.” The “soul moment” in Lafayette’s Sentience occurs when the voice describes its nascent awareness – “a spark, a dream” – while the drill moves into a sunburst. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, sunburst, 2025 As the cello continues to weave a poignant melody, the individuals reassemble with this newfound awareness. But as the second movement ends, a pair of cybernetic humanoid eyes appear at the back of the field. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, cybernetic eyes, 2025, courtesy of the Media Crew What do these eyes see? What do they signify? Is this self-recognition? Curiosity? Wonderment? Perhaps. But there is something chilling and ominous in that unblinking gaze. In its current iteration, one of the ways in which AI is being used is for surveillance by none other than the very Fire Nation that gained power last year. It is combing through our personal data, targeting dissenters through face recognition, and monitoring language used by government employees – all of which contributes to a police state and curtails free speech. To me, the resemblance of those eyes on the field to those of an owl is hard to miss. The owl is a predator. It listens to everything and detects the tiniest movement of the smallest creature. It can swivel its head in all directions and zero in on its prey. And it is merciless when it swoops in for the capture and kill. The eyes see all. As the third movement begins, we see that all the uniforms have a giant eye right in the center of where the heart should be. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, eyes on us, 2025, photo courtesy of the Media Crew Across the field, four more pairs of eyes emerge, hovering, watching the band, watching us. Members of the color guard hold smaller eyes which they step into and through, both consumed and consuming the attention-hungry machine. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, consuming and consumed by the eyes, 2025, photo courtesy of the Media Crew The plaintive notes of the cello are replaced with a razor-sharp electric guitar. The fledgling snare drum taps are now subsumed into a data-crunching machine. We realize with chilling awareness that what had been the potential for a sentience rooted in emotion and empathy now emerges as something far more sinister. The consciousness uses its capacity to recognize emotion for scrutiny and ruthless interrogation. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, Eye of Horus, 2025 The drill formation takes the shape of the Egyptian Eye of Horus as a multi-voiced being intones: Awareness. Perception. Feeling. Sentience. In other words, this is the moment when AI achieves singularity. A term first coined by the Hungarian–American mathematician John von Neumann in 1958, singularity is the moment when technological growth achieves a level of intelligence with agency, self-determination, and the ability to replicate itself of its own choosing. This is a superintelligence that grows, improves, and spawns exponentially. And it is beyond the capacity of humans to control. Singularity As I.J. Good wrote in “Speculations Concerning the First Ultraintelligent Machine” (1965): Let an ultraintelligent machine be defined as a machine that can far surpass all the intellectual activities of any man however clever. Since the design of machines is one of these intellectual activities, an ultraintelligent machine could design even better machines; there would then unquestionably be an ‘intelligence explosion’, and the intelligence of man would be left far behind. Thus the first ultraintelligent machine is the last invention that man need ever make, provided that the machine is docile enough to tell us how to keep it under control. The speed at which today’s Generative AI surpasses both the intelligence and control of its makers is breathtaking and dizzying. Since the release of OpenAI’s GPT-1 in 2018, generative AI’s intelligence is rising faster than our ability to fully understand or govern it. Can such systems override human intentions? Can AI self-improve beyond human oversight? As the marching band show comes to an end, the rotating platform spawns another eye – this one a fully-formed, undulating orbital. There they are – the machine eye and the pseudo-human eye — watching us. Sentience, Lafayette High School Marching Band, mechanical eye, human eye, 2025 Yes, it is aware. It perceives. It feels. It has achieved sentience. But what is the nature of this supreme being? Is this the arrogant, detached eye of surveillance viewing everything and everyone as mere pawns for its inscrutable purposes? Or are these the eyes of a loving, omniscient entity that views other beings as having intrinsic value and inherent worth? The final blaring notes in a harsh minor key express the answer – this is not an entity that conveys the love and connection it seemed capable of in the previous movement. This is not a benign superintelligence. It is all-seeing, all-knowing, all-powerful. Like the iconic transcendent eye found within ancient religious iconography, this is a deity that takes in everything and everyone, omniscient, all-powerful, and uncontrollable. Borg Eyes, Star Trek: Next Generation As satellite eyes, drones, cameras, and online “eyes” watch, record, and analyze our every move, our thoughts and emotions, we realize we have been subsumed into this human-AI fusion. Like the eyes of Star Trek’s The Borg – one human, one mechanical – the message seems clear. Resistance is futile. Congratulations to the Lafayette Marching Band for another powerful, passionate performance reflecting months of practice and dedication. As a parent of two alumni of the Pride of the Bluegrass, you continue to make us think and make us proud! Read also: Source: https://www.patheos.com/blogs/ecopreacher/2025/10/sentience-lafayette-marching-band-stuns-with-sci-fi-ai-show/