PEPIDEMIOLOGY: BEST BANDS
In our ongoing study of the world of college football pomp and circumstance, we present our rundown of our favorite bands. Sometimes denigrated, often ignored, and occasionally hit with thrown objects from the opposing and home stands, the members of college football’s marching bands endure many a travail while earning the 6-7 completely free football tickets they enjoy each year.

Marching bands: they matter whether you pay attention or not.
These include:
1. Wearing wool/poly blends in hostile climes. In warm weather, band members lose gallons of body fluids wearing heavy, double-knit jackets while marching, hopping, and standing around in the sun. In cold weather, the poly kicks in, and never seems to hold heat in for longer than the first quarter. In many senses, the originator of the military style uniform for college marching band members took every possible wrong turn in the design of the outfit, choosing a fabric that’s simultaneoulsly heavy in hot weather and light in cold weather, stitching that ensures a near complete lack of mobility, and hats that require straps, bungees, and occasionally staples through the flesh to keep on a member’s head. It belongs in the hall of historically tragic design with Firestone radial tires, Happy Time Harry, and the Tacoma Narrows Bridge.
2. Abuse. We’ve seen spitting, the throwing of objects, and on one occasion, a fight between a gay flag squad guy and two rural bon vivants who envied his sequined outfit. The flag guy won, which proves you shouldn’t ever mess with a man who tosses a fake rifle in the air all day.
3. The inability to leave, even when hopes of victory have been all but incinerated. Most people may hightail it to the exits when the other team goes up by fifty. You may not. At its worst, this can induce secondary signs of trauma, perfectly illustrated by the 1996 Fiesta Bowl, where the Florida band was reduced to throwing a rubber chicken in the air in the fourth quarter to amuse themselves. However stupid that may sound, it was far better than what was happening on the field.
Given that, bands give much to the gameday atmosphere. They provde a rallying cry for fans to unite around, providing collective cues to an otherwise disorganized mob. They pump a constant supply of festivity into the environment with songs and, if they’re particularly festive, spastic dancing, as well. More importantly, they give a counterpoint to the cheerleaders, whose charm wears thin after the first ten minutes of any game (especially if they have an amplifier and a mike.) If fans have nothing else to thank the band for, it’s drowning them out for just a few blessed seconds of every game.
Bands deserving special note include:
Ohio State. Bears special mention for the central role the band plays in the rite and ritual of Buckeye football, the “dotting of the I” in pregame. Not only is the band the focal point, but the honor of running onto the field and becoming the final piece in the script of “OHIO STATE” writ large on the field is given to the offensive lineman of the band: a tuba player. This ode to the unheralded blue-collar foundation of the organization is good enough by itself to put them on the list.

You know you want a beret.
Yet there’s more. They sing. They wear berets without cowering or smoking Gauloises. They’re actually pretty accomplished, a feat if you’ve ever tried to find 250 sober musicians on a college campus. They’re everthing a college band should be, and for that we tip our berets to you.
Florida State.
A “park and blow” behemoth of a band so huge they’re forced to march conveyor-belt formations spelling out a single formation for much of their halftime show. But when you’ve got 500 people in your band, who needs it? The band that truly goes up to eleven, the brass-heavy horde that follows the Seminole football team around can, at their highest volumes, cause real and lasting hearing damage. (We swear we’ve actually seen them blow hats, toupees, and in one case, the remnants of Carl Franks’ coaching career off the field with the sound. It’s at least 90 decibels, and don’t think we’re exagerrating.)
Their impressive musical repertoire not only includes the responsibility of cueing the frightening “Seminole War Chant,” but also their most dramatic piece, the “4th Quarter Fanfare,” a piece of hellacious pomp straight from Mahler’s wet dreams. It’s geeked-up football doom music, a snippet of music just long enough to evoke visions of a gladiator standing over his doomed foe waiting for the thumbs-down signal. Listen to it here and remember that the final FFF will crack the beer you hold in your hand.
USC. The allure of Tusk has faded, but the shine on that plastic body armor hasn’t. Any band that wears the shoeshine brush gladiator helmets and has personnel required to wear body armor wins with us. They also crank out one of college’s most awesomely fascist themes, “Fight On,” which reminds us that though fascism was evil, it was very stylish, too.

A little fascism can be cool.
Texas They wear bolo ties and cowboy hats. In!
LSU. Not an overwhelming marching presence, but the Tiger Band’s superb musicianship allows them to make twice the noise of most bands with half the members. One of the few bands that plays everything–everything–with a half-beat swing to it. At their best they’re like letting off a can of Mardi Gras in the stadium. Also manage to wear purple and yellow and not look a.) like a walking lesion, and b.) silly beyond description.
Stranko’s addtion: UCF: The football team maybe a work in progress as is there new stadium, but I was surprised at the quality of their marching band when I saw them in person. Not in the traditional college band kind of way where they blow the doors off of cars in the parking lot by playing one or two really catchy and/or annoying ditties over and over again. I’m talking about quality in a hard core band nerd kind of way. So if you ever got excited about going to a BOA competition, they might just be the band for you. Strong on balance, blend and intonation with enough movement to keep it interesting.









1
Bullfrog says:
I simply cannot believe you left off Purdue and their massive drum.
Oh, wait, yes I can.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:30 am
2
VolBrian says:
Tennessee should be in there for their ability to play Rocky Top 5 million times a game and not go insane. Even as a Tennessee fan I’m not sure I could handle it.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:41 am
3
TigerNacho says:
Thanks for the props to the Golden Band from Tigerland. I get chills thinking of Pre-Game.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:41 am
4
immikefazz says:
Wisconsin has an excellent band…and they play the Budweiser song!
http://www.uwbadgers.com/audio_visual/songs/bud_song.mp3
August 16th, 2006 at 10:41 am
5
LD says:
Texas A&M has an interesting band. Military efficiency is their calling card. They do this thing where the band splits into fourths and each group goes to one of the corners of the field. Then they all march directly toward the center of the field, converging and walking directly through each other, so precise that there is literally room for just a single person to move. If one foot is off, among the entire group, it won’t work.
And while I know we both hate to see it, at times I have to admit that Tennessee’s high stepper and the opening of the T is a good tradition.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:42 am
6
VolBrian says:
Oh, and the band (I think Michigan State) that plays the Family Guy theme song.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:43 am
7
Matt Glaude says:
Must have Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band on this list:
1. Nobody busts Free’s “All Right Now” better;
2. Got to have much respect for a band that gets banned from Notre Dame and Oregon for “off-color” shows lampooning the Irish Potato Famine and the Spotted Owl, respectively;
3. They have a guy who plays the keg. The keg, dammit!;
4. And, of course, they served a suspension for public urination . . . in their own stadium.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:45 am
8
adam says:
i remember a couple years ago, probably about ten, the LSU band was the only good thing that team had. after a particularly bad thrashing at the swamp, some of the LSU band guys went over to the UF band and helped them with a couple new songs. I can’t remember which one it was, but one of them stuck. so yay to LSU for teaching our shitty band some new music.
though we should give the sunshine marching band credit for playing trick daddy.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:46 am
9
Anon.4 says:
I have to let you know that the best band in the country has to be the Green Brigade at North Texas. Not only is this the largest music school in the country (shut up Indiana), the oldest and best known jazz program in the world, and way too many top quality musicians have come from this school.
And if not us at least give some love to FAMU.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:48 am
10
Nupe in Va says:
A few years ago, I went to a Florida A & M vs. Norfolk State football game. It’s the first football game I’ve ever been to where most fans came ONLY to see the bands. There were around 30,000 people at the game before halftime. After the bands perfomed at halftime and Florida A & M up by about 50 points, the entire stdium left except for a few thousand that stuck around to see the bands battle after the game…and the subsequent fight that ensued. Awesome!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMG7vjwZiOM
August 16th, 2006 at 10:51 am
11
Stranko Montana says:
Agreed that both FAMU and Stanford should be on the list. In fact they were on the list at the discussion stage of this post… sometimes balancing a job with the blog leads to casualties though.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:53 am
12
Anon.4 says:
“straight from Mahler’s wet dreams.” It is lines like that make me happy that I know what you must be refering too. Symphony #4 right? I would like to hear the FSU band belt out the last few bars of Mahler#2 when the team is behind that way a “resurrection” may occur.
August 16th, 2006 at 10:53 am
13
GoneGator says:
UF Band (and lack of catchy fight song) is the program’s weak link. Those band uniforms are a disaster. Especially problematic when FAMU (how in the name of Welch’s Grape Soda can they be left of the list?) makes a guest appearance and suddenly you feel like the entire Gator nation is without any musical talent whatsoever [which may be true].
August 16th, 2006 at 10:54 am
14
paulwesterdawg says:
The Vol Band is impressive with their circle drill at half time.
As a 3 year band geek in HS, I can tell you the drills that UT does at half-time are very impressive and difficult. Plus, Rocky Top (while painfully annoying) is one of the Top 5 all-time fight songs. And they play Zeppelin …i think the immigrant song.
My Top 5 Fight Songs:
1. Hail to the Victors
2. Rocky Top
3. Yeah, Alabama
4. RamblinWreck from Georgia Tech
5. Notre Dame Victory March
LSU’s band pre-game is off the hook, but their fight song isn’t all that great independent of the way it’s performed in that one moment pre-game.
pwd
August 16th, 2006 at 10:59 am
15
ohiodawg says:
Another great thing about the OSU band – they play the opposing theme’s fight song before the game begins.
I went to my first game at Neyland Field last year…that is a VERY loud band.
As far as I know, Ohio University (not THE Ohio State University) is the only band with Frank Zappa in the repertoir.
Finally, from all I’ve heard, Wisconsin’s 5th quarter is a unique focus on the band.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:03 am
16
Corey says:
I understand why FAMU isn’t on the list. Because it’s THAT DAMN OBVIOUS.
Florida A&M’s band practices makes Urban Meyer’s training camp look like a day at the beach.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:06 am
17
Southern Papa says:
Ditto to the thanks for the Golden Band from Tigerland. Their pre-game is oft-imitated (Memphis) but never duplicated.
However, in the vein of the FAMU Rattlers, the bands from Southern University (Baton Rouge), aka the Human Jukebox, and Grambling State truly take the cake. The Bayou Classic, formerly at the Superdome, is the one where the fans show up to see the halftime show. It makes ‘Drumline’ look cheesier than it is. Also, an honorable mention to Prairie View A&M ( between Houston & College Station) for their ‘Ocean of Soul’ marching band.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:09 am
18
Oren Incandenza says:
I can remember Georgia Tech and Vandy bands with *electric bass players* on the field in the 1970s and 1980s. Sweet Baby Jesus, that was sad. One poor schmuck had to push the amp around the field on a dolly.
Also, Tennessee’s band also plays the opponent’s fight song as part of its pregame show. The band turns to the section of the stadium where most visiting fans sit when it plays it. It’s a classy touch. In the SEC, I’d probably rank the top bands as LSU-UT-Alabama-Georgia in some order.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:11 am
19
LD says:
Something else worth mentioning…
I think mgoblog had a video last year of the Michigan band enacting a good portion of Monty Python and the Holy Grail during halftime last year.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:15 am
20
Doug says:
Ergh . . . I can’t forgive the UT band for “Rocky Top.” If you played a drinking game where you took a shot every time they played it, you’d be face-down in a puddle of your own sick before second-half kickoff.
I do like LSU’s band, though. And I like the “Golden Girls” or whatever they call them. I remember watching last year’s SEC championship game with a friend of mine, a former UGA flagline member, and I commented that I though the Golden Girls were hot. She wrinkled her nose and was like, “They’re slutty.” Duh! Am I talking to myself over here?
Of course, I’m the guy who only found out last year that the Texas fight song is “The Eyes of Texas” and not “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad,” so what the fudge do I know.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:20 am
21
Tommy says:
TBDBITL
August 16th, 2006 at 11:21 am
22
Sean says:
Umm… Southern and Grambling bands televised on NBC each year?
August 16th, 2006 at 11:22 am
23
Bill says:
I am shocked the Stanford band didn’t make the list. Although the don’t have the musicianship of some of these others and did disrupt a classic game 25 years ago, I would think their drinking rep alone would merit EDSBS mention.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:22 am
24
Mike says:
I think on pure playing ability, Stanford and Notre Dame are the top 2. Stanford gets extra props for being incredibly insensitive and displaying their, “I don’t give a rat’s a$$ what you think” attitude.
Side note: Have you guys ever heard the beginning to Mighigan’s fight song? I’ve been to countless games and had not heard it until I found an .mp3 of the entire thing the other day. The beginning sounds like something out of a corny circus.
This should be the top reason why you can’t vote their fight song the best.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:24 am
25
mo.d says:
I wasn’t that impressed with lsu’s band at the peach bowl. miami’s sucks. tennessee plays the same song over and over, so they are out. i would say ohio state, usc, west virginia, uga and notre dame.
west virginia was shockingly good at the sugar bowl.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:25 am
26
Bullfrog says:
Mike, as an Irish alum, I am very excited by this “corny circus” of which you speak. Got a link?
August 16th, 2006 at 11:31 am
27
Southern Papa says:
Another one in the same genre of Stanford is Rice’s MOB, or Mad Owl Band. They get a fan draw to see what they do at halftime, as in what hi-jinks they will pull.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:31 am
28
tony says:
Actually, the OSU band only spells “Ohio” in Script Ohio. Adding the “State” would be too difficult for many of them, and it’s not easily spelled with the arms, either.
To drop some love for the alma mater, I think it was a game last year where BG’s band’s halftime show was all video game songs. (And possibly just “Super Mario” music.) Also, Ay Ziggy Zoomba is one of the most fun and original fight songs out there.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:35 am
29
DevilGrad says:
“Ay Zig” is also played as an alternate fight song at UNC, but I’ve always accused them of stealing it from BG.
Love and honor,**
DG (Miami U ‘88)
** The aforementioned Ohio U band has its own version of the Miami fight song that starts with the lyric “she lost her honor at Miami.” It’s pretty clever and right up there with their rousing rendition of “Go Blow Me, Buckeye Band.” OTOH, the OU band was once described in ESPN — The Mag as “a bunch of pear-shaped white guys in black polyester trying to shake it like Christina Aguilera,” so I guess it’s a mixed bag.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:42 am
30
Kranium Kracka says:
i heard nike is designing 4 more uniforms for Oregon’s band…
August 16th, 2006 at 11:54 am
31
Aerobab says:
Fellas:
Thanks for the commentary on what college marching band members endure. You nearly hit the nail on the head with your “Abuse” point, but I’d like to elaborate a bit.
As a former band member for a certain SEC school whose colors happen to be orange and white, I’ve personally experienced everything from being the receipient of heaved bags/bottles of piss (among the aray of general projectiles), coherent verbal insults, and the incoherant babble of UGA fans pretending they’re WOOF-WOOF motherfuckin “dawgs”.
Like your “patsy” flag guy, we were instructed to beat the piss out of ANYBODY who directly interfered with the band e.g., cut through the band (while either in parade or seated in the stands) to take a ’short-cut’ or a blatant physical assault. In ‘99 while we were visiting the Swamp, one little drunk-ass gator fan started running his mouth as we were getting ready to march into the stadium. We made him a bet that we’d give him $500 if he could make it to the other side of the street by running the gauntlet through UT’s band. He accepted the deal, but much to his suprise, he didn’t make it!
That “guy” wasn’t you, Orson….was it?
Damn, it sucks to be grown up.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:58 am
32
anonymous says:
“I think on pure playing ability, Stanford and Notre Dame are the top 2.”
If I remember correctly, Stanford’s band isn’t technically a marching band, but rather a “scatter band,” which means that they play a song in formation, stop, run to the next formation, then play another song. In contrast, true marching bands play while in motion. Scatter bands are common among schools with smaller bands; for example, Cornell University prides itself (well, I don’t know if “pride” is the right word for it) on having the only marching band in the Ivy League – all the rest are scatter bands.
Not that it matters for pep purposes. I just wanted to have something to say.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:05 pm
33
DC Trojan says:
“Rural bon vivants” — splendid.
Funny you should draw the fascist analogy for the SC band. When I went to a freshman orientation, they had the band blaring away at the Von Kleinschmidt Center (a very stark building with huge columns), and I realized I was in a sea of blond(e) people waving their right arms around… I was torn between looking for Leni Riefenstahl and fighting the urge to sing the Dambusters tune… until some jackass distracted me by trying to force my hand up. Back off Fritz!
I never did find out if she was lurking about the place.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:16 pm
34
PSUgirl says:
I can’t believe that you overlooked the Penn State Marching Blue Band – if only for the director’s tenacity in repeatedly trying to relate the nuances of the piccolo solo to an outdoor stadium crowd of 100K.
Actually, the Blue Band’s pregame is pretty great – fight songs, flipping drum majors, etc. are part of the reason college football is the greatest.
And, as written above, UW has a great band – their post game is one of the best.
osu is probably the best band – simple and concise – however, if I hear hang on sloopy one more time… okay, I’m just jealous that PA doesn’t have a state rock song.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:18 pm
35
The Conscience of a Nation says:
In ‘99 Orson watched the UF-UT game stats change at an Internet cafe in Kunming while he recovered from a nasty bout of ptomaine.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:19 pm
36
Ragin Cajun says:
The LSU band might be the third best band in the state of Louisiana behind Southern and Grambling.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:19 pm
37
Orson Swindle says:
You’re all correct when you say we left some off. We’ll do part two just to give props where props are due, though there really should be a whole separate category for HBCUs. They’re at the top of any list.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:28 pm
38
CouchBurnin'Girl says:
Can’t leave out the Pride of West Virginia. They outline the state and march it across the field. Have you ever seen the state of WV??? It’s not square.
I think that Mountaineer Field is the only place in the country that insulting the band will get you in a fight quicker than insulting the football team. As one drunk senior told me during my freshman year, “Don’t fuck with the band! Best band in the country, right there.”
And they were that year: http://www.wvuband.org/content/view/169/355/
August 16th, 2006 at 12:30 pm
39
gozer says:
Tribute to Troy is enough to remove USC from all discussions of good marching bands. Regardless of shiny plastic helmets. And them bastages fly out 2000 miles to ND every other year just to annoy us with that freakin slow ass stupid song after every damn play that isn’t a first down.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:34 pm
40
MiseanAUFan says:
In addition to LSU having a great band, they had a member beat the crap of a certain SEC kicker one year. Yeah, he was ours, but he sucked, except for one kick in the otherwise-horrendous year of 2001:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5UnSwTt89s
August 16th, 2006 at 12:39 pm
41
TGMBITHOTU says:
Gozer – the fact that the SC band does 2 years of fundraising just to go back to ND to piss you domers off is exactly why they are one of the best bands.
By the way, those plastic helmets come in handy at Cal when they throw full beer cans at your head outside the stadium and launch frozen fruit from aquaslings off Cheapskate Hill when you’re on the field.
August 16th, 2006 at 12:53 pm
42
Pants McPants says:
Hey PSUgirl, I’d agree PSU’s band should make the list if for no other reason than being forced to listen to that “Kitty Roar” shrieking over the PA system 4,087 times per game…Those poor bastards…
August 16th, 2006 at 12:57 pm
43
Orangeblood says:
Texas Tech earned their pirate distinction. Back in the mid-90s there were two mascots roaming Texas’ DKR stadium sidelines: the student in the Bevo outfit and some guy in a bat costume (sponsered by Austin’s main newspaper). During a game between the Longhorns and Red Raiders, the Tech band lured the bat fellow over and beat the shit out of him. The newspaper has never since put a mascot out there again.
August 16th, 2006 at 1:00 pm
44
tony says:
DevilGrad…
UNC claims that their AZZ “tradition” goes back to 1949. EVERY publication I’ve seen of it at BG claims mid-1940’s (1946 in particular). We win.
Besides, we’ve got the rights to the domain name. I think we win. *laugh*
August 16th, 2006 at 1:01 pm
45
Geaux Irish says:
The rationale for the selecting the Longhorn band is weak. The two best bands in the state are at Tx A&M and Rice (Stanford could learn a thing or two from Rice’s band).
The Bayou Classic should get props as well.
I’m being a homer here, but I have fond memories of hearing HD’s band playing the Victory March as they march the campus at 6am on the first home game of the year. It’s a great way to start off a new football season!
August 16th, 2006 at 1:03 pm
46
Bottagetta says:
The worst band decision ever has to be when AU’s and UGA’s bands play together at halftime. I’m tired of the friendly rivalry bullshit they’ve pulled for the past three or four years.
I used to love the Iron Bowl when Auburn and the Turds’ drum lines would “square off” outside of Legion Field. I think it was the basis for the movie “Drumline”.
And for what it’s worth, as an Auburn fan, I give our band credit for trying new stuff for the pregame (forming the AU, mass high stepping, etc.) but I take it away everytime they play Bon Fuckin’ Jovi’s “Living on a Prayer”. Stupid…
August 16th, 2006 at 1:04 pm
47
Notre Dan says:
Great post. If you don’t appreciate the band then you just don’t get college football.
And I agree with keeping the Stanford band off the list. They just try too hard to be “carazyyy”. But I agree with Southern Papa, I’d put Rice on. They’re talented and different and pretty damn funny the couple of times I’ve seen them. I’d also put Purdue on the list. The unintentional comedy is off the charts. They’re trying so hard to create an identity and some kind of tradition and failing so miserably you just can’t help but laugh while watching the 500 person scene, replete with flag waivers, twirlers, dancers, silver twins, golden girls, and of course the world’s largest drum (just don’t tell Texas A&M). They should call it the Purdue Circus.
I’ve only seen the FSU band and I love your description. I just don’t know how you failed to mention the male flaming baton twirler.
August 16th, 2006 at 1:09 pm
48
Irish Coroner says:
One of my favorite marching band memories is kicking the crap out of the BC Fans that rushed the field after beating ND in 1993. Seeing one of our tuba players swing his horn down and catching a BC Fan in face was priceless. I have tears in my eyes now.
August 16th, 2006 at 1:10 pm
49
Orangeblood says:
“The rationale for the selecting the Longhorn band is weak. The two best bands in the state are at Tx A&M and Rice (Stanford could learn a thing or two from Rice’s band).”
C’mon, Texas has Big Bertha! The radioactive super drum from the University of Chicago!
August 16th, 2006 at 1:11 pm
50
Tony says:
Hey Corey, want to know why FAMU didnt make the list? Anytime an entire town has to lock their doors and fear for their lives when a certain university has its homecoming, it gets eliminated from any list except the felony arrest report. Its pretty fcking bad when the malls shut down 5 hours early so they dont get ransaked, looted, and destroyed…AGAIN!
August 16th, 2006 at 1:22 pm