The University of Pennsylvania Band

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The Penn Band
The Penn Band

The University of Pennsylvania Band or the Penn Band is one of the largest marching bands in the Ivy League and is amongst the most active band programs in the country. The organization is a part of the Department of Athletics at the University of Pennsylvania; like most of the other 49 performing arts groups on the Penn Campus, the Penn Band has no affiliation with any academic department and is sponsored by the Vice Provost’s Office for Undergraduate Life. The organization, typically ranging between 80 and 100 members every year, is among the largest and most active student-run organizations on campus, performing upwards of 60 times during the academic year. Like most of the Ivy League Bands, the Penn Band is a scatter band.

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The University of Pennsylvania Band was founded in 1897, and stands among the oldest college bands in the country, and one of the nation's first traveling bands (1901). According to popular legend, the band began after a single trumpet player named Felix A. Dupont played to the jeers of residents in the student quadrangle (“Shut up, frosh!”). Its history is marked with remarkable record of performance and achievement. In its first year of existence, the Band performed twice for President William McKinley, as well as at the opening of Houston Hall, the country’s first student union. In subsequent years, the organization became an integral part of Penn sporting events, including contests at historic Franklin Field and the Palestra, and campus traditions, including ‘Hey Day,’ ‘Rowbottoms,’, and Commencement ceremonies. Appearances during the 20th century include countless NCAA tournament games (including The NCAA Final Four), the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade (the first collegiate marching band to ever march in the parade), the 1964 World’s Fair, and the Miss America Pageant Parade (on more than one occasion). During its history, the organization has performed with notable musicians, including John Phillip Sousa, Edwin Goldman, members of the Philadelphia Orchestra, the U.S. Marine Band (“The President's Own”), “Doc” Severson of the Johnny Carson Show, and the prominent composer Vaclav Nelhybel. The band’s performances also include national broadcasts and numerous recordings, beginning in the late 1920’s with the RCA-Victor Company.

Today, the Penn Band is a bastion of music and mirth on the Penn Campus, performing at campus events, all Football games, and most Men’s and Women’s Basketball games. The group also tours along the East Coast; in recent years, the group has toured both Walt Disney World and Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida. The group’s appearances include eight NCAA tournament games on national television in the past ten years, ESPN Game Day Live, MSNBC Hardball, and the Fox and Friends Morning Show.

In 1901, the renowned composer Roland F. Seitz (1867-1946) of Glen Rock, Pennsylvania wrote the famous University of Pennsylvania Band March. The march is generally regarded as one of the finest compositions ever written for a student band, and ultimately was adapted by many other organizations throughout the country.

Edwin Franko Goldman, who was generally regarded only second to Sousa himself in the early 20th century, composed the Franklin Field March for the University of Pennsylvania Band. On November 5th, 1932, Goldman’s Franklin Field March was performed for the first time at the annual University of Pittsburgh-University of Pennsylvania football game.

Oxymoron is the Penn Band's e-mail listserv. Members post everything from links to stories to basketball scores. Some members post fan fiction stories about other members of the band.

  • Script Penn - At Homecoming, the Band and Band Alumni form a script penn on the field during the halftime show
  • Toast-throwing - At every Penn football game, during the singing of "Drink a Highball" after the third quarter, fans throw a piece of toast onto the field while the band plays the lyrics 'here's a toast to dear old Penn.'
  • Hang Jeff Davis - The Band sings Hang Jeff Davis every time the football team scores
  • Alumni Day and Commencement - The Band leads the parade of alumni and graduates during this springtime festivities.

  • Penn Songs
    • Cheer Penn
    • Drink a Highball
    • Fight On
    • Hang Jeff Davis
    • The University of Pennsylvania Band March

    • The University of Pennsylvania Band (RCA Victor) (1926)
    • The Songs of the University of Pennsylvania (1954)
    • The Songs of the University of Pennsylvania (1958?)
    • The University of Pennsylvania Symphonic Band (1963)
    • Cheer Pennsylvania! (1983)
    • Penn Band: World Tour (1986)
    • Live at Smoke's (1989)
    • A Toast to Dear Old Penn (1993)
    • Five Score and Several Years to Go (1997)
    • The Band That Rocks the Cradle (2001)
    • The Band Before Time (TBA)

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