The first game day tradition for this week is the Alma Mater. If you've ever attended a football game, you know that we play Penn State's Alma Mater during our pregame performance.
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| Photos credit to Annemarie Mountz |
Our director, Mr. Drane, believes in the #BlueBandFamily, so before every game, we sing the Alma Mater together, as one big family. Then, after we sing the Alma Mater, we all dance outside and sing (the sousaphones play) Beautiful Girls and Stand By Me (they have the same bass line)
The next game day tradition is called "F Tuning".
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| Photo credit to Annemarie Mountz |
This is another trumpet-only game day tradition. We call this F Tuning because the first note of the exercise is a G on the trumpet, which is a concert F (for more information about how transposition works, click here). Basically, all of the trumpets stand as pictured above and we play this:
Video credit to Andrew Hill
Just a disclaimer: the video quality isn't spectacular, so the tone is distorted. We sound much better in person! After we play this (and blow the socks off of anyone within 100 yards), we all run to our section leaders in the center (this year's section leaders were John Shoener and Andrew Hill) and jump around while they give us an inspirational speech about how well we will play in the game.
The next game day tradition I have for you today is parade order. I thought long and hard about how to explain parade order, and my conclusion is that I can't (which is ironically what a returnee said to me when I asked what it was).

Basically, parade order is when we jump and yell things (together, of course) as we march to the stadium for the game.
Each parade order has one part that is unique to its game, and it typically has to do with the team we are playing. This year's were:
We parade to the stadium before every game, so next season stop by the O. Richard Bundy Blue Band Building (or the orbbbb, as we call it) before you head to the stadium and listen to us scream at each other (and sometimes you!)!
The fourth and final game day tradition I have for you today is the murse cookie. Now, you may be asking yourself, what is a murse? A murse is a contraction of the words "marching purse"; since the Blue Band leaves to play at halftime and there are so many of us, there is no way that we can all return to the spot in the bleachers we were standing before halftime, so we take our belongings with us. Murses are very fashionable and look like this:
So we've covered the murse, but what about the cookie? The cookie actually comes from the game day sub meal. Every game day, we get a sub, apple, bag of chips, cookie, and bottle of water. The cookies are the best part. Everyone loves them, and if you have a chance to get an extra, you don't pass it up. A lot of people like to save their gameday cookies for third quarter, because unlike high school band, we don't get the third quarter off, and by that time we're pretty hungry. Murse cookies are like the little treat we get to reward ourselves for making it that far.
That's all I have for game day traditions folks! If you come to a game next semester, stop by the orbbbb and check us out! Our practices, f tuning and parade are open to the public!
To view more of Annemarie Mountz's Blue Band photography, click here
Blue Band Social Media:
YouTube - Facebook - Twitter - Instagram
The next game day tradition I have for you today is parade order. I thought long and hard about how to explain parade order, and my conclusion is that I can't (which is ironically what a returnee said to me when I asked what it was).

Basically, parade order is when we jump and yell things (together, of course) as we march to the stadium for the game.![]() |
| Photos credit to Annemarie Mountz |
Each parade order has one part that is unique to its game, and it typically has to do with the team we are playing. This year's were:
- "Kent read, Kent write, Kent play football" (Kent State vs. PSU)
- "T for Temple Who?" (Temple vs. PSU)
- "How do you like your toast? With Blue Band Jam" (Minnesota vs. PSU, referring to Blue Band Jam, a showcase that we performed in before the Minnesota game in the Bryce Jordan Center)
- "Go crawl back in your hole" (also for Minnesota, said after the game)
- "I don't know if you know this, but you can't marry land" (Maryland vs. PSU)
- "If you like the Buckeyes, then you're a nut" (OSU vs. PSU)
- "Hawkeye is the worst Avenger" (Iowa vs. PSU)
- "Is this Sparta? No, this is Patrick" (Michigan State vs. PSU)
- "The Blue Band's in the land of roses" (USC vs. PSU-Rose Bowl)
Video credit to Joe Pruss
We parade to the stadium before every game, so next season stop by the O. Richard Bundy Blue Band Building (or the orbbbb, as we call it) before you head to the stadium and listen to us scream at each other (and sometimes you!)!
The fourth and final game day tradition I have for you today is the murse cookie. Now, you may be asking yourself, what is a murse? A murse is a contraction of the words "marching purse"; since the Blue Band leaves to play at halftime and there are so many of us, there is no way that we can all return to the spot in the bleachers we were standing before halftime, so we take our belongings with us. Murses are very fashionable and look like this:
| Photo credit to Annemarie Mountz |
So we've covered the murse, but what about the cookie? The cookie actually comes from the game day sub meal. Every game day, we get a sub, apple, bag of chips, cookie, and bottle of water. The cookies are the best part. Everyone loves them, and if you have a chance to get an extra, you don't pass it up. A lot of people like to save their gameday cookies for third quarter, because unlike high school band, we don't get the third quarter off, and by that time we're pretty hungry. Murse cookies are like the little treat we get to reward ourselves for making it that far.
That's all I have for game day traditions folks! If you come to a game next semester, stop by the orbbbb and check us out! Our practices, f tuning and parade are open to the public!
To view more of Annemarie Mountz's Blue Band photography, click here
Blue Band Social Media:
YouTube - Facebook - Twitter - Instagram






I loved reading about these traditions! As someone who has no musical talent or concept of how to play an instrument, I had never imagined I would understand what happens within the Blue Band, but you changed that! I'm really intrigued by the murse cookie- I've sat near the Blue Band at football games on multiple occassions and never noticed murses. The more you know!
ReplyDeleteHuh!! Murse cookie...fashionable!! Of course it is!! I love reading this blog. I am learning so much about the Blue Band and you do such a great job of telling the story so that those of us who are not "Band Folk" understand what you are telling us!!
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