Appalachian State University Marching Mountaineers

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Marching Mountaineers
North Carolina's Band of Distinction
Appalachian State BOD.jpg
School Appalachian State University, Hayes School of Music
Location Boone, North Carolina, USA
Conference Sun Belt Conference
Founded1933
DirectorDr. Jason Gardner
Members285
Fight song"Hi Hi Yikas"
Website Marching Mountaineers Website

The Marching Mountaineers, also known as North Carolina's Band of Distinction, is the 285 member marching band of Appalachian State University. Founded in 1933, the band performs at all home Mountaineer football games and travels to select away games each year. The Marching Mountaineers were a participant in the 2006 and 2014 London New Year's Day Parades. [1] The Band of Distinction also marched in the 2011 Cabalgata de Reyes in Madrid, Spain.

Contents

The Marching Mountaineers are represented in competitive indoor performing arts through the Appalachian Ascent Winterguard. Ascent competes in the CWEA and WGI circuits.

History

The Term "North Carolina's Band of Distinction" was coined by Joe F. Phelps during his early years as the director of the Marching Mountaineers after receiving such positive press and reviews and growing the band from 80 to 220 in just a few years.

Traditions

Directors

NameYears
Mr. Joe F. Phelps1971-1986
Dr. Joe Brashier1987-1991
Dr. Jay C. Jackson1992-1999
Dr. Dawn Perry2000 (Interim)
Dr. Scott C. Tobias2001-2011
Mr. Donald E. Peach2012 (Interim)
Dr. Kevin G. Richardson2013–2017
Mr. Donald E. Peach2018 (Interim)
Dr. Jason P. Gardner2019–Present

Songs

The Band of Distinction performs a Pre-game show about 20 minutes before kickoff. The show begins with a Simple Gifts fanfare which then rolls into the song Carolina Pride. The band then performs the fight song America the Beautiful and the national anthem while the Colors are Presented followed by the Appalachian State Alma Mater, Cherished Vision. The band then marches towards the fieldhouse playing "Go Appalachian" to prepare for the entrance of the football team. The band's post-game show after every football includes Paul Simon's "You Can Call Me Al," "The House of the Rising Sun" as made famous by The Animals and "The Tennessee Waltz." The Waltz, as it is known by members, was added as a standard of the band in the 1970s by Director Joe Phelps, when the fans began requesting the song be played after every game after it was played as part of a halftime show. The show used to include songs from their halftime repertoire along with several other tunes.

In the stands

Music performed in the stands consists of:

Instrumentation

The Marching Mountaineers are divided into the following sections:

Appalachian Marching Band Festival

The Appalachian Marching Band Festival, [4] is a competition hosted by the Marching Mountaineers for high school marching bands every fall in Kidd Brewer Stadium on the campus of Appalachian State University. The Competition, founded in 1979, is organized by the Rho Tau Chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, provides these bands a performance venue where they are critiqued by a panel of nationally recognized adjudicators and a chance to perform in a collegiate stadium. The top band of the day receives the Chancellors Cup which is sponsored and presented by the chancellor of Appalachian State University. The chancellor, Sheri Everts, refused to sponsor the cup beginning in 2015 and the cup was renamed to the Sinfonian’s Cup. The festival has been on hiatus since 2019 due to construction around the stadium and Covid-19.

Controversy

University of Miami - Appalachian State Color Guard Allegations

On Saturday September 18, 2016 the Mountaineers football team hosted a Power 5 conference member for the first time with the University of Miami. In front of a record high crowd, it also marked the first time they hosted a top 25 opponent and the main ESPN network would broadcast an Appalachian State home game. [5] Local media outlets dubbed it "the biggest event ever to take place in Boone." [6]

Several hours after the game, Sophie Randleman alleged on a public social media post that members of the Marching Mountaineers color guard were "assaulted...groped, sworn at, taunted, and touched in ways that were definitely not asked for" when Miami's football team ran on to take the field for their pregame prayer. [7] No incidents were reported to police onsite. [8] Prior to kickoff, the Mountaineers Color Guard had positioned themselves into the visiting team's sideline in the direct path of where Miami's players and its staff were instructed to go. [9] [10] Randleman widely publicized her post and accused Miami of other incidents without specifying where or when they occurred. [11] After learning of the allegations, Miami's athletic department opened a formal investigation.

In an interview with the Palm Beach Post two days later, Randleman failed to provide any witnesses to corroborate detail towards the allegations when provided a link to a video [12] where no members of the Marching Mountaineers could be seen falling to the turf. [13] She nor any other members of the Marching Mountaineers could provide descriptions, jersey numbers, or last names of any of the alleged Miami players. Three days after the incident, Randleman told CBS that they had not yet met with police, [14] despite video showing several police officers and emergency medical staff visible near the color guard during the pregame that would have been witnesses. [15] Boone police told local news High County Times that there were no issues surrounding the game. [6] Six videos of Miami's entrance shot by fans, ESPN, and press media showed no indication of Randleman's allegations.

Following Randleman's CBS interview, Miami's Athletic Director announced that they had found zero evidence [16] and were concluding their investigation after "a school review of multiple videos and social media posts and interviews with possible witnesses revealed no evidence of wrongdoing by (Miami) players." [9] [17] Appalachian State subsequently closed their investigation as well after it was unable to find any credible evidence backing up Randleman's claims. [18] [19] [20] [21] Appalachian State's Associate Athletics Director Zeke Beam noted that "the University of Miami went above and beyond to review the incident." [22] [23] [24]

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References

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  6. 1 2 "KBS Attendance Not Only Record Broken, Boone ABC Sells Nearly $70K of Liquor Friday - High Country Press". www.hcpress.com. 19 September 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  7. "Miami Kneels for Pregame Prayer". Twitter. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  8. "Appalachian State Color Guard Says Miami Football Players "Assaulted" Them When They Ran Out of the Tunnel" . Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  9. 1 2 "Miami says players didn't 'grope,' 'shove' Appalachian State students | Palm Beach Post" . Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  10. "Miami AD says Hurricanes investigating claim of pregame incidents". Miami Herald . Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  11. "Miami Hurricanes Accused of Assaulting App St Band". Sports Illustrated. 2016-09-21. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  12. "Appalachian State students allege Miami players 'shoved,' 'groped' during pregame entrance | Palm Beach Post" . Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  13. Sun-Sentinel, South Florida (19 September 2016). "UM finds no evidence to back up Appalachian State band member's accusations of shoving, groping" . Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  14. Faherty, Dave (2016-09-20). "CBS Interview with Sophie Randleman" . Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  15. "Miami APP State Football Team Entrances". Twitter. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  16. "Miami finds no mistreatment of color guard". 22 September 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  17. Staff, AB. "U. of Miami: No Evidence Behind App State Allegations - Athletic Business". www.athleticbusiness.com. Archived from the original on 2016-09-25. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  18. Taylor, John (2016-09-22). "Appalachian State AD apologizes 'to all those impacted by the situation' prior to Miami game". CollegeFootballTalk. Retrieved 2016-09-26.
  19. "Schools finish inquiry into accusation by Appalachian State color guard member against Miami players". 22 September 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  20. Sun-Sentinel, South Florida (22 September 2016). "Appalachian State apologizes for incident created when Miami took the field as band was still playing" . Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  21. Journal, Bret Strelow, Winston-Salem (22 September 2016). "Schools finish inquiry into accusation by Appalachian State color guard member against Miami players" . Retrieved 2016-09-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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