Harman Patil (Editor)

The Pride of Arizona

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Location
  
Tucson, AZ

Director
  
Chad Shoopman

Active from
  
1902

Conference
  
Pacific-12 Conference

Founded
  
1902

Members
  
250+

Established
  
1902

The Pride of Arizona The Pride of Arizona University of Arizona Marching Band

Similar
  
Band Day, Sun Devil Marching Band, Band of the Hour, GSU Tiger Marching Band, Oregon Marching Band

Profiles

the pride of arizona marching band the university of arizona band day 0 22 16


The Pride of Arizona (POA) is the University of Arizona's Marching band. The band was founded in 1902 as the UA ROTC Band and contained 12 members. Over the years, the band has performed in prestigious venues such as Super Bowl I and the Inaugural Parade of President James Earl "Jimmy" Carter, Jr.

Contents

History

The Pride of Arizona The pride of Arizona band plays BEAR DOWN ARIZONA YouTube

  • 1885: The University of Arizona is established.
  • 1902-1912: The UA ROTC Band is established under the direction of student Frank C. Kelton. Wearing military uniforms, the band makes its first appearance at Battalion Parade on Dec. 9. The band varies from 3 to 20 men, mainly trumpeters and percussionists.
  • 1907: The UA Band is created as part of the Music Department.
  • 1920: The band is offered for one unit credit, and subsequently grows to the "impressive" size of 40 men. The ROTC band is dissolved, with the UA Band taking over its functions.
  • 1922: The band makes its first appearance at a football game, and gets 50 instruments from the Military.
  • 1928: Joseph DeLuca is hired as the director of bands. He was known as "the world’s greatest euphonium soloist," and was a member of Sousa's band. The UA Band is the first band from Arizona to perform on the radio.
  • 1936: The UA Band adopts the motto "The Best Band in the West" at the Western States and Philippine Islands Music Conference in Pasadena, CA.
  • 1945: While rebuilding after World War II, women are allowed to march in the UA Band for the first time.
  • 1952: Jack Lee becomes director of bands. Lee wrote the fight song "Bear Down, Arizona."
  • 1954: The UA hosts its first annual Band Day. The UA Band is the first band in the nation to incorporate moving formations and marching charts, and is considered to be one of the top five bands in the country.
  • 1967: On January 15, the UA Band performs the halftime for Super Bowl I at the Los Angeles Coliseum. With 62,000 spectators in attendance, and another 90 million watching on television, this is the single largest crowd the UA Band has ever played for.
  • 1977: The UA Band marches in the Inaugural Parade of President James Carter in Washington, D.C.
  • 1984: "Bear Down, Arizona" is played to wake up the astronauts on the April Space Shuttle mission.
  • 1995: Jay C. Rees becomes the assistant director of bands at UA and the director of the Pride of Arizona. They adopt the slogan "The World’s First Alternative Music Marching Band."
  • 1997: The POA marching and pep bands release their first studio CD recording, entitled The Pride of Arizona - The University of Arizona Marching and Pep Bands.
  • 2001: The POA pep band releases their second studio CD recording, entitled Wildcats Legacy Lane - The University of Arizona Pep Band.
  • 2002: The UA Band celebrates its 100th anniversary and the 50th anniversary of "Bear Down, Arizona". "A Century of Pride" is the university's homecoming theme, and the year is marked with performances throughout the band program.
  • 2004: The "Grande Dame" of the Pride of Arizona, twirling coach Shirlee Bertolini, celebrates her 50th year with the Pride of Arizona.
  • 2006: On October 28, the Pride performs (in exhibition) for the Bands of America competition in the Los Angeles Coliseum. Also, a recording of parts 1 and 2 of the Radiohead performance from the Wildcats' home game against University of Washington makes its way onto the popular video-sharing site YouTube. It later received an award for being the 74th most viewed video in the category of music for the year of 2006.
  • 2008: The Pride of Arizona releases its third album, entitled Monkey Feet. The album, recorded throughout the course of the 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006 seasons, was made possible by a generous grant from the Marshall Foundation of Tucson, Arizona, and is dedicated to the memory of former band member Eric Bradley, a horn player who died after the 2006 season from brain cancer. All proceeds from the album go in memory of Eric to the University of Arizona Cancer Center.
  • 2009: The Pride of Arizona receives the prestigious honor of being selected by the College Band Directors National Association as one of the ten best college marching bands in the nation.
  • 2013: The Pride is selected to record the Bay City Rollers' "Saturday Night" for a national commercial spot by Hyundai USA, with the additional goal of creating college football's first ever theme song. The performance was sight-read, rehearsed and recorded in a total of two hours inside Arizona Stadium on August 22.
  • 2015: The Pride of Arizona is again selected by the College Band Directors National Association as one of the ten best college marching bands in the nation.
  • Instrumentation and Auxiliaries

    The instrumentation of the Pride of Arizona is as follows, in score order:

  • Piccolo
  • Clarinet
  • Alto Saxophone
  • Tenor Saxophone
  • Baritone Saxophone
  • Trumpet
  • Mellophone
  • Trombone
  • Baritone Horn
  • Tuba

  • The Pride of Arizona 2013 Pride Of Arizona Quartet Family Weekend National Anthem YouTube

    The percussion section (Drumline) of the Pride of Arizona is battery only and consists of snares, tenor drums, bass drums, and cymbals.

    The Pride of Arizona News Page 2 of 2 The Pride of Arizona

    There are three auxiliary units that perform with the Pride of Arizona: the Pom Line (dance, pom-poms), Twirling Team (batons), and Color Guard (flags, rifles and other equipment).

    Recent Field Shows

    The Pride of Arizona historically fielded multiple shows each season, some of which had an overall theme of a particular artist or style, and some of which were selections of unrelated individual songs. Beginning in 1995, when Jay Rees became director, each season had one primary show, and sometimes a secondary show. These shows had tightly focused themes, which for the primary show was typically the music of one artist in the rock/alternative genre, often focusing on music from one or two albums of that artist's career. Beginning with the Pink Floyd show in 1997, each primary show was also crafted to explore some aspect of the human experience, often featuring both musical and visual recurring motifs.

    For years before 1995, the list below contains a mixture of artists and songs featured in the various field shows that year. From 1995 on, the artist or theme of each primary show is listed, and if there was a secondary show that year, it follows in parentheses.

    Under Steve Steele:

  • 1985: You Are My Sunshine, Ludwig from Beethoven 9, Cats medley
  • 1986: I Got Rhythm, Everybody Loves the Blues, En Sueno, Being Alive (Hoedown, Theme from the Cowboys)
  • Under Joe Hermann:

  • 1987: Matchpoint, "One More Time" by Chick Corea, Ol' Man River
  • 1988: "Who Framed Wilbur Wildcat?", Thank You Band, Elk's Parade, Malagueña
  • Under Eric Becher:

  • 1989: Bill Chase, Blood, Sweat & Tears
  • 1990: Selections from Carmen, Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass
  • Under Gregg Hanson/John Yoon (Head Graduate Teaching Assistant):

  • 1991: Sunshine Show
  • Under Enrique "Hank" C. Feldman:

  • 1992: Latin Salsa/Rock 'n Roll
  • 1993: West Side Story
  • 1994: Santana, Channel One Suite
  • Under Jay C. Rees:

  • 1995: The Beatles (Rock 'n Roll History)
  • 1996: The Red Hot Chili Peppers (No Doubt - Tragic Kingdom)
  • 1997: Pink Floyd (Carmina Burana)
  • 1998: The Smashing Pumpkins (Stevie Wonder)
  • 1999: The Who's Tommy
  • 2000: Danny Elfman/Oingo Boingo (Santana - Supernatural)
  • 2001: Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (Dave Matthews Band)
  • 2002: The Return of The Red Hot Chili Peppers (World Peace Medley)
  • 2003: Teardrop (An original work for band by Jay C. Rees) (No Doubt - Rock Steady)
  • 2004: Talking Heads
  • 2005: Led Zeppelin
  • 2006: Radiohead (Red Hot Chili Peppers - Dani California)
  • 2007: Tears for Fears (Mars Lander)
  • 2008: Weather Report
  • 2009: Aerosmith (The Foo Fighters - The Pretender)
  • 2010: Muse
  • 2011: Jethro Tull
  • 2012: Radiohead 2.0 (Fun.)
  • 2013: The Beatles Strike Back!
  • Under Alli Howard:

  • 2014: Daft Punk
  • 2015: Dave Matthews Band
  • Under Chad Shoopman:

  • 2016: Earth, Wind, & Fire
  • Directors of the Pride of Arizona

    (Note: This list is not representative of each director's career with the University of Arizona, just their career as director of the marching band. Also, the title "Pride of Arizona" was first used during the James Keene era. The band was known as the "Best Band in the West" prior to that time.)

    As the "ROTC University Band"

  • 1902-1904: William K. Seitz
  • 1906-1908: C. G. Hoover
  • 1913: A. E. Clark
  • 1916-1917: Clark Leaming
  • 1918-1920: 2nd Lt. Alfred E. Truscott
  • 1920-1922: J. H. McGibney
  • As the "ROTC University Band and Concert Band"

  • 1922-1923: Guy Tufford
  • 1923-1925: Ernest G. Dobney
  • 1925-1928: Guy Tufford
  • As one of the "University of Arizona Bands"

  • 1928-1935: Joseph O. DeLuca
  • 1935-1939: Maurice F. Anderson
  • 1939-1946: George C. Wilson
  • 1946-1952: Sam Fain
  • 1952-1980: Jack Lee
  • 1980-1985: James Keene
  • 1985-1987: Stephen K. Steele
  • 1987-1989: Joseph Hermann
  • 1989-1991: Eric Becher
  • 1991-1992: Gregg I. Hanson
  • 1992-1995: Enrique "Hank" C. Feldman
  • 1995-2014: Jay C. Rees
  • 2014-2016: Allison Howard
  • 2016–Present: Chad Shoopman
  • References

    The Pride of Arizona Wikipedia