Skip to main content
Newswire

Instrumental

From stadiums to celebrations, NC State’s marching band is instrumental to the Wolfpack spirit.

NC State's marching band performing on the football field the day of a game.
You’ve heard a complex organization described as having “a lot of moving parts.” In the case of the marching band, it’s literally true. Band members learn to play their instruments and move in precise time to create a visual effect on the football field. Creating their halftime shows is a full-scale effort. Photography by Joshua Steadman

You might hear the sound coming from across campus. Or maybe in Carter-Finley Stadium or coming from Reynolds Coliseum. First, there’s the boom of the bass drums. The staccato of the snares. Then the brass and woodwinds join in, and you hear those first six notes of the NC State fight song: Bah-Bah Bam, Bah-Bah Bam. 

The trombone section plays in a performance on campus

If you bleed red — Wolfpack red, anyway — that sound is going to make your blood race a little faster and your heart beat a little stronger. You know it builds to a crescendo, and before it’s over, you’re going to get to shout, “Go State!” at the top of your lungs.

This is the pride that the NC State University marching band brings everywhere it goes. And if that pride feels brawnier these days, it’s because the Wolfpack band is bigger than it’s ever been. In the past 20 years, the size of the band has nearly doubled. Now at over 400 members, it’s on par with some of the largest bands in the country. 

For these students — none of whom are music majors — the band is a passion project. They fit their schoolwork around a demanding practice schedule, and Saturdays in the fall often turn into 12-hour days. Their school year starts early, with a week of band camp in the blistering days of August — all for one semester credit hour. 

A color guard member holds a flag during band practice
Drum line in band practice

“I wouldn’t trade it for anything,” says Eliza Shertzer, a chemistry major who plays snare drum. “It’s tough. But I am going to make time for marching band.”

What keeps them going is the thrill of performing, the joy of making music and the honor of representing NC State. “I love being on the field, seeing everyone in the stands so excited,” says Shertzer, a junior from Morehead City, N.C. “I love to be a part of amping up that excitement. I can just feel the adrenaline pumping.”

Band member cheers for the team during a football game

Game Day By the Numbers

  • in a typical football season

  • band members meet at Price Music Center to get ready for game day

  • to get everyone to the stadium, plus one Penske truck for extra equipment and a pickup for ladders. (This is more buses than the football team uses.)

  • to load the buses and trucks

  • the length of a home game day for band members

The clarinet section is all smiles on game day
The dance team enters the football field on game day.
The cymbal players perform in the stadium on game day.
The saxophone players have fun during a game.

Band members form close friendships, particularly within their sections. The sousaphones go on retreats to the coast or Lake Gaston. The clarinets have a pumpkin-carving contest. “The sax section is like a family,” says Andrew Otelsberg ’24, an alto sax player who is also a graduate student. (He says the prospect of another year of band was one reason he went to graduate school.)

Who’s in Charge?

Paul Garcia leads band members through the football stadium

Staff Leadership

1 band director, Paul Garcia (who has been leading the marching band since 2006)

1 assistant band director

2 drumline instructors

2 dance team instructors

1 twirling instructor

Student Leadership

4 drum majors

47 section leaders

6 student band assistants (almost always former band members, who receive tuition assistance to handle logistics)

Band director Paul Garcia has been working to increase the band’s size over the years. One reason? More students get the opportunity to be involved. And a big band can bring a bigger sound and more excitement. “You get that wow factor,” he says. Of course, that’s meaningless if the quality isn’t there. “You can’t be large and not be good,” he says. “But when you are both, it ups that wow factor. And we become a pride point for the university, for our fans, for alumni everywhere.”

Band uniforms hang neatly in a storage room
A student band assistant on the sidelines on game day.
A student band assistant in the band office
A box of uniform hats in the storage area

“We take inventory of every uniform. Every left glove, every right glove, every gauntlet. We set up the field for practices with ladders and speakers, and then we break it down. We make all the things happen.”
— Emmie Cumby, student assistant

To earn a spot in the band, students must submit video auditions, and the process is competitive. Garcia says he’s had students from every major, including the College of Veterinary Medicine. He remembers one future veterinarian bringing a box of bones to study while on the sidelines. 

Band members perform and dance in a parade

Does the band suffer because NC State does not have a music major? Garcia says no. He holds up his hands. “Just look at us!” he says with a grin, the delight showing on his face. Look, and listen. 

We hear you.  


Music Notes

(Click on the plus symbol to expand each fact.)

For the last home game of the year, the seniors get to choose the show.

These include black pants, marching shoes, jacket with sash drop, white gloves (with fingertips removed for some sections), white gauntlets that go over wrists, and cap. 

Sousaphone players wear a cap without a brim because their instrument is so large that the bell would hit the brim of the cap.

Usually these games include Duke, Pitt or UNC.

These include Legacy Luncheon, convocation, Packapalooza, commencement and often at the Raleigh Christmas Parade. They’ve performed at Hurricanes games, and last spring the band was on hand to play for two important announcements: to welcome Kevin Howell ’88 as NC State’s new chancellor and Will Wade as head basketball coach.

Marching band members can try out for a spot in the pep band. There are 170 spots for men’s games at Lenovo Center and 115 spots for women’s games in Reynolds Coliseum.


Tell Us What You Think

Do you have a personal connection to this story? Did it spark a memory? Want to share your thoughts? Send us a letter, and we may include it in an upcoming issue of NC State magazine.