August 10, 2021

Cornhusker Marching Band exhibition is Aug. 20

Last year’s Cornhusker Marching Band recorded a pregame and halftime performance in Memorial Stadium in October for the virtual game day experience. This year the band will return to performing live at each home game in front of a full stadium of fans. Ph

The 2020 Cornhusker Marching Band recorded a pregame and halftime performance in Memorial Stadium in October for the virtual game day experience. This year the band will return to performing live at each home game in front of a full stadium of fans. Ph

The Cornhusker Marching Band’s annual exhibition concert will return at 7 p.m. Aug. 20 in Memorial Stadium. The concert is free and open to the public.

The performance will include a preview of the first halftime show of the 2021 football season, favorite Husker songs and a “drill down” contest in which band members follow rapid marching instructions to try to be the last person on the field.

“I’ve had many people tell me they enjoy coming to the band exhibition because it helps them annually begin their school year,” said Doug Bush, assistant director of bands and assistant marching band director. “It’s just a fun, free, family event where we gather in Memorial Stadium, hear and clap along with the fight songs and see what the Cornhusker Marching Band has been up to during band camp. It’s a special event. Exhibitions this size don’t happen everywhere.”

Tony Falcone, associate director of bands and director of the Cornhusker Marching Band, said the band has its work cut out for it in camp.

“Two entire classes of the band (this year’s freshmen and sophomores) won’t have performed in front of 90,000 in Memorial Stadium,” he said. “That’s going to be a steep learning curve, and we’re going to have to rely heavily on our student leadership for guidance and institutional memory to get us back up to speed.”

The exhibition gives band members a practice run before their first home game.

“Although they don’t really look at it as practice; they take it seriously,” Bush said. “It’s a way for them to get the first-show jitters out before that first pregame performance with 90,000 fans in the stands.”

It’s a welcome return to a more normal season for the Cornhusker Marching Band this season after the pandemic canceled the exhibition concert last season, and the band did not perform live at football games. In fact, no more than two-thirds of the band rehearsed in Cook Pavilion at one time last year.

“I think I speak for the entire band when I say that we can’t wait to have a more normal band experience this fall. Last year looked much different than a normal year,” said Katherine Schmit, a junior drum major from Lincoln. “Rather than working on a different half-time show each week, we worked on one show for the whole season, which was recorded and shown during football games. Our rehearsal time was much more limited than usual, so I’m thankful we had the opportunity to meet at all.”

Falcone is excited to get back out on the field in front of an audience again.

“I think it will be a jolt to everyone’s system to feel that energy again, audience included,” he said. “There will be a lot of goose bumps and tears. What I’ve missed the most is watching the students enjoy the experience and come together as a family through all the hard work. We did our best to preserve that last season, but it was a challenge.”

Falcone said the exhibition concert is an important part of the band’s preparations for the season as they run through their game-day routine and perform in front of people in the stadium.

“Everyone should come to the Band Camp Exhibition to see the sights, hear the sounds and feel the feelings of Marching Band live and in person for the first time in what, for many, will be two years,” he said. “It’s also one of the very few things that we do just for ourselves, so it’s a special night for the students and their friends and families, many of whom don’t always get the opportunity to see us at a football game.”

Fans attending the Cornhusker Marching Band exhibition concert should enter Memorial Stadium through Gate 3 (southwest entrance) and Gate 11 (northwest entrance). The gates open at 6 p.m.

The Cornhusker Marching Band is part of the Glenn Korff School of Music within the Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts.