The Oklahoman

FAIR EVENT GIVES BANDS CHANCE TO SOUND OFF

- BY HEATHER WARLICK

State Fair Park was a musical place to be on Monday as about 1,800 student musicians from 40 Oklahoma middle school and high school marching bands paraded along a half-mile route inside the fairground­s. It was the fair’s 61st annual Oklahoma Band Day, and the students competed for trophies and cash awards.

“I think it’s cool that it’s at the fair,” said Avery Burgard, 13, an eighth-grade flute player in the Clinton Middle School marching band. “And you get to skip school.”

The bands competed in four categories in their classifica­tions, based on school sizes. The categories were color guard, drum line, drum major and overall band.

“The students, they get so excited representi­ng their schools. That to me is amazing,” said Melinda Parsons, senior manager of attraction­s and entertainm­ent

at the fair. Band Day is one of her favorite events at the fair, she said, because she was a member of her high school band.

“These are students that have got something going on. They’re being part of their school, really doing something.”

The competitio­n has grown each year, Parsons said, and her goal is to eventually attract 50 bands to the event. It’s free, and all state marching bands are invited to participat­e, she said.

For El Reno High School band director Marshall Douglas, the best part of the event is the camaraderi­e the students feel being together in such a large group of like-minded teens.

“They get to drill-off and drum-off against each other, join together and play music with one another,” he said. He’s been bringing his bands to Oklahoma Band Day at the fair since he started as band director at El Reno High School 13 years ago, he said.

Normally, “we’re across the stadium from each other. We’re supposed to be enemies,” he said. “Here we’re not enemies. We’re one big happy family.”

The groups were judged by five judges on a variety of skills including the execution of melodies and harmonies, drum line cadences, balance, footwork, alignment of rank and file, flag work techniques and choreograp­hy.

The Southmoore High School band took top honors at the competitio­n, winning the Outstandin­g Grand Champion Award.

Before the awards were announced, the University of Central Oklahoma color guard and the Southweste­rn Oklahoma State University drum line offered workshops demonstrat­ing techniques that are useful in marching and outdoor playing situations.

Next year, two Grand Champion Band Awards will be awarded: one for small class and one for large class bands.

 ?? PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Members of the Southmoore High School Color Guard demonstrat­e techniques Monday at a clinic hosted by the University of Central Oklahoma Color Guard as part of Band Day activities at the Oklahoma State Fair.
PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN Members of the Southmoore High School Color Guard demonstrat­e techniques Monday at a clinic hosted by the University of Central Oklahoma Color Guard as part of Band Day activities at the Oklahoma State Fair.

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