Songs The repertoire consists of traditional Harvard fight songs and their own arrangements of popular songs played for field shows.
Fight songs •
10,000 Men of Harvard by Martin Taylor class of 1910 •
Fair Harvard Harvard's Commencement Hymn by Samuel Gilman, Class of 1811 [Revised 1998] •
Fight Fiercely, Harvard! by Tom Lehrer class of 1946 •
Gridiron King by Raymond Fletcher class of 1908 •
Harvard Eternal (Premiered at the 90th Reunion in 2009, written by Hannah Horowitz class of 2011) •
Harvardiana by R.G. Williams 1911 •
Onward Crimson (Premiered at the 85th Reunion in 2004, written by Joshua Rissmiller class of 2006) •
Our Director by F.E. Bigelow •
R-A-D by Alice Hunnewell class of 1914 •
Score by J.W. Adams class of 1910 •
Soldiers Field by Raymond Fletcher class of 1908 •
Up the Street by R.G. Morse class of 1896 •
Veritas by John Densmore class of 1904 •
Yo-Ho by Raymon Fletcher class of 1908 •
Wintergreen for President arr. Leroy Anderson and containing a medley of other fight songs •
Harvard Medley arr. by Leroy Anderson as a medley of several fight songs
Fight Fiercely • Tom Lehrer, Harvard class of 1946, undoubtedly intended his song parody, "Fight Fiercely, Harvard" to mock the normally bellicose language of football fight songs. In keeping with the irreverent spirit of the band, they have adopted the song, and it is now sung with gusto at all the football games.
Unofficial • Budweiser • Sieve-Goalie (the tune of Hava Nagila played by the clarinets at hockey games to mock the opposing goalie) • Theme from Hawaii Five-O (played during hockey games when Harvard is winning 5–0) • Three Blind Mice (formerly played by the tubas when the referees emerge at hockey games, but due to accusations of unsportsmanlike conduct is relegated to a quiet rendition after particularly upsetting judgements against Harvard) • The Bagpipe Cheer (the saxophones play "Scotland the Brave" while others dance a traditional Scottish dance) •
Underdog Theme played by the trombone section.
Cheers •
Black Hole Cheer – Used in hockey matches against opposing goalie. • "1 2 3 4 Our team can really score, 1 1 1 1, humiliating isn't it?" OR "2 4 6 8 Our team is really great, 1 1 1 1, humiliating isn't it?" – Cheer for Hockey when the score is 4-1 or 8-1, respectively. Also performed in 4-0 and 8-0 versions. • "That's all right, That's OK, You'll all work for us some day" – Cheer for when team is losing. Was banned for HUB use by Harvard Administration. • "Hey Ref, you suck, we know where you live. Hey ref, we know, where you live... sucks." •
Repel them, Repel them, make them relinquish the ball to support the football defensive plays. (Written by Tom Lehrer) •
Navy Cheer: "Gooooooooo Har-vard! Beeeeeeeeat ___-___" for all sporting events •
Safety Cheer: "Hey [opposing school], 3 points is a field goal, two points is a safety,
safety school,
safety school" alternately: "6 points is a touchdown, etc." (used when Harvard is winning in hockey with a score of 3 to 2 or 6 to 2). It was banned for use by Harvard administration against any
non-Ivy League opponent. •
Sieve Cheer: (while pointing) "Sieve! Sieve! Sieve! (etc.) It's all your fault!" (used at Hockey games against the opposing goalie at the beginning of each period and when Harvard scores; also used when in the case that any obvious mistake is made, for example a flubbed musical entry or note) •
Engineers Cheer: E to the x, d-y,d-x; E to the y, d-y; Cosine, Secant, Tangent, Sine; 3 point 1,4,1,5,9—Come on Harvard, Give 'em the digit!! (With appropriate accompanying hand gesture.)
Staff cheers These cheers are intended for the band itself, rather than the audience •
The Flower Cheer – variants: Flour Cheer, Spaghetti Cheer (or any cheer for objects thrown into the HUB section of the stands). •
The Greek Cheer – a rousing cheer in honor of the new freshmen members of the band. •
MOM cheer – a cheer for Alice Tondel, aka "MOM". The word "MOM" is spelled backward, forward, and upside-down (WOW). •
the Humpty Dumpty Cheer, yelled by those in the back of the stands when they can't be heard •
The Bottle Cheer – cheer performed during third quarter during years when drinking age was 18. Band members would rhythmically beat the bottles they had emptied and would punctuate each phrase with the word, FIGHT. ==The Latin verse==