During its traditional pre-game performance, the WVU drumline enters
Mountaineer Field through the home-side tunnel and performs the "Tunnel" and "Boogie" cadences. When complete, the remaining band members emerge from the south end-zone tunnels to a spirited, 220-beats per minute run-on cadence. The band forms several iconic images during its pre-game show including the Flying WV, the initials WVU, expanding circles, and an outline of the state of
West Virginia. The band plays several university songs and favorites including "
The West Virginia Hills",
"Country Roads",
"Hail, West Virginia",
"Simple Gifts" (from
Appalachian Spring),
"Fight, Mountaineers",
"Mountain Dew", and the
"West Virginia University Alma Mater".
Formation of the State The band forms the outline of the state of West Virginia during the pregame show of all home
Mountaineer football games. The outline moves down the field during the playing of "Hail West Virginia", and the shape inverts to face the student side of the stadium when the crowd begins the "Let's Go...Mountaineers" chant. West Virginia is one of only two U.S. states with two
panhandles, the other is Alaska. West Virginia features an irregular oval body formed mostly by the
Ohio River and a straight northern border formed by the
Mason-Dixon line. The unique shape creates a complex formation on the football field. Adding to the difficulty of the performance is the inversion of the formation, the motion of the band members around the border of the state, and the movement of the outline across the field.
Simple Gifts While the song was originally performed by the band during the 1973 halftime show,
Aaron Copland's
Simple Gifts has become a pregame tradition. Soon after its debut as a pregame selection, then band director Don Wilcox decided to exclude the song from the show for one year. However, the high demand for
Simple Gifts to be reinstated caused Wilcox to add the performance into the very next pregame show. The highlight of the performance begins when the band gathers in a circular formation in the center of the field. After a drum roll the colorguard thrust gold and blue flags into the air, raising and lowering them for emphasis, as the outer circle kneels, creating a two tiers of instruments for maximum sound during the fanfare of the arrangement. The formation then expands in concentric circles as the band begins the reprise. ==Composition==