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Craig Urey/For The Daily ItemAngie Palermo of Mifflinburg Area High School-s color guard tosses a sabre during the Tournament of Bands competition in Mifflinburg Saturday.


Craig Urey/For The Daily ItemThe Shikellamy High School marching band-s color guard provides a flurry of flags at the Tournament of Bands Competition in Mifflinburg Saturday. 'We always try to challenge our students each year musically, physically,' Shikellamy band director Scott Carey says.


Craig Urey/For The Daily ItemChris Rote of the Milton Area High School marching band finishes a tune with a flourish during the band-s performance at the Tournament of Bands competition in Mifflinburg Saturday.


Craig Urey/For The Daily ItemMaria Greenaway of the Milton Area High School marching band-s color guard shows the flag during the band-s performance at the Tournament of Bands in Mifflinburg Saturday. 'I think they were ready to take that step,' Milton band director Brett Hosterman said of his squad, which only last year resumed competing after 20 years. 'They wanted to get better. They wanted to get themselves out there performing more.'


Craig Urey/For The Daily ItemMembers of the Mifflinburg Area High School marching band, as seen through the blue and gold trophies of the Tournament of Bands competition, prepare to start their routine. As hosts of the tournament, Mifflinburg was not competing for the hardware. 'It-s just a tradition,' Mifflinburg band director Matt Wagner said of the schools- 40-year run of competing. 'I know our students enjoy competing. We-ve always competed.


Craig Urey/For The Daily ItemThe musicians of the Shikellamy High School marching band try to hit their notes, hit their marks and play with enthusiasm at the Tournament of Bands competition in Mifflinburg Saturday.


Published September 30, 2007 07:21 am - Nearly 40 years of tradition marched across the football field Saturday at Mifflinburg Area High School's annual Tournament of Bands.


Competition offers Valley bands
chance to strut their stuff



By Amanda Keister
The Daily Item

MIFFLINBURG -- Nearly 40 years of tradition marched across the football field Saturday at Mifflinburg Area High School's annual Tournament of Bands.

Though this is only the eighth year the high school has held its own band tournament, marching bands at Mifflinburg have competed since the late 1960s, band director Matt Wagner said.

"It's just a tradition," he said. "I know our students enjoy competing. We've always competed. It's always been a part of what we do at Mifflinburg."

Bands from Milton, Shikellamy, Williamsport, Loyalsock and Lebanon competed at Saturday afternoon's event in Mifflinburg.

Milton, Shikellamy and Mifflinburg continued to Shikellamy's 37th annual Sounds of Champions Band Cavalcade Saturday evening.

Mr. Wagner said the competition experience serves as a way for band members and staff to improve their performance.

"The students ... get a chance to see other bands do the best that they can," he said. "The competition aspect gives judges an opportunity to critique what you're doing, so the staff can learn how they can instruct better and also the students learn how they can perform better."

Though bands at Mifflinburg have competed for decades, the Milton Marching Black Panthers didn't compete for more than 20 years before band director Brett Hosterman took the lead last season.

Mr. Hosterman, a former competitive band member himself, gave his students the option of whether to compete.

"I think they were ready to take that step. They wanted to get better. They wanted to get themselves out there performing more and that was a good way to do it," he said. "When we bring home a first-place trophy, it's a way of getting recognition in the school community because the band program wasn't very exposed to the school community and very appreciated in the school community."

Junior trumpeter Kevin Hower, 17, of Milton, was a member of the band before it began competing and said he enjoys the attention competition performances bring.

"I'm excited because we're finally bringing the band program back to Milton. It was sort of in a slump for a while and it's really coming back now and competition is just so much fun," he said. "I like being on the field and just that feeling you get when everyone is applauding for you and when they call out the winners."

Bands and color guards dressed in every color in the rainbow took to the field in Mifflinburg and Sunbury Saturday, performing music as diverse as the uniforms and costumes they wore.

Mifflinburg performed the music of Leonard Bernstein while Milton performed an arrangement of the well-known hymn, "It is Well with My Soul."

Shikellamy performed "New York State of Mind," a collection of music that took the audience through the traffic, street performers and city life that is Manhattan.



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