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Join The Ohio State University Marching Band for our annual Hometown Concert, held this year at Mershon Auditorium on Ohio State's campus on Sunday, Nov. 10. Purchase Tickets
The Ohio State University Marching Band (often called "The Best Damn Band in the Land" or TBDBITL) performs at Ohio State football games and other events during the fall semester. The...
The Ohio State University Marching Band (OSUMB) is a university marching band named for and a part of Ohio State University. The band, nicknamed The Best Damn Band in the Land (TBDBITL) (pronounced / təˈbɪtəl /), [1] performs at football games and other events during the fall semester.
The Ohio State University Marching Band. 230,362 likes · 28,320 talking about this. The Pride of the Buckeyes.
Carrying on the tradition of excellence that dates back to the late 1800s, the 228-piece “Pride of the Buckeyes” is one of the few college all-brass-and-percussion bands in the U.S. and is acknowledged as the largest of its type in the world.
The Ohio State University Marching Band (often called "The Best Damn Band in the Land" or TBDBITL) performs at Ohio State football games and other events during the fall semester. The 228-piece...
The Official YouTube Channel for The Best Damn Band in the Land, The Pride of the Buckeyes: The Ohio State University Marching Band.
To kick off the 2024 football season, The Ohio State University Marching Band blew through the music of Earth, Wind & Fire at the Buckeyes’ home game against the University of Akron.
Following a five-day tryout process, the band’s 247 newest members heard their names read aloud in the rehearsal hall of the Steinbrenner Band Center. That total includes the band’s 228 music-playing members, the 6 members of D Row — the drum major training row — and 13 student staff members.
The signature formation of the Ohio State Marching Band performed before, during halftime or after home games is Script Ohio. Each time the formation drill is performed, a different fourth- or fifth-year sousaphone player has the privilege of standing as the dot in the “i” of “Ohio.”