SMU Spirit Songs

Since the other thread got nuked, I figured it may be interesting to some to still discuss the random SMU fight/spirit songs.
I was a member of the Mustang Band, and I remember learning that Pony Battle Cry was somehow the 'official' fight song, while Peruna was a 'spirit' song. I think that back in the day, there wasn't a set formula for having one official mascot/logo/fight song/alma mater, there were just things that some schools did in many different ways. As a result, SMU has had many spirit or school-related songs through the years. Here's what I've compiled:
1917 - Lewis Stuckey, an SMU student, is inspired to write "Varsity". It becomes the school song (alma mater) in 1929. Stuckey also wrote the "Mustang Victory Song", which I've found on some 1940-50's recordings of the Mustang Band. It sounds like your traditional rah rah school march.
1924 - "Peruna" is introduced as a peppy fun play on an old folk song and gospel song of the same tune. The students add the words and the rest is history. Within just a few years, the band is playing unique swing and jazz versions of the tune.
1940's? - "Go, Mustangs, Go" is introduced as another 'march-style' song. The EA Sports NCAA video game franchise used this as the fight song for SMU up until like 1999/2000 timeframe for some strange reason. Never heard it anywhere else, and when I was in the band in the early 2000's, we never played it.
1961 - "Pony Battle Cry" is written by Mustang Band director Irving Dreibrodt. It has the same march style that many other school's fight songs sound like. I imagine because he wrote it, it became very well heard over the next 20+ years that Dreibrodt was director of the band.
1960's - "SMU Loyalty Song", another song written by Dreibrodt, with lyrics about current students and alumni professing their loyalty to SMU.
2000 - "Mighty Mustang Thunder", written by some SMU employee, can't remember his name. Sounds like another typical march. Written to go along with Ford Stadium, so it features lyrics about the "Mighty Mustangs" fighting to victory in the "Canyon on the hill" (the guy explained that the stadium was the canyon on the hill) and that the thunder from "Peruna's heart within" will lead the team to a win. Honestly, an outside observer may think it sounds like a totally normal fight song, but this was one of those forced/new traditions that just rubbed some the wrong way. At least as of a couple years ago, I heard the band still play it occasionally. You can listen to it and read the lyrics at the bottom of this page: http://smu.edu/spirit/
Overall, there's a lot of songs, and I think to simplify things for the fans, the band has mostly stuck with Peruna and Pony Battle Cry. Peruna is the oldest fight/spirit song, and Pony Battle Cry offers the crowd a traditional-sounding song to sing along to.
Feel free to chime in with your thoughts!
I was a member of the Mustang Band, and I remember learning that Pony Battle Cry was somehow the 'official' fight song, while Peruna was a 'spirit' song. I think that back in the day, there wasn't a set formula for having one official mascot/logo/fight song/alma mater, there were just things that some schools did in many different ways. As a result, SMU has had many spirit or school-related songs through the years. Here's what I've compiled:
1917 - Lewis Stuckey, an SMU student, is inspired to write "Varsity". It becomes the school song (alma mater) in 1929. Stuckey also wrote the "Mustang Victory Song", which I've found on some 1940-50's recordings of the Mustang Band. It sounds like your traditional rah rah school march.
1924 - "Peruna" is introduced as a peppy fun play on an old folk song and gospel song of the same tune. The students add the words and the rest is history. Within just a few years, the band is playing unique swing and jazz versions of the tune.
1940's? - "Go, Mustangs, Go" is introduced as another 'march-style' song. The EA Sports NCAA video game franchise used this as the fight song for SMU up until like 1999/2000 timeframe for some strange reason. Never heard it anywhere else, and when I was in the band in the early 2000's, we never played it.
1961 - "Pony Battle Cry" is written by Mustang Band director Irving Dreibrodt. It has the same march style that many other school's fight songs sound like. I imagine because he wrote it, it became very well heard over the next 20+ years that Dreibrodt was director of the band.
1960's - "SMU Loyalty Song", another song written by Dreibrodt, with lyrics about current students and alumni professing their loyalty to SMU.
2000 - "Mighty Mustang Thunder", written by some SMU employee, can't remember his name. Sounds like another typical march. Written to go along with Ford Stadium, so it features lyrics about the "Mighty Mustangs" fighting to victory in the "Canyon on the hill" (the guy explained that the stadium was the canyon on the hill) and that the thunder from "Peruna's heart within" will lead the team to a win. Honestly, an outside observer may think it sounds like a totally normal fight song, but this was one of those forced/new traditions that just rubbed some the wrong way. At least as of a couple years ago, I heard the band still play it occasionally. You can listen to it and read the lyrics at the bottom of this page: http://smu.edu/spirit/
Overall, there's a lot of songs, and I think to simplify things for the fans, the band has mostly stuck with Peruna and Pony Battle Cry. Peruna is the oldest fight/spirit song, and Pony Battle Cry offers the crowd a traditional-sounding song to sing along to.
Feel free to chime in with your thoughts!