The "Go U Northwestern", originally titled "Go Northwestern Go",[1] is one of the fight songs of Northwestern University.
History and significance
editThe song was written in 1912 by Theodore Van Etten, a member of the Northwestern University Wildcat Marching Band at the time. It debuted November 23, 1912, at old Northwestern Field in Northwestern's football season-finale versus the Illinois Fighting Illini.[2]
The song, along with Northwestern's other fight song, "Rise, Northwestern!" (commonly called the "Push On Song" or simply "Push On!"), and the university's alma mater, "University Hymn" (sometimes "Quæcumque Sunt Vera") are Northwestern official school songs.[citation needed] "Go U Northwestern" or "Rise, Northwestern!" is played by the marching band during football games every time Northwestern scores against its opponent and at various other times during the game.[citation needed]
Other uses
editAlong with being the Fight Song of Northwestern University, "Go U Northwestern" is the fight song for many high schools, with some using it under the original name.[3] Several other colleges and universities use the song as well, including Northern Oklahoma College Enid[4] and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro from 1998 to 2010.
In popular culture
editIn an early 1970s Sesame Street sketch, Ernie sings the song's opening bars while wearing a football helmet, eager to open a present Bert has wrapped, that Ernie thinks is a new football for him.[5]
References
edit- ^ Northwestern Fight Songs (Accessed February 24, 2012).
- ^ "Behind Northwestern's Songs". Northwestern University. Retrieved July 2, 2011.
- ^ Levin, Andrew (April 2012), "Go U (insert school name here)!: What different schools use our fight song as their own and why?", The Growl: The Newsletter of the Northwestern University Marching Band and Band Alumni Organization, archived from the original on July 29, 2014, retrieved April 17, 2014[unreliable source?]
- ^ "Fight song adds to NOC Enid's spirit" Archived June 29, 2013, at archive.today, Enid News & Eagle, December 9, 2005.
- ^ "Sesame Street: Surprise Present," YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9h4YQA3_JWQ&t=37s