West Virginia
Strike up the bands: West Virginia Community Band Festival takes the stage in Buckhannon on Saturday
BUCKHANNON — Eleven community bands from across West Virginia will descend on Buckhannon-Upshur High School on Saturday for the inaugural West Virginia Community Band Festival, a day-long celebration of music that ranges from concert pieces to jazz to — you guessed it — British pub songs.
The first notes ring through the auditorium at 10 a.m., when the Buckhannon-Upshur Middle School band kicks things off. From there, a new band takes the stage every 30 to 45 minutes, with the day finishing in a combined finale that pulls musicians from across the lineup into one mass band performance.
“We’re going to have 11 bands, and they truly are from all across the state,” said Sheila Zickefoose, president of the host Buckhannon Community Band. “We’re going to kick off the morning on Saturday with the middle school band, and then we, as the host band, are performing. And then we just start popping around the state. We have three bands from Huntington, two from Charleston, and bands from Clarksburg, Washington, Fairmont and Martinsburg.”
One of those groups will be making one of its first big appearances anywhere.
“The band from Martinsburg is just a year old, and so we’re the first big thing they’ve done since they got started,” Zickefoose said. “We’re beyond-the-moon excited for Saturday and being able to bring everybody together.”
The festival closes with two pieces performed by a combined band drawn from the day’s musicians — one a classical work by Billy Joel chosen by the host band, the other written by a member of the Kanawha Valley Community Band, whose director will conduct it. That handoff is more than ceremonial.
“We’re going to be truly passing the baton,” Zickefoose said. “They are hosting next year’s band festival.”
The 2027 festival is already on the calendar for May 8 at the University of Charleston — a remarkable stretch of planning for an event that hasn’t had its inaugural event yet.

“It’s really kind of scary how it’s all come together, because I expected blow-ups, things that were not going to work, and you have to reverse course and come up with Plan B,” Zickefoose said. “And it really has not happened that way.”
The whole thing started, fittingly, with a goodbye. A husband-and-wife pair in the Buckhannon Community Band were leaving for a medical residency at CAMC in Charleston, and the band held a small farewell.
“His wife said, ‘Wouldn’t it be great if we could all get together and play again sometime?’” Zickefoose recalled. “So that just got us thinking, ‘Well, how many community bands are there?’”
They found 17, and by August, Buckhannon’s band had organized a Zoom call to pitch a statewide festival. Roughly nine months later, it’s about to happen.

Inside the high school common area, around 10 local arts and crafts vendors will be set up throughout the day. Outside, three food trucks will be parked in the lot, with additional sweet-treat options rolling in for afternoon stops.
“We’re going to have food trucks parked outside so people don’t have to leave,” Zickefoose said. “But they’re also welcomem, if they would like, to come to town to find something else to eat.”
The musical menu is as varied as the food.
“We have concert bands that are going to be playing concert music. We have two jazz bands who are going to be playing jazz,” Zickefoose said. “And we actually have a brass band. And this is the third band from Huntington that plays British pub music.”

That brass band, she noted, is “completely off the wall” — a mix of Marshall University students and community band members.
For Zickefoose, Saturday is also a not-so-quiet pitch to anyone in Upshur County still eyeing an old instrument in a closet. She joined the Buckhannon Community Band when it formed in the fall of 2023, after her own clarinet had sat unused for three decades.
“It had been 32 years of my moving my clarinet from one side of the closet to the other,” she said, “always wondering and thinking, ‘You know, it’d be so cool to be able to play again.’”
She said the band plans to spend the day reminding people they don’t have to stay on the sidelines.

“If this has made you nostalgic and made you get that inkling of playing again, don’t be afraid. Don’t be hesitant. Just do it,” Zickefoose said. “Has it been a little painful at times, learning, relearning, hoping that the brain and body memory kicks in? Absolutely. But the best thing that I’ve done for myself in a very long time was joining this band, sticking to it, and I just can’t say enough about it.”
She encouraged people to give it a try.
“If people are interested, or even think they might be, get connected and come and have fun and enjoy it,” Zickefoose said. “Laugh when it doesn’t work and celebrate the little, wonderful victories that we have, because there’s nothing in this world more worth your time than making music.”
Performance schedule
- 8:30 a.m. — Vendors open
- 10 a.m. — Buckhannon-Upshur Middle School
- 10:45 a.m. — Buckhannon Community Band
- 11:40 a.m. — Brass Rhythm and Sax Orchestra
- 12:35 p.m. — Charleston Metro Band
- 1:30 p.m. — Brass Band of the Tri-State
- 2:25 p.m. — Kanawha Valley Band
- 3:20 p.m. — Greater Huntington Symphonic Band
- 4:15 p.m. — Eastern Panhandle Community Band
- 5:10 p.m. — Greater Huntington Jazz Band
- 6:05 p.m. — Fairmont Community Symphonic Band
- 7 p.m. — Shinnston Community Band
- 7:50 p.m. — Combined Band
West Virginia
Notebook: MCWS as good as advertised; West Virginia no overnight success story – WV MetroNews
Ahead of a June 10th trip to Omaha, I’d only heard positive reviews of the Men’s College World Series and the city that hosts it.
After an eight-night stay in Nebraska’s biggest city, it’s easy to see why.
The event at Charles Schwab Field was well-run and organized starting with Thursday practice for each of the eight participants.
The ballpark, which opened in 2011, is a state of the art, clean venue with a wide variety of concession offerings and a spacious press box that easily accommodated media members while all eight teams played two games over the first four days.
Crowds were strong and made their presence felt, particularly over the first several days.
There are fan-friendly activities just outside the stadium and no shortage of restaurants and bars within walking distance to partake in pregame or postgame festivities.
Perhaps Troy coach Skylar Meade summed it up best after the Trojans were eliminated Tuesday with a 12-0 loss to West Virginia that marked their second setback to the Mountaineers over a 96-hour stretch.
“Every person who came here now knows what this place is,” Meade said. “It’s the most unique place in the world. It’s the best college sporting event bar none. No offense to the others. Rose Bowl is awesome. It ain’t this.”
— — — — —
This was the third straight year I was present for West Virginia’s last game of the season after being on hand for the 2024 Super Regional series at North Carolina and again last year at LSU on the same stage.
Taking in the atmosphere in 2025 at Alex Box Stadium, when the Mountaineers played in front of consecutive crowds of 12,000-plus, provided a look at college baseball I’d never experienced and a newfound appreciation of the sport.
The MCWS took it a step further and continued the ascension of a Mountaineer program that gained national notoriety while hosting the Morgantown Regional and a Super Regional series against Cal Poly.
Envisioning WVU playing on the premier stage in college baseball was unfathomable a decade ago and even highly unlikely as recently as five years back.
But let’s not forget this is a program with four consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances and one of only two (North Carolina the other) to reach the Super Regional round each of the last three years.
What transpired this season as the Mountaineers set a new single-season program mark with 47 victories is a culmination of a lot of hard work from a lot of people within the program and athletic department alike, but it cannot be considered an overnight success story.
While West Virginia was swept in best-of-three sets in Chapel Hill and Baton Rouge, it’s important to remember those were 36 and 44-win teams that won regionals outside of Morgantown — feats fans should appreciate even more after witnessing the postseason atmosphere at Kendrick Family Ballpark.
WVU hadn’t won in the Super Regional round prior to this season, but two years ago, it had a ninth-inning lead against the Tar Heels in Game 1 and lost Game 2 by one run. Last season, the Mountaineers were eliminated by the eventual national champion.
“There are financial realities of the sport, and people may have assumptions about specific programs or about West Virginia in general that may or may not be correct,” WVU coach Steve Sabins said. “We have a whole lot of people working really hard on a whole lot of different areas, whether that’s Gold & Blue Enterprises, whether that’s BioPrecision with us, whether that’s the School of Sports Science or Biomechanics and Performance Center, whether that’s third-party NIL, specific donors, West Virginia has all of that.
“And it’s competing at the highest levels in all these areas, and I think it would probably surprise a lot of folks of the amount of effort, work, attention to detail and financial resources that have been poured into our program.”
— — — — —
A tip of the cap to West Virginia senior outfielder Brock Wills.
The UNC Wilmington transfer was a mainstay in the Mountaineer lineup throughout the regular season and Big 12 Conference Tournament when he appeared in 50 of 53 games with 45 starts.
When the NCAA Tournament rolled around, Sabins opted to start fellow senior Ben Lumsden in place of Wills.
The decision proved difficult to debate as Lumsden came up with numerous hits in key spots and finished 12-for-37 with three home runs, two doubles, 13 RBI and 11 base-on-balls over 11 games.
Wills, meanwhile, came off the bench to play in three NCAA Tournament games, one of which was Wednesday’s 12-7 season-ending loss to North Carolina when he came on as a right fielder to start the fifth inning.
Wills had three plate appearances against the Tar Heels, the first of which was a well-struck, but tough-luck double play on a liner to second base with the bases loaded in the sixth. He followed it with a walk in the seventh and a single in the ninth.
“So awesome. That kid has been such an instrumental piece of this team,” Sabins said. “In high-level competition, things don’t always go your way. There’s only nine dudes that get to play, and so coaches have to make hard decisions, and that happens every single year. And some years it’s a bigger storyline and some years it’s not, and some guys play good and some guys don’t. And there’s always some mix of that.
“But when things don’t go your way, it’s very easy to cash out. And so when you see a kid that has been so team-oriented and then to get inserted into the biggest game of his career and perform, it just shows you everything that you need to know about character. Because if you cash out, you don’t roll into the highest competition in the world and have success.
“Whether he had success or not, I knew his character. I knew that he was still working, and I knew he was team-oriented, and I knew he was fighting like hell to be great for the Mountaineers, and that’s why he got his opportunity. That’s why it came back around to him.”
For the season, Wills hit .283 (47-for-166) with two home runs, six doubles, three triples and 23 RBI.
West Virginia
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West Virginia
Charleston commemorates Juneteenth with downtown parade and celebration – WV MetroNews
CHARLESTON, W.Va – Charleston is celebrating Juneteenth with its annual parade, followed by a celebration in Slack Plaza featuring live entertainment, food, educational exhibits, and more.
The parade stepped off from the Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Center at 11:30 on Friday with a long line of organizations participating and several community members recognized as “Mr. and Miss Juneteenth.” Smiles dotted the procession as organizers watched a community come together.
“It’s just a wonderful thing when we can bring the community together to celebrate freedom, and here in West Virginia, we’ve had some challenges because they’ve said that Juneteenth is not a state holiday, but our people are still celebrating,” parade chairperson Karen Williams said.
The parade marked the start of an entire day recognizing the history of Juneteenth, the emancipation of more than 250,000 enslaved Black people when the Union Army arrived at Galveston, Texas, on June 19, 1865. With the last stronghold of slavery in the Confederate States eradicated that day, June 19 came to be celebrated as a second independence day, and President Joe Biden established it as a national holiday in 2021.
In West Virginia, former Gov. Jim Justice was the first to declare a state holiday and did so in each of his last four years in office. Gov. Patrick Morrisey recognized Juneteenth with a proclamation on Friday but has not declared a state holiday in 2025 or 2026.
“Representation really matters, so seeing Black queens and Black kings roaming the streets of Charleston is a beautiful thing, and it’s a needed thing. I think there’s a lot more people that aren’t going to celebrate Juneteenth than people that are, so I think it’s really important that we continue to celebrate this holiday and show why it’s important,” Miss Juneteenth Adult Keyarna Frederick said.
Different groups from around the Kanawha Valley came out to participate from businesses and youth organizations to political committees and arts collectives. Williams believes that shows that Juneteenth is a day for the entire community to celebrate.
“Appalachian people have always grown up and lived together, and what we want—we want people to continue that. We want people to continue to be together. We’re not saying this is a Black event or a white event. We welcome all people to come and participate,” she said.
The parade route echoed her sentiment as nearly everyone who joined the parade shared handshakes, high-fives, and hugs. That spirit of togetherness spoke to the day’s honorees as well.
“It’s definitely something that we should all be celebrating. It’s for all of us, not just for a certain color or a certain kind. It’s for all of us, so I believe everyone should be celebrating this day,” Mr. Juneteenth Adult Edward Frederick said.
“This is my first time in the parade. It’s so beautiful. It’s so amazing to see different organizations a part of the parade, seeing how much muscle has went into even doing something like this, so I think it’s a beautiful thing for Charleston,” Keyarna Frederick added.
From the parade to the activities in Slack Plaza, the day’s organizers sought to create an environment to celebrate Juneteenth with a spirit of unity. Williams hopes that anyone that joined or watched felt that along the way.
“I want them to see that we are Almost Heaven, West Virginia; that we are celebrating freedom; and that we are a community that embraces one another,” she said.
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