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The Royal Australian Navy Band plays an invaluable role in keeping Navy’s image in the public consciousness, and it maintains one of Navy's most consistent and significant public engagement profiles. Its musicians promote awareness in the wider community of Navy’s critical contribution to the nation and reflect the quality of Navy’s people and the values for which we all aspire.[1]

The band comprises two full-time detachments and five part-time detachments positioned across Australia, and is one of the few platforms in which Navy can deliver its message to the people of Australia. Its musicians also add significant value to deployments undertaken by major fleet units. Through ship borne deployments of small elements of musicians, the band provides personnel who are cross-trained in a range of mariner and non-category specific skills. This enables its musicians to make a very meaningful contribution to the capability of the ships that they join as well as adding value to the Fleet’s engagement profile` ashore. Navy’s musicians have demonstrated a strong and proud record of service. Prior to and immediately after Federation, music was provided in the various state Navies by bands formed within the structure of each group. Whilst records are scarce, there are indications that in 1879 the Fremantle Naval Volunteers (sometimes referred to as the Fremantle Naval Brigade or Naval Artillery Volunteers) formed a fife and drum band.[2] In 1893, the New South Wales Naval Brigade Band comprised 22 personnel. Another of the very early naval bands was the Band of the Victorian Naval Brigade. This band, which comprised personnel from the permanent service and Naval Brigade, deployed to China as part of the naval contingent that assisted in quelling the Boxer uprising,[3] and was present (as a band of the Commonwealth Naval Force in 1901) at the arrival of the US Navy's "Great White Fleet" into Port Phillip Bay in 1908.

Some months prior to the commissioning of HMAS Australia at Portsmouth on 21 June 1913, six musicians (recruited in Melbourne) were sent to England to join up with a number of ex-Royal Marine and British Army bandsmen. These musicians, who formed the first band established under the title ‘Royal Australian Navy’, were kitted up in the Royal Marine uniform[4]of the period and arrived in Sydney in HMAS Australia on 4 October 1913. A second band was formed in 1927 for Flinders Naval Depot, now HMAS Cerberus. This band consisted of permanent musicians assisted by volunteers from all branches within the depot. By the late 1930's, in addition to bands in shore establishments, there was a rapid expansion in musician recruitment with a total of five bands at sea, serving in the cruisers Australia, Canberra, Hobart, Perth and Sydney. During WWII, musicians served with distinction in HMA Ships in all theatres of war. To supplement their musical duties, they worked as gun crews, shell bearers in magazines, in transmitting stations, as first aid parties and as lookouts through day and night watches. Fatalities occurred; and given the fact that cruisers were prime enemy targets, musicians were among those unfortunate sailors who lost their lives in HMA Ships Perth, Australia, Penguin, Canberra and Sydney. Musicians also saw action aboard the carrier HMAS Sydney in Korean waters in 1953, and a total of 172 musicians served aboard HMA Ships Sydney and Melbourne during the Vietnam conflict. Also, the Fleet Band onboard HMAS Melbourne and HMAS Sydney’s Band performed separate concert tours of South Vietnam in 1970. By 1973, the only band remaining afloat was serving aboard HMAS Melbourne, and this band transferred to HMAS Stalwart on the decommissioning of the ageing carrier in mid 1982.

Without a carrier, the ability of the band’s musicians to serve at sea was very limited for a short while after 1982. Although the Navy’s larger ships possessed some spare capacity when not conducting operations, the majority of the Fleet consisted of ships of frigate size and smaller, with little excess accommodation above the requirements of their crews. Nonetheless, after a brief absence, the band successfully renewed and reconfigured itself to take account of the changed environment, and re-established links with the Fleet through regularly embarking small musical ensembles for major deployments. Then as now, the musicians assisted in establishing strong morale within the ship in which they were embarked, as well as making a valuable contribution to the promotion of Navy's interests ashore with public performances.

During these deployments, Navy's musical seafarers have been employed in a variety of roles including for general duties in cafe and laundry parties and in the galley, on watch in the bridge, on the helm, and as members of the ship's force protection teams. For OPERATION SLIPPER and OPERATION FALCONER whilst embarked in HMAS Kanimbla, the musicians worked as members of a Flight Deck Team. The Commanding Officer, HMAS Arunta reported that his detachment of musicians ‘significantly contributed to the Task Group achieving its goals of representing Australia to the nations of South East Asia.’[5] He added further that ‘in a Navy of pressing operational imperatives the detachment has proved a powerful weapon in winning the hearts and minds of the people in which they have been in contact.’[6] His report is reflective of many other reports attesting to the value of embarking a detachment of musicians. During HMAS Anzac’s visit South Africa, one of the band’s musicians sang at the Rugby Union match in Cape Town between the Wallabies and the Springboks on 23 July this year. The performance was broadcast around the world and significantly raised Anzac’s profile during her visit to South Africa.

The deployment of 17 musicians to the Middle East Area of Operations (MEAO) during Christmas 2003 and the New Year 2004, as part of the musical Tour de Force sponsored by the Forces Advisory Council on Entertainment (FACE), demonstrated to Australian and coalition forces the calibre of Navy's musicians as well as the band's impressive musical capability. This was the first deployment to the MEAO by an Australian Defence Force Band. For ANZAC Day 2004, the band deployed 15 musicians to Anzac Cove and one of its buglers also performed at the Dawn Service in Baghdad.

The band’s role in supporting Australia’s Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands in 2005 and its redeployment to the Middle East Area of Operations (MEAO) for Christmas 2005 further strengthened its record of contribution to operational service. The deployment to the Solomon Islands was sponsored by the Forces Advisory Council for Entertainment (FACE), was a resounding success. The highlight of the deployment was a concert in Honiara in front of more than 20,000 people. The band contingent comprised musicians from the Melbourne and Sydney detachments and presented a high energy program performed entirely from memory. The success of the bands second deployment to the MEAO during Christmas 2005 and the New Year 2006, also sponsored by FACE, should not be understated. The 19 strong contingent comprising members from the Sydney and Melbourne detachments, Defence Force School of Music and the Directorate of Music, completed 25 performances over a 16 day period in eight separate locations moving more than three and a half tonnes of equipment for each performance: this was in addition to four days of in theatre military training. There were twelve major concerts (where civilian artists joined the band) with performance times ranging from one and a half hours to three hours. The entire program was performed from memory with a high level of chorography. An additional three and a half hours were required for the set up and pack down. Once again, Navy’s musicians made a truly magnificent contribution to Australian and Coalition Forces during the important holiday season. The band returned to the Solomon Island in 2007 for a second tour and to the MEAO in 2008 for its third tour; this time travelling within Afghanistan as well as throughout Iraq.

Of the 106 current serving permanent personnel the band has 45 musicians entitled to wear the Australian Active Service Medal; 12 of whom also wear the Iraq campaign medal. Importantly, a high percentage of its people have served at sea and the band continues to provide a very impressive output for Navy at home and abroad. The Commander Australian Navy Systems Command recently wrote in acknowledgment of the band’s role in the Thanksgiving Service for HMAS Sydney II, ‘the RAN Band was (as usual) a first class centrepiece to the service and again showed that it is second to none’.[7]

In Australia each year, the band completes more than 500 missions with audience numbers in the hundreds of thousands. Importantly, the band is able to keep Navy’s image alive in communities far removed from any naval presence. Tasks range from supporting local community groups and ex-Service associations to supporting ceremonial, public relations and social activities for the wider naval family.

The presence of the band at Welcome Home and Departure Ceremonies for ships deploying to and returning from OPERATION CATALYST adds ‘immeasurably to the importance of those occasions for our people and their loved ones.’[8] It is interesting to note that in 1900, on the eve of Federation, the bluejacket New South Wales Naval Brigade Band farewelled Australia’s Naval Expedition to the Boxer uprising. The expedition comprised members of the New South Wales, Victorian and South Australian colonial naval forces, and sailed from Cowper Wharf at Woolloomooloo.[9] Today’s Navy Band continues the tradition established by the bluejacket band; however, instead of playing ‘Sons of the Sea’, as was the case in 1900,[10] today’s musicians perform the popular tune ‘I Am Australian’ and Australia’s national song, ‘Waltzing Matilda.’

The Royal Australian Navy Band has performed on the shores of Gallipoli and in the bunkers of Vietnam, throughout Iraq and the Middle East, at the Royal Tournament and in Disneyland, at the Popes summer palace (Castel Gandolfo) and in the "Big Egg" Stadium in Japan. It supports Navy’s regional engagement profile overseas and maintains a strong commitment schedule across Australia. These performances, throughout Australia and the four corners of the world, have created the proud traditions upheld by Navy’s current generation of musicians.[1]

  1. ^ R.W. Gates (MCAUST), signal to the RAN Band, 1 July 2003
  2. ^ www.firstaif.info/west-aust/page/05-fremantle.htm
  3. ^ B. Nicholls, Blue Jackets and Boxers, Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 1986, p. 45
  4. ^ The band changed from the Royal Marine uniform in 1960
  5. ^ Commanding Officer, HMAS Arunta, message dated 4 November 2003, para. 1
  6. ^ Ibid., para. 4
  7. ^ S.R. Gilmore, CANSC, email to the executive 27 April 2008.
  8. ^ R.W. Gates, loc.cit., para. 3
  9. ^ B. Nicholls, loc.cit., p. xi
  10. ^ Ibid