Version 2 2019-12-13, 03:09Version 2 2019-12-13, 03:09
Version 1 2017-02-09, 01:11Version 1 2017-02-09, 01:11
thesis
posted on 2019-12-13, 03:09authored byAnthea Skinner
Almost a
million Australians served in World War II. Military bands were, in many ways,
the public face of the armed forces, performing in departure and welcome home
ceremonies, recruitment drives and to pacify potential enemy sympathisers.
Despite this, there has been little research conducted on mid-twentieth century
Australian military band history. This thesis is the first study of the lives
of Australia’s military musicians before, during and immediately after World
War II. The period from 1930 to 1955 saw a marked change in the organisational
structure of the Australian military generally and its band services specifically,
as they transformed from a largely part-time force, to a fully professional
service with long-term career structures for its members. Throughout this time
of great change musicians serving in the Australian military were tasked with
performing ceremonies aimed at reminding the population, military and civilian
alike, of the longstanding traditions and ethos of the military. This thesis
explores the dichotomy faced by musicians, working in a constantly modernising
organisation like the military, while at the same time maintaining largely
unchanging ceremonial performance traditions.
In exploring changes and traditions in Australian military
banding between 1930 and 1955 I will concentrate on three main fields:
non-musical training and duties, music and performance, and organisational
change. Using fieldwork interviews with retired veterans and their families,
together with archival records and contemporary newspaper reports, this thesis
shows a rapidly changing band service. It tells of barely-trained, part-time
militiamen who went on to become the last generation of Australian military
musicians to see combat; of highly-trained radar operators who became fulltime
bandsmen; and of a previously undocumented group of women, welcomed into
mainstream bands during wartime, only to be excluded for another 40 years once
peace reigned.
This period was also one of gradual professionalization for
Australia’s military band services. In the 1930s musicians performed other
military duties, as stretcher-bearers for example; however, starting in World
War II and continuing post-war, musicians were gradually removed from the
frontlines to focus solely on their musical skills. I will argue that, although
it limited their military duties, this process of specialisation was vital to
the survival of Australia’s military bands because as increased modernisation
led to increased specialisation for military personnel, the idea of having to
focus on two distinct fields, such as music and radar operating, was no longer
appropriate.
While the mid-twentieth century was a time of great
organisational change for Australian military bands, this thesis also
demonstrates strong continuity in ceremonial performance. Ceremonial repertoire
had often been in use since World War I and much of it is still in use in the
present day. Ceremonies such as Remembrance Day are still performed in much the
same way today as they were in the period under discussion. Australia’s
military musicians may no longer be responsible for keeping up to date with the
latest in medicine or radar, but their role as keepers of tradition and
ceremony in a constantly modernising military means that they will forever be
marching forwards, looking back.