Austria Military bands of Austria are for the most part similar to the German musical format, although some military bands lack a
Corps of Drums, which is the most notable part of the German format. The
Gardemusik Wien of the
Guard Battalion is the seniormost band in the armed forces and is the one responsible for playing at all state ceremonies and events. at the 34th Austrian Brass Music Festival The first military bands in Austria were organized in 1741, with ensembles being restricted to infantry and artillery units. They reached their golden age between the 1820s and the mid-1840s, being inspired by French military tradition and reforms. Military bands at this point, were led by a director of music and were composed of 50-60 civilian musicians. By the turn of the 20th century, Austrian Military Music Bands included 178 regimental bands in the Army alone (majority in the infantry), which was composed of over 10,000 musicians. Outside the Gardemusik, military bands are divided into the following regional bands: • Military Band
Burgenland • Military Band
Kärnten • Military Band
Niederösterreich • Military Band
Oberösterreich • Military Band
Salzburg • Military Band
Steiermark • Military Band
Tirol • Military Band
Vorarlberg From October 2014, the abandonment of five Austrian military bands, including the military band in Vorarlberg, was discussed for cost reasons. In December 2014, the government agreed to keep the nine locations with a reduced staff. Instead of the previous 47, there are to be 20 musicians per state in the future. In May 2016, during the Austrian governors' conference, together with Defense Minister
Hans Peter Doskozil, it was decided to that military bands should be preserved in every federal state, consisting of 43 to 47 musicians.
Belarus The massed bands of the
Military Band Service of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Belarus follow the Russian traditional model with elements of Belarusian music in its repertoire. Regional bands from each of the military commandants form the basis of the band service along with the Exemplary Band (also known as the
BelArmyBand), the Band of the
Honor Guard Company, the Central Band of the
Interior Ministry and the Band of the
Ministry of Emergency Situations. The bands of the regional departments of the Ministry of Internal Affairs are also affiliated as well to the service.
Belgium The
Belgian Armed Forces have three professional military bands, each representing one of the service branches. Bands of the Belgian Armed Forces include the
Royal Band of the Belgian Guides, the Band of the
Belgian Navy, and the Royal Symphonic Band of the Belgian Air Force. All follow the British precedent due to these bands being based in the United Kingdom for much of the Second World War, with elements from the band traditions of France, the Netherlands and Germany. The oldest and largest of these is the Royal Band of the Belgian
Guides (former cavalry) dating from 1832. The bands of the Belgian Navy and of the Royal Belgian Air Component both date from 1947. The combined bands are known as the Music Bands of the Belgian Defense and consist of a total of nearly 200 professional musicians, all of whom holds a diploma from a Royal Conservatory.
Bulgaria Military bands in
Bulgaria are under the jurisdictional authority of the
Bulgarian Armed Forces. They are shaped by the Russian and German examples as well as follow their own precedent. The senior band is the
Representative Guards Band from the
National Guards Unit. It was formerly the Central Brass Band of the
Bulgarian People's Army and the Band of the Bulgarian Life Guards Squadron before that. The armed forces also maintain three service bands: the
Ground Forces Band from
Sofia, the
Navy Band from
Varna and the
Air Force Band from
Plovdiv. The Ground Forces Band was established in 2000 as a direct successor to the Band of the 4th Infantry Regiment of Pleven, which has a more than 120 years of history. On 28 February 1884, Franz Minarick was appointed as the bandmaster of the newly formed Navy band. The air force band was created on 1 October 2000 (Bulgarian Music Day) from the Tactical Aviation Corps Band and the Plovdiv Garrison Brass Band.
Cyprus Republic of Cyprus The Military Music Department of the
Cypriot National Guard is the official music band in the Republic of Cyprus. It is based on Greek and British military traditions. The National Guard Band was founded in 1968 and its staff comes from conscript musicians performing their service term within the Guard.
Northern Cyprus The modern day
Security Forces Command Band of the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus is based in primarily Turkish influences. It dates back to British rule over the island, when Captain Zeki Taner established the foundations for a Mujahideen Band to be formed in 1958 from makeshift tools. In 1960, when the
Republic of Cyprus was declared, the guarantor country
Turkish government sent instruments to the island that the Mujahideen Band needed through Cyprus Turkish Forces Regiment. In 1971, the Mujahideen Band took the name of the Cyprus Turkish Police Band, performing at many concerts under the name of "Student Band" due to the problems faced while crossing to the other districts. When Turkish Cypriots gained an independent state with the
Turkish invasion of Cyprus, Security Forces Command was established on 1 August 1976 and the Police Band took the name of the Security Forces Command Band.
Czech Republic The
Czech Army Central Band is the primary unit of the
Czech Land Forces responsible for providing musical support to the
Army of the Czech Republic and the
Armed Forces of the Czech Republic. The band is currently based in
Prague where it fall under the Army Music Service of the Czech Armed Forces, which heads all bands in the CAF. There are two other bands in the CAF:
Military Band Olomouc, Military Band
Plzeň, Military Band
Brno, Military Band
Tábor and Military Band
Hradec Králové. The latter descends from the former Band of the
Czechoslovak Air Force (founded in 1949) and has since 1963 been working mainly in the East
Bohemian Region. Many graduates of these bands come from the Prague Military Music School. Primarily, the band tradition in the republic stems from the Austro-Hungarian tradition, with latter influences from the United Kingdom and Russia. On 11 December 1918, it was decided to establish the first military band in the larger garrison towns.
Denmark , the seniormost military band in
Danish Defence. Danish military bands are known to have been influenced greatly by the traditional
German and
Swedish examples that it often surrounded itself with. The
Royal Life Guards Music Band is the seniormost military band in the
Danish Defence, performing at all national events, especially ones involving the
Monarchy of Denmark, the
Danish royal family and foreign dignitaries. The squad-sized
Mounted band of the
Guard Hussar Regiment Mounted Squadron, which consists of one Timpani and nine bugles, is the only mounted military band in the country and is used during processions and ceremonial escorts. The
Royal Danish Naval Academy sports the navy's only military band, the Royal Danish Navy Band (
Danish: Søværnets Tamburkorps), established in 1964 and composed of 24 cadets. The army also maintains several regimental and battalion bands such as the
Slesvigske musikkorps, which are stationed at their home barracks.
Finland Band formations in
Finland have been heavily influenced by
Russian,
German and
Swedish military traditions. Finnish military music has an over 400-year history which began in 1544 when King
Gustav I of Sweden promoted the strengthening of musical structure in the Swedish-Finnish army. The first Finnish military bands were composed of pipers, drummers, cavalry buglers and kettle drummers who began to serve on the front lines in the
Russo-Swedish War (1554–1557). Gustav's son,
John III, settled at
Turku Castle after his father's death, and created his own personal court band, whose first directors were the Dutch-born Jören van Heiden and Blasius Fischer. This provided the basis for modern military bands in Finland. of the Finnish Armed Forces, perform at the Sweden International Tattoo. In the 1600s, a four-member band was added to the ranks of an army regiment on the basis of the Hautboist model in Europe. In the early 1700s, there was a period of repression of Finnish military music, which would only improve later on in the century. In the early 1800s, the last band to be founded in Swedish Finland was the Band of the Queen Dowager's Life Guard Regiment in Pomerania. Bernhard Henrik Crusell, who was a musician in the and an internationally known Swedish instrumentalist, is known as the "Father of Finnish military music" and has "Crusell's March", named in his honor. In the period of the
Grand Duchy of Finland, a total of 23 military bands were in service, growing to 28 from 1812 to 1905. During this time, bands such as the Cavalry Band of the Dragoons Regiment and the
Guards Band were founded. Army bands in independent Finland received their initial training at Korsholma Military Music School (now the Military Music School) near
Vaasa. The
Finnish Defence Forces sports 6 professional military bands with 180 musicians combined. The six professional Finnish military bands are the
Kaartin Soittokunta, the
Conscript Band of the Finnish Defence Forces, the
Finnish Air Force Band,
Finnish Navy Band, the Lapland Military Band, and the Dragoon Band. Lapland Military Band from
Rovaniemi is the only professional wind orchestra in Northern Finland and is the northernmost military band in the
European Union. The Finnish Armed Forces also hosts and participates in the biannual
Hamina Tattoo.
France , a fanfare band during
Bastille Day in 2013. Since the 17th century, France has sported one of the oldest military band traditions in all of Western Europe, providing the Western world with a collection of French marches composed by eminent composers from the Ancien Régime, the Revolution, the Napoleonic era up to the present. The
French Revolution brought many changes to music and military bands. As a result of the increase of musicians, military bands grew to sizes never seen before. The
French National Guard had 45 musicians in 1789 and expanded to 70 in 1790. The band dissolved in 1792 but became the nucleus for the
Paris Conservatory of Music. In 1827, all French bands were cut to 27 players at minimum due to economic reasons. While modern instrumentation somewhat mirrors those of British and American military bands, it is based on uniquely French military music traditions. These bands are led by a conductor and a drum major. There are four types of military bands today in France: military marching bands (subdivided into marching and mounted brass bands), Corps of Drums (only in the
Foreign Legion),
Fanfare bands (attached to the marching band or as separate marching bands) and Pipe bands (more known in Brittany as the
Bagad). Examples of these are the
Marching, Fanfare, and Mounted Bands of the French Republican Guard, and the
Central Band of the Foreign Legion, the only remaining French military band to use the fife. The French Army
Cavalry and Armored Branch maintain mounted and dismounted fanfare bands featuring cavalry trumpets and bugles plus kettledrums and marching percussion. Another example is the band of the French
Chasseurs Alpins (the
band of the
27th Mountain Infantry Brigade (France)), which uses the
Alphorns in displays.
French Armed Forces bands are also of the headquarters element from the regimental or brigade level onward and can also provide musical elements for civil and military events. These bands are distinguished by their service dress uniforms. All army bands are part of the
Army Music Command (CMAT). Outside of this framework, army bands include the Fanfare Bands of the
9th Marine Infantry Brigade and the
6th Engineer Regiment.
Germany during the funeral of German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt. The military bands of Germany have two or more components depending on instrumentation.
Military bands in Germany's Bundeswehr today are only composed of a military band and a Corps of Drums. Another distinguishing features are the presence of the
Turkish crescent in the military bands when they are on parade and the band's conductor being assisted by a
Drum major, as well as the inclusion of
fanfare trumpeters. The military bands of Germany have also influenced the development of military bands throughout
South America. In types of ensemble, these bands are called as: • Corps of Drums (
Spielmannszug, Tambourkorps, Trommlerkorps) • Military/Music/Marching Band (
Musikkorps, Musikkapelle, Orchester) •
Drum and bugle corps (
Bläserkorps) • Brass bands (
Blasorchester, Blaskapelle) •
Fanfare bands (
Fanfarenzug, Fanfarenkorps) •
Mounted bands (
Trompeterkorps, Kavalleriemusik, Kavallerieorchester, Fanfarenkavalleriekorps) The bands of the
Bundeswehr today are mainly composed of the band proper, Corps of Drums, and the occasional fanfare section, several bands have historical sections wearing period uniforms and playing either modern or classic instruments. Other such bands are led by Drum Majors, Conductors/Directors of Music, and Bugle Majors in the case of mounted, bugle, and fanfare bands. During the Imperial era, such bands existed all over the
German Empire, and later on during the
Weimar Republic and the
Third Reich (but the mounted bands were reduced to only a few by that time). The
Wehrmacht and the
Waffen-SS had maintained a considerable amount of military bands in its ranks. The
SS-Verfügungstruppe and the
Allgemeine SS had also maintained bands, giving way for the
SS lead the way for German musical units in
Nazi Germany to be part of this
paramilitary organization. By 1934, a musical unit had been set up in the
1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, which was Germany's most senior military band in the pre-war years. Professor
Hans Felix Husadel, who was the
Luftwaffenmusikinspizient of air force bands, was primarily responsible for the 1930s reorganization of bands in the
Luftwaffe, which was notable in its inclusion of the saxophone in 1935.
East Germany's official band service was the
Military Music Service of the National People's Army (
Nationale Volksarmee), organized into the same ensembles as in the
Bundeswehr, as well as added ensembles based on Soviet influence.
Greece during the 2011 International Military Music Festival at
Spasskaya Tower Greek military bands have a long history that goes back since the country's establishment in the early 19th century. When the
Hellenic Army's regular force was under the command of French Colonel
Charles Fabvier, army culture was expanded into different areas, including the establishment of military music detachments for the first time. The
Hellenic Armed Forces operates three musical units, including the Military Band of Athens, the
Hellenic Air Force Band, and the
Hellenic Naval Band The
Military Band of Athens, which is the seniormost military band in the army and the armed forces, has an over 190-year history. The band in its current form was established in 1856, and was the only professional musical band of the Greek State. All three bands partake in rendering honors and performing in military parades and concerts. Like the British Army, the Greek military also maintains unit bands at the regimental/brigade level to provide ceremonial support to these specific units.
Hungary With the
Hungarian Defense Forces Central Military Band (HDF Band) (
Magyar Honvédség Központi Zenekar) being the official military band of the
Hungarian Defence Forces, it represents the HDF on every occasion, including parades as well as ceremonies and has done this since its foundation in 1962. Military bands in Hungary have an over 120-year history dating back to the founding of the first military band in the capital of
Budapest in the late 1890s. The central band also acts as the headquarters for all separate garrison bands.
Italy fanfare band. As they lack percussion instruments, the band marches at a jogging pace. Italy has a long tradition of military music. Today, within the
Italian Armed Forces, Italian military bands (called in the
Italian language as both either
banda or
fanfara) have an instrumentation order similar to British, French, and American military bands, although it retains the Italian musical flavor and heritage. Mounted bands in the Italian Army, Carabineri and the Polizia di Stato formerly used only the bugle and the natural trumpet from the 16th century, up to the middle of the 20th century, from the late 19th century to now also they use brass, woodwinds, timpani, single tenor drums, snare drums, cymbals and glockenspiels. Brass bands belonging to the
Bersaglieri have no percussion and march on the jogging pace of their attached units on the lead. The following bands serve the servicemen and women of the Armed Forces: •
Italian Carabinieri Bands • National Carabinieri Band • Mounted Carabinieri Regiment Band • Band of the Carabinieri NCO School Rome • Band of the Carabineri Basic School Turin • Band of the Warrant Officers' School (
Florence) • Band of the "Lombardy" Battalion (
Milan) • Band of the "Campania" Battalion (
Naples) • Band of the "Sicily" Battalion (
Palermo) • Italian Army Bands •
Italian Army Band Rome •
Alpine Brigade "Taurinense" Band •
Alpine Brigade "Julia" Band •
Bersaglieri Brigade "Garibaldi" •
Cavalry Brigade "Pozzuolo del Friuli" Band •
Mechanized Brigade "Aosta" Band •
Mechanized Brigade "Pinerolo" Band •
Mechanized Brigade "Sassari" Band • Anti-aircraft Artillery Command Band •
1st Regiment "Granatieri di Sardegna" Band •
7th Bersaglieri Regiment Band •
Guardia di Finanza Bands • Central Band • Academy Band •
Italian Air Force Bands •
Central Band • Air Force Academy Band •
Italian Navy Bands •
Central Band • Band of the
San Marco Marine Brigade • Band of the Corps of the Port Captaincies • Naval Academy Band A military band was maintained in the former
National Republican Guard.
Latvia maintain a number of military bands, such as the Central Band of the
Latvian Navy. Latvia developed a tradition of having military bands right after it gained its independence from the
Russian Empire in 1918. In February 1919, Captain Ludvigs Bolšteins of the newly formed
Latvian Army ordered an infantry company to form a band composed of 11 volunteers in what was considered to be the first military band in independent
Latvia. Beginning in 1940 and again following the end of the German occupation in 1944–45, the
Red Army began stationing army bands on its territory. As the Soviet band tradition grew and progressed over the years, bands of the
Baltic Military District stationed in the
Latvian SSR were aligned towards the standard of the Bands of the
Moscow Military District. Since 1991, the
Central Military Band of the Latvian National Armed Forces (also known as the NAF Staff Band) has been the flagship ensemble of the national armed forces and has participated in every protocol events. Officially coming under the command of the
Latvian National Armed Forces Staff Battalion, it mostly performs in the presence of a major public figure, such as the
President of Latvia. In addition to the Central Band of the Armed Forces, three other military bands are also associated with the NAF Staff Band and are on the National Armed Forces National Orchestral Board: They include the Central Band of the
Latvian Land Forces, based in
Daugavpils and mostly provides music for the
Latgale; Central Band of the
Latvian Navy, based in
Liepāja; and the Central Band of the
Latvian National Guard. The Central Band of the Latvian National Guard is the newest band established by the Latvian Armed Forces. However, although it was officially founded in 2011, it actually succeeded a military band that was under the supervision of the National Guard and was active in the 1990s. At the time, it was simply under the command of an Ordnance Battalion of the National Armed Forces. At present, the National Guard Band sports a saxophone quartet, jazz ensemble, a choir, and a
big band, which combined totals up to 40 musicians. The current conductor of the National Guard Band is Captain Andis Karelis and Major Viesturs Lazdins.
Luxembourg The
Musique militaire grand-ducale is the sole military band of the small country of
Luxembourg, based in
Conservatoire de Luxembourg. The band performs close to 50 concerts per year, mostly in
Luxembourg City. The band is divided into a chamber orchestra, brass band, bugles and drums, an instrumental ensemble, as well as several quintets.
Netherlands The
Netherlands Armed Forces's military music component is made up of eight military bands and two field music formations, which perform ceremonial duties and give concerts to the public, these bands are a hybrid of the German, British, Spanish and French band traditions. The
Royal Military Band "Johan Willem Friso" is the main military band of the
Netherlands, serving as the seniormost band of the entire armed forces. The band was formed in 1995 as a fusion of both the Royal Military Band of the Grenadier Guards Regiment, elements of the Brass Band of the Rifle Guards Regiment and the Band of the Johan Willem Friso Regiment and thus is the largest and oldest among all the bands. The other four bands are the
National Reserve Korps Fanfare Orchestra, the Brass Band of the
Royal Netherlands Army Regiment of Engineers, the Fanfare Orchestra of the RNA and Mounted Fanfare Band Section and the
Garderegiment Grenadiers en Jagers Brass Band. All five report to Headquarters,
Royal Netherlands Army. The Royal Netherlands Navy is served by the
Rotterdam Marine Band of the Royal Netherlands Navy, the Royal Netherlands Air Force by the
Central Band of the Royal Netherlands Air Force and the
Veterans' Brass Band of the Royal Netherlands Air Force and the
Royal Marechaussee by the Fanfare Band of the Royal Marechaussee. Of the many field music formations in active service during the Cold War only the
Fanfare Band of the Royal Marechaussee's Traditional Drum and Bugle Corps is in service, together with the Royal Netherlands Air Force Traditional Drum and Bugle Corps, the eight bands currently active were only a few of the many bands that existed for public and ceremonial activities from the 19th century up to the 1990s in the Armed Forces. Former bands and field music formations were: • Corps of Drums of the Garderegiment Grenadiers • Fanfare Orchestra of the Rifles' Guards Regiment • Rifles' Guards Regiment Drum and Bugle Corps • Band and Corps of Drums of the Garderegiment Fuseliers Prinses Irene • Band and Corps of Drums of Regiment Van Heutsz • Band and Drum and Bugle Corps of the Infantry Regiment Oranje Gelderland • Band and Drums and Bugles of the Limburgse Jagers • Fleet Forces Band of the Royal Netherlands Navy • Fanfare Band of the Royal Netherlands Army Cavalry • Fanfare Band of the
Royal Netherlands Army Artillery • Drum and Bugle Corps of the Logistics Component of the RNA • Fanfare Orchestra of the Royal Netherlands Army Artillery • Band and Fanfare Unit of the Royal Netherlands Army Regiment of Engineers • Band and Fanfare Unit of the Royal Netherlands Army Corps of Signals
Norway Band and Drill Team Company The
Norwegian Armed Forces have several military bands that play a prominent role during ceremonies and parades. Norwegian bands date back to the 1620s, when platoons of drummers (tambur) were stationed at all military fortresses in the country under the Army. Five brigade bands were established during the restructuring of the Norwegian Armed Forces in 1817. Following World War II, military bands became popular among civilians and government officials, eventually leading to the
Norwegian Parliament to give the green light for establishing over six bands in 1953. The following bands, among others, serve the ceremonial duties of the Norwegian Armed Forces: •
Staff Band of the Norwegian Armed Forces • Royal Norwegian Navy Band •
Norwegian Air Force Band •
Hans Majestet Kongens Garde Band and Drill Team Company • Norwegian Army Band, Northern Norway • Norwegian Army Band, Western Norway (also known as the Norwegian Armed Forces Band) • Oslo Home Guard Band
Poland was established in 2002, merging two military bands from
Jelenia Góra and
Oleśnica.
Polish Armed Forces military bands follow the Austrian model, but follow also the German and Russian band and march music tradition too. The main military band in
Poland is the
Representative Central Band of the Polish Armed Forces which is part of the
1st Guards Battalion, Representative Honor Guard Regiment and has served the leadership of
Poland since 1918. All service branches of the armed forces also have their own military band. The representative ensemble of the armed forces also maintains a full chamber orchestra attached to the unit. In addition to the central band, the three main service branches of the Polish military maintain their own representative bands. The Representative Band of the
Polish Air Force (
Orkiestra Reprezentacyjna Polskich Sił Powietrznych) was established in 2002 following the merger of two military bands from
Jelenia Góra and
Oleśnica. The majority of band members are graduates of the former Military Music High School in
Gdańsk, as well as graduates of Music Academies in
Poland and abroad. It takes part in numerous festivals and tattoos in
Western and
Central Europe. In 2009, the
Polish Air Force Band was the winner of the 44th annual
Polish Armed Forces review of military bands. It is currently based with the 34th Air Defense Missile Squadron in
Bytom and is placed under the command of Lieutenant Krystian Siwek. The Representative Band of the
Polish Land Forces (
Orkiestra Reprezentacyjna Wojsk Lądowych) supports the everyday ceremonial activities of the
Polish Land Forces from its headquarters in
Wrocław. It was established in 1952 by order of
Vladislav Korchits, who was the then chief of
Polish General Staff. In over 50 years, the band was led by acclaimed Polish musicians such as Major Czesław Kęstowicz, Captain Franciszek Minta, and Major Mariusz Dziubek. has served the musical needs of the Navy since 1920. The Representative Band of the
Navy of Poland (
Orkiestra Reprezentacyjna Marynarki Wojennej Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej) serves the ceremonial and musical needs of the
Polish Navy. The band was formed in 1920 in the city of
Puck, which was the then headquarters of the Polish navy. It was transferred to
Gdynia with other units in 1925 and has been based there ever since. Its activities were suspended during
World War II due to the
occupation of Poland. The
Polish government created a
Big Band as part of the band in 1982. The history of the Representative Band of the
Polish Border Guard (
Orkiestra Reprezentacyjna Straży Granicznej) dates back to 1956 and is closely related to the history of the
Carpathian Brigade of the Polish Army. It has performed its current functions as a military band since 1973 and has been based in
Podhale since its founding. It is known as a perfect interpreter of symphonic, brass and classical music. The band prides itself on the over 10,000 concerts that it has performed over the years and the several prizes and awards it has been given by musical and government officials in
Poland and abroad. garrison performing on
May 3rd Constitution Day, 2014 The following military garrisons have military bands under their jurisdiction: •
Bydgoszcz Garrison Band •
Stargard Garrison Band •
Toruń Garrison Band •
Lublin Garrison Band •
Giżycko Garrison Band •
Elbląg Garrison Band •
Szczecin Garrison Band •
Siedlce Garrison Band •
Żagań Garrison Band •
Świnoujście Garrison Band •
Koszalin Garrison Band •
Bytom Garrison Band •
Dęblin Garrison Band •
Radom Garrison Band •
Warsaw Capital Garrison Band •
Kraków Garrison Band •
Rzeszów Garrison Band
Portugal Portugal has a long military music tradition. Military type bands exist not only in the Military forces, but also in security and emergency forces, with some influences from Spain, France and the United Kingdom. The senior band of the
Portuguese Armed Forces is the Army Symphonic Band (BSE), based in
Lisbon and formed in 1988 by order of the Chief of Staff of the Army, General Mário Firmino Miguel. It is the heir to the oldest musical traditions of the
Portuguese Army, historical predecessors of which include the Band of the 1st Infantry Regiment and the Band of the 5th
Caçadores Battalion On 7 October 2005, it was awarded by the President
Jorge Sampaio the
Gold Medal of Distinguished Services. The Army also has four regional military bands, the Army Fanfare Band and three other fanfare bands. The Fanfare Brass Band of the
Portuguese Rapid Reaction Brigade has the particularity of including bagpipes and its members being all qualified paratroopers. The youngest of the formations, it has been active since 1986. The
Banda da Armada (Navy Band) is the official band of the
Portuguese Navy, dating back the 1740s when there was a band called "Charamela" in the Portuguese Royal Navy. The Navy also includes the
Fanfarra da Armada (Fanfare Band of the Navy), a
drum and bugle corps which is part of the
Portuguese Marine Corps, with origins dating to the Royal Brigade and in existence since 1837. Both carry the long history of bands and field music in this branch. The
Portuguese Air Force Band was created on New Year's Eve in 1957, five years before the founding of the actual air force. Like the army band, it is a recipient of the Gold Medal of Distinguished Services, awarded in 1997. Outside those bands, all of which are part of the main framework of the Portuguese military, the
Symphonic Band of the
National Republican Guard (GNR), the country's gendarmerie force, serves as an official military band and serves as the official state band of the republic. The GNR also includes the Horse Brass Band (
Charanga a Cavalo), which is the only mounted band in the world which plays while on the gallop.
Romania The Military Music Service of the
Romanian Armed Forces (
Serviciul musical militar al Forțelor Armate Române) and the Military Music Inspectorate (
Inspectoratul Muzicilor Militare) are the principal military band departments in
Ministry of National Defense of Romania. It is responsible for the organization and instruction of military bands in the armed forces. It is currently housed at a military base on 13
Iuliu Maniu Boulevard,
Bucharest. July 1 is considered to be the "Day of Military Music" (
Ziua muzicilor militare), which is observed as a professional holiday. during the visit of
Petro Poroshenko to
Romania. In 1864, it became a special section in the Ministry of War, which controlled its subordinate military bands and music schools. The section became the basis for the subsequent establishment of the Military Music Inspectorate in 1867, which had Captain
Eduard Hübsch being the first commander. In the nearly 30 years since Hübsch was the inspector of the military music, the special regulations for the bands of the band were elaborated and the military musicians were given a new status in the army. On May 26, 1895, inspector general
Ion Ivanovici (the author of the most famous Romanian waltzes
Waves of the Danube) endowed the inspectorate with new instruments, introduced a valuable and diverse repertoire, while supporting the training of future military instrumentalists. On October 10, 1936, the Military Music School was established and was designed to ensure the training military music staff. In the middle of June in 1954, the representative military bands of each service branch of the
Romanian People's Army were formed. The current inspector general of the military music service is Colonel Valentin Neacsu, who has served in this position since October 11, 2007, succeeding Colonel Ionel Croitoru. The Romanian Armed Forces maintains a central band for its respective service branches. They include the Representative Central Band of the
Romanian Army, the Representative Central Band of the
Romanian Air Force, and the Representative Central Band of the
Romanian Navy. In addition to centralized bands, the Romanian Armed Forces also maintains several other bands, which include the Regimental Band of the
Michael the Brave 30th Guards Brigade, the
Doina Armatei Folk Band, and the bands for the Military Training Center for Music, and the Military Music School. All the bands follow a mix of the Russian, French, British and German traditions with field snare drums on the front rank occasionally when in massed bands formation, during the period of the Socialist Republic of Romania a typical massed bands formation on national holidays in Bucharest (until 1989) sported bugles and chromatic fanfare trumpets following the Russian practice at the front rank in front of the percussion.
Russia during the
Russo-Japanese War Starting in the late 17th century with the birth of the regular Russian armed services, each unit of the Imperial army and navy formed their own bands using regular enlisted personnel and NCOs and led by officers as directors of music and
bandmasters. This tradition stayed even in the Soviet era, and one of the finest band conductors of that era was Major General
Semyon Tchernetsky, who founded and became the first director of music of the Central Band of the
Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union from 1927 to 1951. Indeed, Russia has a long tradition of military bands and so many military marches have been composed by various composers throughout the years. These bands were modeled after the German military bands, with the addition of the chromatic fanfare trumpet. Some but not all Russian marches then were made in Germany and other locations as the rest were locally composed military marches. They would usually have a conductor, and a drum major using his mace with/or a bugle major playing the chromatic fanfare trumpet. Brass instruments formed the first tier of the formation followed by the percussion and the woodwinds. Mounted cavalry bands were similar to German ones but were different in many aspects. Military bands (also loosely translated to
Военный оркестр, which means
Military Orchestra) when massed would add field drums and fanfare trumpets to the ensemble for large parades and state ceremonies. The formation used by these massed bands mirror today's formations. By the time that the Soviet Armed Forces came into being in 1918, military bands began to change for the better. With the establishment of the Central Military Band by Semyon Chernetsky in 1927 came the birth of today's Russian and ex-Soviet Union military band culture. In the late 1920s and the 1930s the typical Soviet Massed military bands that perform on May 1, November 7 and from 1945 onward, May 9, would be composed of a Military band and a Corps of Drums marching past and until the 1970s would later join the military band in place. Soviet massed military bands in the 1930s and 1940s tend to have a drum major, a conductor, and an optional two to three deputy conductors in the front of the band. Mounted bands had the same formation, but with only a director of music and the optionally mounted band drum major, only a few bands sported woodwinds. The Soviet military bands of the pre-war days played not only on May Day and Revolution Day but in the National
Sports Day parades at the Red Square, the various sports competitions, and other occasions, and after the Second World War, at Victory Day celebrations across the USSR. In the 1930s, the Turkish crescent holders were shaking during the sports parades, but in the 1940s, they were not shaking them. Their formation mirrored those used by Russian military bands in the Imperial era. also maintain their own musical support services, such as the
Military Band of the Eastern Military District. By the 1950s, Soviet military bands evolved in instrumentation. Their positioning, especially in the Moscow bands, changed for the better as newly composed Soviet military marches soon created the Soviet military band sound common to Westerners during the Cold War days. A conductor and one to four drum majors and several bandmasters led the massed military bands of the Soviet Union in Moscow, Leningrad and republican capital cities into a new decade of progress for Soviet military music as many new compositions entered the song-list of marches played during state parades. The reform of the bands begun in 1948-1949 under the assistant director of the band service, Major General Ivan Petrov, and continued on until the 1970s. Bands from the Moscow Military District took part in the opening and closing ceremonies of the
1980 Summer Olympics, which was the international television debut of Soviet military bands, broadcast to numerous countries around the world. Today, military bands in the
Russian Federation are also of the headquarters element from the regimental level onward, and also provide musical support to the different units of the
Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Federal Protective Service, the
Federal Security Service and the
Ministry of Emergency Situations. The military bands here also provide musical support in civil and military events, in a wide range of groups and ensembles. Some can even continue the old Russian military band traditions by donning the old imperial military uniforms of the
Russian Empire, especially the uniforms of the bands. Examples of such are the
Central Band of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation, the
Exemplary Band of the Moscow Garrison Guard of Honor, the
St. Petersburg Admiralty Band, the
Central Band of the Western Military District and the
Presidential Band from the
Kremlin Regiment.
Serbia The first military band in
Serbia was founded in 1831 by decree of Prince
Miloš Obrenović under the title of
Knjaževsko–Serbska Banda. This band served the then-
Royal Serbian Army and is the ancestor to the modern
Band of the Guard as the official ceremonial band of the
Serbian Armed Forces. The
Royal Yugoslav Army and the
Yugoslav People's Army have also maintained military bands in their ranks throughout the 20th century, with the former having a band in its Royal Guard. There was also a Military School of Music in the early 1900s. Military bands also include the
Niš and
Binički Bands of the
Serbian Army. All bands follow the Austrian practice with added Russian and Turkish influences.
Spain Military bands in
Spain are of very long-standing. There are reports of primitive bands dating from the
Celtiberian tribal and Roman periods. However military music in the modern sense began with the expansion of the
Spanish Empire between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, during the numerous Spanish military campaigns in Europe and the wider world when the first bands were formed in the
Tercios of the Spanish Army, equipped with fifes and drums and later with wind instruments of the period formed under a drum major. The influence of Spanish military marching bands is very important, especially in Latin America and the Philippines. The characteristic marches are the "touch" of trumpets, bugles and cors de chasse, and the steady rhythm of the percussion section, with contrasting festive spirit and martial beats. In the 19th century, the light infantry of the Army adopted a militarized form of the civil
Charanga tradition of southeastern and northern Spain, a tradition the
Spanish Navy would adopt for naval units and ship's company bands. . Band formations in the
Spanish Armed Forces, all under the Band Corps within the
Common Corps, follow the British model, but Spanish bands tend to have the most senior bandsmen or bandsman, playing a tuba, positioned at the head of the band or at the second line. The tubaist is usually the band sergeant major or the band corporal, mostly stationed in between the trombone players or leading a file of tuba and euphonium players in some bands. Bugle bands are part of the Spanish musical tradition since the 19th century when the bugle replaced the fife in the Spanish Army and Navy, and these bands consist of drummers and buglers (or trumpeters in the cavalry dismounted bands since the 20th century). Such formations, when massed together, are led by a Director of Music and a Drum Major (with a Bugle Major or a Trumpet Major depending on the specialty arm). The century-old Corps of Drums of the
Regulares is led by a Drum Major and a Bugle Major with personnel playing the snare, bass, and single tenor drums, bugles, North African flutes and sometimes bagpipes, and the Spanish Royal Guard (as well as the
1st King's Immemorial Infantry Regiment of AHQ) sport Corps of Drums playing drums and fifes and wearing 18th-century uniforms. Plain bugles, by tradition, are used in the bugle bands of the
Spanish Legion and the
Paratrooper Brigade instead of the valved bugles used by other bands and the trumpets and bass drum used by the Royal Guards. Within units based in Galicia and Asturias, military pipe bands are in service as well. Only the
Civil Guard and the
Royal Guard retain mounted bands with cavalry trumpeters, both of which also having mounted kettledrummers. Today, there are 26 bands or "Music Units" (
Unidad de Música) whose members belong to the Band Corps. They are divided as follows: 15 of them in the Army, 5 in the Navy, and the rest in the Air Force. Their areas of operations include:
Andalucía,
Aragon,
Canarias,
Castilla-La Mancha,
Castilla y León,
Ceuta,
Comunidad Valenciana,
Galicia,
Madrid,
Melilla, and
Murcia. A school of music is based in the
Carabanchel district of south western
Madrid as part of the
Central Defence Academy with the purpose of training individuals in the Band Corps.
Sweden performing during the
National Day of Sweden in 2012 Traditionally, every Swedish regiment had a band. During the 20th century, many of them were disbanded and in 1957 all remaining military bands were merged into one per garrison or disbanded entirely. The Swedish military music was made into a non-military organization in 1971 but this proving unsuccessful, the
Royal Swedish Army Band was set up in 1982, followed by several other bands in the 1990s. As of 2010 the Swedish Armed Forces no longer have conscripts, but professional soldiers. The military musicians in the Swedish Armed Forces Music are now professional musicians with civil ranks (CR-1/8) or professional soldiers with military ranks (OR-1/5). Today, Swedish military music has undergone new cuts, retaining two bands only in the army and one in the navy and only a single field music formation. In addition, there are 25 bands in the Swedish
Home Guard, all of which are under the command of the
Hemvärnsmusiken. Formations in these bands are a mix of the Italian, German and British band traditions. The current active bands of the Swedish Armed Forces includes the
Royal Swedish Army Band, and the
Life Guards' Dragoon Music Corps, both of which are based in
Stockholm; and the
Royal Swedish Navy Band, based in
Karlskrona. All three report to the
Swedish Armed Forces Music Corps.
Switzerland The
Swiss Army Central Band is the main military band in the
landlocked confederation. It is based on mostly German and French, but also Italian and British influences. It serves as the
Swiss Armed Force's sole ceremonial ambassador as the military does not have a permanent ceremonial (guards of honour are mounted by regular units). Despite having affiliations with the military, as well as its 18th century uniforms and precision drill, the civilian
Top Secret Drum Corps is not a Swiss military band. The Military Music Competence Center (
Kompetenzzentrum Militärmusik) is an organizational unit which specializes in the training of military musicians for service. Also in service is the Conscript Band of the Swiss Army, which is manned by musician conscripts serving their national service term in the Armed Forces. Other bands include the Swiss Army Strings, the Swiss Army Big Band, Swiss Army Brass Band, the Swiss Military Small Band and the Swiss Army Concert Band. The Swiss Military Small Band is composed of musicians from the Brass Band Recruit School who finished an 18-week basic training in May 2018.
Ukraine Military bands in
Ukraine are subordinated to the
Military Music Department of the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. The following bands that form part of this department can be categorized into the following: band centers, academy bands and unit bands. The three seniormost bands in the
Ukrainian Armed Forces are the
National Exemplary Band of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and
National Presidential Band of Ukraine and the
Band of the Kyiv Presidential Honor Guard Battalion. The National Exemplary Band is the largest in the armed forces, employing over 100 musicians. There is a quota for the number of musicians different bands, with the headquarters bands of music centers of each armed service branch employing 52 members, and academic bands employing 21 members. perform during the
Independence Day of Ukraine in 2018. The Military Band Service of the
National Guard of Ukraine consists of the Central Band of the National Guard of Ukraine, the Band of the
National Guard Military Academy of Ukraine, the Band of the
NGU National Honor Guard Battalion Kyiv and the Band of the National Guard NCO Training School. Ukrainian massed bands are known for their unconventional use of stationary instruments such as the
Timpani and
tubular bells. Since the
Russian Army annexed Crimea in 2014 followed by the
Russo-Ukrainian War, Ukrainian military bands have been ordered to orient their marching styles, as well as their drum majors to military bands in the
European Union and
NATO armed services. In May 2016, soldiers from the Band of the
44th Artillery Brigade in
Ternopil performed
Shche ne vmerla Ukraina nearly 300 metres underground, breaking a world record. The Band of the 194th Pontoon-Bridge Regiment of the State Special Transport Service (established in October 2001) also serves as a military band despite it not being part of the armed forces.
United Kingdom , which can trace its origins to the
Battle of St. Quentin, in 1557. Since later medieval times and the formation of the first bands, the United Kingdom has had a strong military band tradition. In 1993,
Richard Morrison, the chief music critic of
The Times noted: "One of the oddest statistics about British cultural life is that the
Defence Ministry spends more to maintain military bands than the government spends on all the professional orchestras and opera companies in the country." All regular bands in the British Army are part of the
Royal Corps of Army Music and there are currently 22 in service. They range in personnel number from 64 to 15 and include: traditional marching, mounted and concert bands, as well as rock bands and a small string orchestra. The bands of the Royal Corps of Army Music are: • The
Band of The Household Cavalry -
Hyde Park Barracks, London and
Combermere Barracks Windsor • The Band of the Royal Armoured Corps - Catterick, North Yorkshire • The
Royal Artillery Band - Tidworth • The Band of the Corps of
Royal Engineers - Chatham, Kent • The Band of the
Royal Corps of Signals - RAF Cosford, West Midlands •
Band of the Grenadier Guards -
Wellington Barracks, Central London •
Band of the Coldstream Guards -
Wellington Barracks, Central London •
Band of the Scots Guards -
Wellington Barracks, Central London •
Band of the Irish Guards -
Wellington Barracks, Central London •
Band of the Welsh Guards -
Wellington Barracks, Central London • The Band of The
Royal Regiment of Scotland - Edinburgh • The Band of The
Queen's Division - RAF Henlow, Bedfordshire • The Band of The
King's Division - near Preston • The Band of The
Prince of Wales' Division - St Athan, South Wales • The Band and Bugles of
The Rifles - Winchester • The Band of The
Parachute Regiment - Colchester • The
Band of the Brigade of Gurkhas - Shorncliffe, near Folkestone • The Band of the
Army Air Corps - Colchester • The Band and Corps of Drums of The
Royal Logistic Corps - near Camberley • The Band of the Corps of
Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers - Catterick, North Yorkshire • The Band of the
Adjutant General's Corps - near Winchester • The
Countess of Wessex's String Orchestra - Woolwich, London The British Army also has 20 reserve military bands located across the United Kingdom and Gibraltar: 's Corp of Drums at the
Lord Mayor's Show in 2010 • Band of the
Honourable Artillery Company • Regimental Band (
Inns of Court & City Yeomanry) of the
Royal Yeomanry •
Lancashire Artillery Volunteers Band • The Nottinghamshire Band of the
Royal Engineers • The (Northern) Band of the
Royal Corps of Signals •
Lowland Band of the Royal Regiment of Scotland • Highland Band of the Royal Regiment of Scotland • Band of the
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment (Queen's and Royal Hampshires) • Band of the
Royal Regiment of Fusiliers • Band of the
Royal Anglian Regiment • Volunteer Band of the
Royal Gibraltar Regiment • Band of
The Royal Irish Regiment (27th (Inniskilling) 83rd and 87th and Ulster Defence Regiment) • Band of the
Royal Welsh - The only Brass Band in the Reserve Army • Band of the
Duke of Lancaster's Regiment (King's Lancashire and Border) • Band of the
Yorkshire Regiment (14th/15th, 19th & 33rd/76th Foot) • The Band of The Mercian Regiment • The Salamanca Band of
The Rifles • The Waterloo Band of
The Rifles • Band of the 150th (Yorkshire) Transport Regiment,
Royal Logistic Corps • Band of the
Army Medical Services is the only musical wing presently active in the
Royal Navy. The
Royal Marines Band Service is, since 1950 and the disbandment of the Fleet Divisional Bands, the only remaining musical wing of the
Royal Navy in service. It currently consists of six bands. Without doubt, groups of musicians existed in the service before 1767, when Royal Marines Divisional Bands were formed at the naval dockyard-bases of
Chatham,
Plymouth and
Portsmouth and the naval gathering-point of
Deal in the
Downs, and marine bands (along with professional bands paid for by captains) plus their respective corps of drums provided music aboard ships before and during battles of the Napoleonic Wars (e.g. during the long sail into action at the
Battle of Trafalgar). At present, there are a total of five Royal Marine Bands and a
Corps of Drums: • Band of HM Royal Marines,
Portsmouth (HMS
Nelson) • Band of HM Royal Marines,
Plymouth (
HMS Raleigh) • Band of HM Royal Marines, Scotland (
HMS Caledonia,
Rosyth) • Band of HM Royal Marines,
HMS Collingwood (replacing the Band of
Britannia Royal Naval College) • Band of HM Royal Marines,
Commando Training Centre Royal Marines The band of the Royal Marines School of Music in Portsmouth (The Training Band) brings the total number to six. The
Royal Air Force Music Services is the organisation which provides
military musical support to the
Royal Air Force. Based at
RAF Northolt (previously at
RAF Uxbridge) and
RAF Cranwell, it forms the central administration of one hundred and seventy musicians divided between the
Central Band of the Royal Air Force,
The Band of the Royal Air Force College,
The Band of the Royal Air Force Regiment and
Headquarters Music Services. These main military bands contain within their ranks the Royal Air Force Squadronnaires, Royal Air Force Swing Wing, Royal Air Force Shades of Blue, and The Salon Orchestra of the Central Band of the Royal Air Force. during the 2007
Trooping the Colour, an annual ceremony in which the military bands provide the music. In the
United Kingdom, the
Mounted Band of the Household Cavalry and the
Massed Bands of the Household Division perform at
Trooping the Colour, an annual ceremony held every June on
Horse Guards Parade to mark the official
King's Birthday celebrations. The Massed Bands and the Mounted Band play a central role in this ceremony. The term "Massed Bands" denotes the formation of more than one separate band performing together, whether belonging to one or more regiments, or indeed countries. ==Military bands of Oceania==