1st Marine Division Band explained

Unit Name:1st Marine Division Band
Dates:1940 – present
Role:Public duties
Size:50 members
Command Structure: 1st Marine Division
Garrison:Camp Pendleton, California
March:Marine Hymn (official hymn)
Semper Fidelis (official march)
Waltzing Matilda (divisional march)
Nickname:1st MARDIV Band
Current Commander:Master Sergeant Andrew Cox
Commander1:Captain Eric Kyne
Commander1 Label:OIC
Commander2:Master Gunnery Sergeant Raul Caldera
Commander2 Label:Bandmaster

The 1st Marine Division Band is a regional military band of the United States Marine Corps, reporting directly to the 1st Marine Division. It is stationed in Camp Pendleton, California. The band serves as the de facto USMC representative for the Western United States, performing at over 300 military and state functions, civic events, and military parades a year.[1] [2]

History

The 1st Marine Division Band was organized during World War II when the division was based in Australia to participate in the Pacific War. On the occasion of President George Washington's birthday in February 1943, the 1st MARDIV Band played Waltzing Matilda, an Australian bush ballad which would later be the official march of the division. The band would play this march again in April of that year during an ANZAC Day parade in Melbourne[3] and would continue to play it exclusively during the division's deployment to Australia. In recent years, all 50 members of the band have taken up arms to serve on the battlefield, especially during the Gulf War, the Iraq War and the Iraq conflict (2003–present).[4] During the lattermost conflict, the band was attached to Headquarters Company, 5th Marine Regiment at Camp Fallujah, Iraq from February 2006 - January 2007.[5] During this deployment, the band served as a security platoon.[6] [7] In 2008, the band was awarded the "Colonel George S. Howard Citation of Musical Excellence for Military Concert Bands" by the John Philip Sousa Foundation.[8] In 2006, the band took part in the State funeral of President Gerald Ford and has annually taken part in the Rose Parade as part of the USMC West Coast Composite Band.[9]

Ensembles

The following ensembles are subordinated to the 1st MARDIV Band:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1st Marine Division Band (1st MARDIV Band) . marineparents com.
  2. Web site: 1st Marine Division Band to perform free concerts in Escondido. Emily. Sorensen. mcall.com.
  3. Book: Rill, James C.. A Narrative History of the 1st Battalion, 11th Marines During the Early History and Deployment of the 1st Marine Division, 1940-43. 6 May 2019. Merriam Press. 9781576383179. Google Books.
  4. Web site: Back From Iraq, Marine Band Will Lead Big Parade. 24 October 2003. LA Times.
  5. Book: Piehler, G. Kurt. Encyclopedia of Military Science. 24 July 2013. SAGE Publications. 9781506310817. Google Books.
  6. Web site: 1st Marine Division > Units > 1ST DIV BAND. www.1stmardiv.marines.mil.
  7. Web site: NPR: Analysis: 1st Marine Division Band Prepares for Battle in the Kuwaiti Desert. www.npr.org.
  8. Web site: The 1st Marine Division Band plays Arcadia August 7. 31 July 2014.
  9. Web site: Renowned 1st Marine Division Band to perform during Vietnam Veterans Recognition Ceremony. 13 September 2014.
  10. Web site: This Marine band doesn't march ... it rocks. 9 September 2010. Orange County Register.