Training Band of the Bundeswehr explained

Unit Name:Training Band of the Bundeswehr
Country: Germany
Branch: Bundeswehr
Command Structure:Joint Support Service
Type:Military Band
Size:150 men and women
Garrison:Hilden
Commander1:Lieutenant ColonelMichael Euler
Commander1 Label:Head Conductor
Native Name:Ausbildungsmusikkorps der Bundeswehr

The Training Band of the Bundeswehr (German: Ausbildungsmusikkorps der Bundeswehr, AustMusKorpsBw) is the Bundeswehr's training music corps. It is responsible for training new musicians. It was created in Siegburg on 1 July 1960 and has been stationed in Hilden since 1969. It is subordinate to the other 13 music bands of the Bundeswehr and the Military Music Center of the Bundeswehr in Bonn.[1] Every year the training band goes on a concert tour to demonstrate the success of their training. The task of the training band is to pave the way for young musicians to become professionals and to prepare them for future service in the Bundeswehr. Many members of the vand come from the Robert Schumann Hochschule in Düsseldorf. It consists of a teaching staff, three officers and one bandmaster, which coordinate and manage the training company, which offers can accommodate up to 150 musicians.[2]

History

Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Deisenroth, known as a composer and arranger of numerous pieces of music and, in 1947, founder of the Hilchenbach Folk Music School, a predecessor of the South Westphalia Philharmonic,[3] developed the concept for the military musical institution of the Bundeswehr in Siegburg. He created it on 1 July 1960. That November, Captain Ludwig Kühlechner became head of the training platoon and in December the first concerts took place under his leadership and that of his senior deputy, Sergeant Major Joseph Hoser. The following year, contracts were established with what is now the Hochschule für Musik und Tanz Köln. On 5 May 1969, the band was moved from Siegburg to the Waldkaserne in Hilden. The first music officer cadets were trained in the band in 1978 and completed their studies at the music academy in Düsseldorf. Colonel Michael Schramm (later the head of the Military Music Service of the Bundeswehr) was the first graduate of the school. The first female soldiers began their training in Hilden in 1991.

The construction of a new training center in Hilden necessitated a temporary relocation of the band until April 2018 to the Bergische Kaserne in the Hubbelrath district, which was then in the process of being disbanded.[4] [5] Two new building is located on approximately 6,400 square meters of space, which includes, among other things, 140 accommodation rooms, 68 practice rooms and 34 classrooms A special feature is the polygonal part of the building in the middle of the building complex with two rehearsal rooms and sound studio.[6]

Chiefs

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ausbildungsmusikkorps der Bundeswehr. www.bundeswehr.de. 13 June 2023 .
  2. Web site: Ausbildungsmusikkorps der Bundeswehr. June 24, 2019.
  3. Web site: Vom Nachwuchsorchester zur Südwestfälischen Philharmonie. - Die Geschichte von 1957 bis 1997 . Thomas . Wolf . de . From the youth orchestra to the South Westphalian Philharmonic. - The history from 1957 to 1997 . www.siwiarchiv.de.
  4. Web site: Kommando Streitkräftebasis. www.bundeswehr.de. December 2022 .
  5. Web site: Düsseldorf: Bergische Kaserne - die große Leere. RP. ONLINE. RP ONLINE. 20 November 2015 .
  6. Web site: Langenfeld: Musik in Schwarz, Rot, Gold. RP. ONLINE. RP ONLINE. 4 May 2018 .
  7. Web site: Robert Kuckertz. www.auren-musik.de.
  8. Web site: "Wir sind keine Maschinen." • VAN Magazin. November 27, 2019. VAN Magazin.