Jump to content

Stadacona Band of Maritime Forces Atlantic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stadacona Band of The Royal Canadian Navy
La Musique Stadacona de la Marine royale canadienne
Active1940-Present
Country Canada
Branch Royal Canadian Navy
TypeMilitary band
Size35 members
Part ofMaritime Forces Atlantic
HeadquartersHalifax, Nova Scotia
Websitehttp://stadband.ca/index.html
Commanders
Commanding OfficerLieutenant (Naval) Brad Ritson
Notable
commanders
William Gordon

The Stadacona Band of the Royal Canadian Navy is a Canadian military band in the Royal Canadian Navy based in Halifax. It serves as official military band of the Maritime Forces Atlantic Command (MARLANT). It is one of six regular force military bands in the Canadian Forces. It provides musical accompaniment for ceremonial requirements of the East Coast Navy.[1] The Stadacona Band usually performs at the Halifax dockyard to take part in the welcoming naval vessels. For over 75 years, the band's performances have been seen members of the Royal Family, the Governor General of Canada, the Prime Minister of Canada, foreign heads of state, and Canadian naval officials.[2] The band has provided music for all graduation activities in the area.[3]

History

[edit]

In the summer of 1942 the original Stadacona band was divided into three parts, with one section going to HMCS St. Hyacinthe, another to HMCS Cornwallis and the remainder to HMCS Avalon. In October of that year another military band was formed for the ship. In 1943, part of the Stadacona band went to serve as aboard HMCS Protector at Sydney, Nova Scotia.[4] In 1967, the band was one of three naval bands represented in the 1967 Canadian Armed Forces Tattoo.[5][6] The Stadacona band absorbed the Royal Canadian Artillery Band (Coastal) and members of the HMCS Cornwallis Band following the 1968 Unification of the Canadian Armed Forces.

In September 2017, a member of the band composed what is now the service march of the Canadian Coast Guard.[7]

Directors of Music

[edit]
  • Jim Forde (July 1988-July 1993)[8][9]
  • Peter van der Horden (July 1993-May 2001)
  • Gaetan Bouchard (May 2001-January 2006)
  • Raymond Murray (January 2006-August 2016 )[10]
  • Patrice Arsenault (August 2016-August 2018)
  • Brad Ritson (August 2018 – Present)[11]

Ensembles

[edit]
The band at a sunset ceremony in CFB Greenwood in August 2013.
  • Parade Band
  • Concert Band
  • Big Band
  • "Boarding Party" Rock Band
  • Jazz Combo
  • Brass Quintet
  • Woodwind Quintet

A four-piece combo from the Stadacona Band toured Norway, Sweden, and Denmark in 1981.[12]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Government of Canada, National Defence (3 September 2013). "The Stadacona Band of The Royal Canadian Navy". www.navy-marine.forces.gc.ca.
  2. ^ "Stadacona Band - Royal Canadian Navy". stadband.ca.
  3. ^ https://cold-war.muninn-project.org/crowsnest/Crowsnest-1960_2.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwi42_DO9-3mAhVSd6wKHZQpCPAQFjARegQIBxAB&usg=AOvVaw3J9prb4qnahlJxjDUgZUw6 [dead link]
  4. ^ https://navalandmilitarymuseum.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/CFB-Esquimalt-Museum-Crowsnest-Volume13-Number-09-Jul-1961.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwjZwPKq0M_mAhWVZM0KHfZLDCIQFjAAegQIBRAC&usg=AOvVaw1KM298OjrMj8BBGDBy7fI9 [dead link]
  5. ^ Wilson, Keith Allan (23 October 2017). The Making of a Tattoo: Canadian Armed Forces Tattoo 1967. ISBN 9781525514043.
  6. ^ "The Minute Book".
  7. ^ "Sponsorship".
  8. ^ "Conductors – Sackville Community Band".
  9. ^ "Jim Forde – the World Association of Marching Show Bands".
  10. ^ "Stadacona Band - Royal Canadian Navy".
  11. ^ "New conductor for Stadacona Band". 20 August 2018.
  12. ^ "Music Bands | the Canadian Encyclopedia".