A Musical Voyage

Page 121

- 119 – The Aussie’s again were great supporters and although the American’s told us how much they enjoyed our concert it was extremely hard to tell during the show; they just sat back and listened and none of them got up and danced. During our few days at Camp Andy we had a little bit of time off to sleep, and do a little bit of shopping at the PX store. Our shopping day into the local town was cancelled due to troubles with the government trying to organize our visas. Some of the Aussie’s took orders and went in for us and we got perfume, DVD’s, remote cars and lots of other goodies. We went on a tour of the base and saw some amazing things, the jobs some people do are just crazy. We saw the bomb squad, F15 and 16 fighter jets, British Tornado’s, the trusty old C130’s and the US C17’s. All in all it was a very interesting day and the British guys put on an awesome fly past for us. After this the jazz group and the acoustic version of Kintama set up and we had a pizza and volley ball night. Our time here in the Middle East is rapidly coming to an end and tomorrow we fly out for a few more concerts (can’t say too much about that but HMAS Melbourne received some Christmas cheer from us as well.). Our last day started early (again) with cleaning the equipment. We say goodbye to our Aussie troops and head for Dubai. Once in Dubai we had a few hours before our flight to Sydney departed. All of us headed into town for some retail therapy………. All in all I think we can say that we’ve had one of the best experiences of our lives and careers. It’s been an amazing experience and we’ve made friendships and memories that will never be forgotten. The guys of Kintama did an awesome job and were brilliant, Angry was fantastic and might I say is the massager from heaven (and the other girls will attest to this). Our mover for the trip, Perryn, did a wonderful job and made our travels go smoothly; it didn’t take him long to settle into our group! Thanks must also go to our Chief, Andrew Stapleton, who had a lot of running around to do, making sure that we were all informed of what was going on throughout the trip. To our boss, Lieutenant Commander Anderson, thanks for your hard work in getting us here, you picked an awesome bunch of people. Lastly, to Lieutenant Colonel Reynolds, the Commanding Officer for Tour de Force; this has been amazing, thank-you for giving us the opportunity to play for our troops—we certainly won’t be forgetting this anytime soon.

ONE OF THE MOST FRIGHTENING EXPERIENCES OF MY LIFE Article by Able Seaman Grant Metcalfe The deployment of ten personnel from Baghdad International Airport to the Security Detachment in Baghdad City was one of the most inspiring and frightening experiences of my life. Upon arriving at Baghdad International Airport we were greeted by soldiers from the Security Detachment in two Australian Light Armoured Vehicles (ASLAVs). We then loaded all music equipment onto a Unimog truck. Movement orders were then issued in an extremely serious, matter of fact tone. It was then that it hit me that we were going into Baghdad. Picture it; eight bandies in Desert Cams with Combat Body Armour, Kevlar Helmets, full Patrol Webbing and a Steyr rifle at the load state, stepping into the rear of an ASLAV—very surreal. Joining us for this leg of the tour was Angry Anderson and the tour Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Reynolds. Our convoy travelled into the centre of Baghdad. The exact location is secret; however, it is certainly in one of the main areas of security concern in Baghdad. The trip was hairraising. ASLAVs travel through the city at top speed with soldiers aiming the 1.05mm turret gun and sighters to each side—120kmph in an ASLAV is fast. We arrived safely and disembarked. The soldiers live in a heavily fortified building with no windows or doors; basically, it’s a gutted high rise that provided ample viewing aspects for force protection duties. The scenes in front of our eyes of ASLAVs, soldiers, 50 cal weapons in sandbag bunkers was straight out of a movie, except for one thing; it was very, very serious and most definitely the real thing. Our duty for the evening was to perform two gigs to two groups of soldiers on watch rotation. That sounded easy enough but before any of that we had to receive more safety and security briefs, establish our sleeping arrangements, put together our racks and try to come to terms with our surrounding.

Royal Australian Navy Band: A Musical Voyage


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Articles inside

Prince of Wales Award

3min
page 236

CDF Leadership Forum

7min
pages 237-238

Op Resolute – Transit Security Element Rotation 62

3min
page 235

The Salute – Indigenous Artwork

2min
page 229

A Naval Salute – RAN Centenary Concert

6min
pages 227-228

From the PR Desk

5min
pages 232-233

Final Signal from the Director

1min
page 230

4th Nanchang International Tattoo

3min
page 234

Abu Dhabi International Defence Exhibition and Conference 2011

3min
page 225

Brunei International Tattoo 2011

3min
page 226

From the PR Desk

3min
page 224

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 223

Strengthening Ties Beyond Navy

3min
page 220

From B Shed to Bryon Bay with Navy’s Variety Bash

6min
pages 221-222

Operation Slipper Deployment

3min
page 219

RIMPAC 2010 Sea Deployment Group

3min
page 218

From the PR Desk

7min
pages 216-217

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 215

ANZAC Gallipoli Pilgrimage

7min
pages 212-214

RIMPAC 2010

3min
page 211

From the PR Desk

3min
page 210

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 209

Sea Deployment Group HMAS Darwin

5min
pages 207-208

Northern Trident (Second Leg

4min
page 206

LONGLOOK 2009

8min
pages 202-204

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 205

Northern Trident

3min
page 201

LONGLOOK 2008

7min
pages 194-195

HMAS Sydney II (The Pride of the Australian Fleet

3min
page 196

From the Director’s Desk

8min
pages 197-199

Freedom of Entry Celebrations

3min
page 200

King’s Coronation, Tonga

7min
pages 192-193

Hands Across the Sea

7min
pages 188-189

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 187

RIMPAC 2008

7min
pages 190-191

Anzac Day in Mumbai

4min
pages 185-186

Tour to Afghanistan

7min
pages 183-184

Tour De Force 9

7min
pages 181-182

HMAS Adelaide Deployment

3min
page 176

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 180

Stories from the Solomon Islands

3min
page 177

Jingili Man’s Solomon’s Tour

4min
pages 178-179

HMAS Sydney Deployment

11min
pages 173-175

HMAS Parramatta Deployment

10min
pages 170-172

On the Bugle in Anzac Cove

15min
pages 165-168

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 169

Gallipoli 2007

3min
page 164

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 163

HMAS Manoora Deployment

6min
pages 161-162

All Hands on Deck

3min
page 160

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 159

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 156

Sea Ride in HMAS Kanimbla

8min
pages 153-155

Lest We Forget: Bugles engraved to commemorate OP RIMAU

3min
page 152

From the Director’s Desk

4min
pages 147-148

Tour De Force (A Musical Spectacular from Down Under

11min
pages 149-151

HMAS ANZAC Detachment

11min
pages 144-146

A Salute to Australia

3min
page 143

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 142

RIMPAC 2004

3min
page 141

A Life on the Ocean Wave

3min
page 140

From Seahawks to Singapore Slings

3min
page 136

HMAS TOBRUK Deployment

10min
pages 137-139

From the Director’s Desk

1min
page 135

From the Director’s Desk

5min
pages 127-128

Missiles and Musicians

8min
pages 124-126

Good Morning Vietnam

7min
pages 122-123

Musicians Onboard HMAS Adelaide

6min
pages 115-116

Welcome from the Director’s Desk

1min
page 112

Musicians Deployed in a Combat Role

5min
pages 113-114

Tour de Force in the Middle East

12min
pages 118-120

Welcome from the Director’s Desk

1min
page 117

One of the Most Frightening Experiences of My Life

4min
page 121
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