Corps of Army Music | |
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Cap Badge of the Corps of Army Music
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Active | 1994 to Present |
Country | United Kingdom |
Branch | British Army |
March | The Music Maker |
Commanders | |
Colonel in Chief | The Countess of Wessex |
The Corps of Army Music (CAMUS) is a Corps of the British Army dedicated to the provision and promotion of military music.
The formation of the Corps of Army Music was triggered by a defence review known as Options for Change in the early 1990s and followed a 1993 announcement by the Chief of the General Staff that the number of army bands was to be reduced from 69 to 30. The Queen signed a warrant on 13 August 1994 to allow the formation of the Corps of Army Music. This stated that it was Her will and pleasure that all officers who were Directors of Music in the various Corps and Regiments and that all army musicians should transfer to the Corps of Army Music - now the newest and most junior corps in the army - on 1 September 1994.
The home of the corps was established at Kneller Hall in Twickenham, a site that encompasses the Headquarters of the Corps of Army Music and the Royal Military School of Music. The school was founded by the Duke of Cambridge, soon after his appointment as Commander in Chief in 1857, when the first class of military musicians was formed, a 'Class of Music'. The establishment was retitled as The Royal Military School of Music by Queen Victoria in 1887.
The Future Army Structures review of 2006 saw the bands of the Regular Army reduced from 30 to 23.
The bands of the corps are:
The Future Army Music 2020 (FAM2020) was published in August 2013. It contained information about how the Corps of Army Music would be restructured and better suited to enable sustainable musical support to be provided to the Army and Defence supporting operations and defence diplomacy.
There will be:
These changes will be implemented between 2014 - 2018.
The regiments of the Life Guards and The Blues and Royals will have their bands merged to form a single band of the Household Cavalry.
The five Foot Guards Bands will remain in London, as Symphonic Wind Bands and the Edinburgh-based Band of The Royal Regiment of Scotland will grow to the same strength as the Foot Guards Bands.