The Royal Marines are renowned for their military skill and also for
having one of the finest military bands in the world. These highly
trained and talented musicians are equally at home parading at
Buckingham Palace, playing at the Royal Albert Hall, or on the flight
deck of an aircraft carrier in a foreign port.
Why then when the Argentines invaded the Falklands in April 1982 did
these superb musicians get involved in what became a serious and deadly
military campaign? The answer is that, in addition to their musical
expertise, the RM Band Service members are trained for military service
and fully qualified in a multitude of military and medical skills,
providing support to their comrades, the fighting commandos.
The Band That Went to War is a graphic first-hand account of the
Falklands War as it has never been told before. It describes the roles
played by Royal Marine musicians in the conflict; unloading the wounded
from helicopters, moving tons of stores and ammunition, burying their
dead at sea and guarding and repatriating Argentine prisoners of war.
These and other unseen tasks were achieved while still ready to provide
morale boosting music to their commando brethren and other frontline
troops. These men are not just musicians; they are Royal Marines.