Rain fails to dampen Beating Retreat spirit

| | New Delhi
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Rain fails to dampen Beating Retreat spirit

Monday, 30 January 2023 | Pioneer News Service | New Delhi

Rain fails to dampen Beating Retreat spirit

The Beating the Retreat ceremony to mark the formal ending of Republic Day celebrations was a spectacular affair on Sunday despite the rain and inclement weather.

   The lighted mass brass drums and crescendo of martial music by soldiers of the Armed forces dispelled the chill of the cold weather at Vijay Chowk here.

  While the performers braved incessant rain to play tunes in their uniforms, the drone show was cancelled due to bad weather.

  Foot-tapping music marked the beginning of the ceremony with the arrival of President Droupadi Murmu. She was welcomed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Defence Minister Rajnath Singh.

   The Prime Minister was drenched as he moved around outside the sheltered area, waving at the audience after the ceremony was over. For the first time, a 3-D anamorphic projection was done on the facade of North Block and South Block.

  As many as 29 Indian tunes were played by the music bands of the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the State Police and the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF).

  Never missing a step despite the wet ground, the bands began playing the “Agniveer” tune followed by the enthralling tunes like “Almora”, “Kedar Nath”, “Sangam Dur”, “Queen of Satpura”, “Bhagirathi” and “Konkan Sundari”.

  The Air Force’s band played “Aprajey Arjun”, “Charkha”, “Vayu Shakti”, “Swadeshi”, while fascinating “Ekla Cholo Re”, “Hum Taiyyar Hai”, and “Jai Bharati” were played by the band of the Navy.

  The Army’s band played “Shankhnaad”, “Sher-e-Jawan”, “Bhupal”, “Agranee Bharat”, “Young India”, “Kadam Kadam Badhaye Ja”, “Drummers Call”, and “Ae Mere Watan Ke Logon”.   The event came to a close with the ever-popular tune “Sare Jahan se Accha”.

  In a magnificent sight, the contrast of the bands playing with the lights on their instruments on and then playing “Aye mere watan ke logon”, with the same lights switched off, cast an ethereal spell on the Vijay Chowk.

  The buglers performed under the leadership of Naib Subedar Santosh Kumar Pandey, and the pipes and drums band was played under the instructions of Subedar Major Baswaraj Vagge.

The ceremony traces its origins to the early 1950s when Major Roberts of the Indian Army indigenously developed the unique ceremony of display by the massed bands.

Now, it has emerged as an event of national pride when the colours and standards are paraded. 

“It marks a centuries-old military tradition when the troops ceased fighting, sheathed their arms and withdrew from the battlefield and returned to the camps at sunset at the sounding of the Retreat,” a Defence Ministry statement said on Saturday.

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