Barmy trumpet has place at Ashes battleground
Thursday, 30 November 2006
Cricket officials should allow the trumpet to play its proper role at the Adelaide Ashes Test Match tomorrow (Friday 1 December) because the trumpet has a clearly defined place on the Ashes battleground, according to a 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide academic.
Associate Professor , a musicologist from the 最新糖心Vlog's , says the trumpet has cultural and historical significance.
"Music in general, and wind instruments in particular, have long accompanied life's rituals; birth, marriage, work, death, and so forth," Dr Carroll says.
"In calypso cricket the West Indian conch shell is used in a celebratory way, proclaiming the coming together of different nationalities in a great sporting contest.
"The Barmy Army's use of the trumpet, however, seems to trace its origins to the use of the trumpet in war, as a kind of rallying cry for the troops.
"To some, the raucous trumpet sounds that accompany the Barmy Army's tour of duty to the Antipodes during the current are a mere irritation, but a deeper social and cultural significance can be attributed to the instrument," he says.
Dr Carroll says that among the earliest and possibly best known uses of the trumpet - or rather its ancient forbear, a ram's horn - appears in the Old Testament, when it was used to breach the walls of Jericho.
"Judging by the current performance of the English cricket team, a similar time might elapse before we see the Barmy Army trumpeter leading his foot soldiers onwards to victory! Nevertheless, officials should reconsider their decision to ban the trumpet during play."
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Elder Conservatorium of Music
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