President arrives in
six-horse, decorated buggy
Spectators at the Beating
Retreat ceremony on Wednesday were in for a surprise when President Pranab
Mukherjee arrived in a decorated, six-horse buggy. Breaking away from the usual
tradition of arriving in a limousine, the carriage was used after a gap of
nearly 20 years.
The majestic Raisina
Hills, enveloped in a layer of fog on the cold winter evening, provided the
perfect ambience for the ceremony which brought the curtain down on the 65
Republic Day celebrations.
The event at Vijay Chowk
began with the unfurling of the Tricolour and the National Anthem playing in
the background. This was followed by buglers announcing the formal beginning of
the ceremony.
First to perform were the
massed bands, which set the tone for the evening with “Jahan daal, daal par …”
Indian tunes were the flavour of the ceremony.
As many as 18 of the 21
performances were composed by Indian musicians. The band members, in their red,
olive green, orange and navy blue uniform, mesmerised the spectators, including
Mr. Mukherjee, who is also the supreme commander of the armed forces,
Vice-President Hamid Ansari, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Defence Minister
A.K. Antony, chiefs of the three defence forces and hundreds of spectators
watched in awe as the bands from several regiments regaled those present.
Fourteen military bands,
17 pipes and drums bands, 85 buglers and 14 trumpeters from various regiments
of the Army left the audience enthralled. Four military bands each of the Navy
and the Air Force also took part in the event. The principal conductor of the
Beating Retreat ceremony was Squadron Leader G. Jayachandran.
The Beating Retreat
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.
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