Saturday, November 29th, 2008. Second to none.
Pipe major Ross Munro, wearing the Scots Guards’ dark blue doublet, the Royal Stewart tartan in his kilt and plaid, a sporran of grey horse hair with tassels of black and red, and white buttoned spats over George boots, stands alone on a tarmac strip that crosses extensions of compacted gravel, sand and pebbles in the desert of Basra.
On his sleeves, the four golden chevrons of a sergeant, in the Highland bearskin, the red plume of a bandsman. A French Imperial Eagle in the badge worn as a plume clasp and on the sporran cantle, for the standard of Napoleon’s French 45th Regiment of Foot, seized in Waterloo by Sergeant Charles Ewart of the Scot Greys from the hands of a standard-bearer protected by four escorts. It has a black backing in mourning for Tsar Nicholas II, Colonel-in-Chief of his Regiment at the time of his murder.
He blows Abide with me, a hymn for the fallen, in his Great Highland pipe.
Spirit of the Glen: Journey will be released on next Monday by Universal Classics and Jazz. The recording was held in Basra, where the bandsmen of the Pipes and Drums section of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, signal operators and drivers of the Type 58 Challenger 2 battle tanks, grouped in the four Sabre Squadrons of the regiment, are stationed amidst a six-month tour of duty.













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