The British Grenadiers
"The British Grenadiers" is a traditional marching song of British, Australian and Canadian military units whose badge of identification features a grenade, the tune of which dates from the 17th century. It is the Regimental Quick March of the Royal Artillery, Corps of Royal Engineers, the Honourable Artillery Company, Grenadier Guards 'The First Regiment of Foot Guards', and the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers. It is also an authorised march of the Royal Australian Artillery, The Royal Gibraltar Regiment, The Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery, The Royal Regiment of Canada, The Princess Louise Fusiliers, and The 5th Canadian Mounted Rifles. The standard orchestration for the military band was approved in 1762, when the Royal Artillery Band became recognised officially, and for all other 'grenade' regiments in 1763, when the remaining unofficial bands gained official status.
History
The exact origins of the tune are disputed but generally date to the early 17th century. It appears in John Playford's 1728 collection of dance tunes as "The New Bath," while Victorian musicologist William Chappell also suggested links to a 1622 work called "Sir Edward Nowell's Delight." The debate is best summarised by the composer Ernest Walker in 1907 who described the melody as "three centuries evolution of an Elizabethan tune."The melody was introduced into Britain as a military march during the 1689–1702 reign of William III and has similarities with one written for Prince John William of Friesland. Henry Grattan Flood suggested the 1672 Dutch march 'Wilhelmus von Nassau' as another candidate which in turn was a reworking of a French version from 1568.
"The British Grenadiers" refers to Grenadiers in general, not the Grenadier Guards Regiment and all Fusilier units were entitled to use it. It allegedly commemorates an assault in August 1695 by 700 British grenadiers on the French-held fortress of Namur during the Nine Years War. The first printed version of 'The Granadeer's March' appeared in 1706, the first with lyrics sometime between 1735–1750. It was a popular tune in both Britain and North America throughout the 18th and 19th centuries and remains so.
It is most commonly heard today in the annual Trooping the Colour ceremony when the Colour Escort marches into position on Horse Guards Parade.
Lyrics
The following text is the best-known version of the song. The text arguably dates back to the War of Spanish Succession, since it refers to the grenadiers throwing grenades and the men wearing "caps and pouches" and "loupèd clothes"- coats with broad bands of 'lace' across the chest that distinguished early grenadiers.Historical terms
There are a number of words in the song not commonly used or whose meaning is obscure;- Fusee; shortened muskets carried by Grenadier officers, sometimes called fusils and thus 'Fusilier;'. Accurately depicted in David Morier's painting of the Highland charge at Culloden, where the Government troops are grenadiers and their officer wields a fusil.
- Glacis; a smooth sloping embankment usually in front of the walls of a fort; designed to deflect cannonballs, it also gave defenders a clear field of fire, making it a dangerous place to stand upright and throw grenades;
- ; any drinking container used in a toast, normally filled with beer or other alcohol;
- Loupèd; 'looped' pronounced "loup-ed" to scan; it refers to the lace button-holes or 'loops' on grenadier uniforms;
- Tow, Row, Row, Row; mimics the rhythm and beat of the drums used to keep soldiers in step.
In popular culture
- Alistair Ramson in the Sherlock Holmes film The Scarlet Claw sings this song when he is disguised as the character Postman Potts, delivering mail to Emile Journet.
- The character Mr. Bucket in the Dickens novel Bleak House plays this song by fife in Chapter 49.
- The tune is heard by the protagonist rifleman Dodd of the British Army in C. S. Forester's Death to the French when he rejoins his unit.
- In the fourth series of Blackadder, theme composer Howard Goodall incorporated the first two bars of the march into the series theme song.
- During the episode 'Merry Christmas Mr. Bean', Mr. Bean hums the song whilst playing with Queen's Guard figurines. This itself could be a reference to Blackadders usage of it; Rowan Atkinson played both Blackadder and Mr Bean.
- The tune occurs as the main theme of the finale of the fourth piano concerto of Ignaz Moscheles.
- The "Gentleman Soldier," another traditional British song, uses the same tune.
- In the movies Listen to Britain, Horatio Hornblower, The Miracle, ', Empire of the Sun, Sharpe's Company, Barry Lyndon, Under Capricorn, The Italian Job, The Patriot, 55 Days at Peking, Pride & Prejudice, The Four Feathers, Diamonds Are Forever, Breaker Morant, Young Winston and Patton, "The British Grenadiers" is played. It can also be heard at the end of The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp.
- The tune – with a different trio section – was used as the Regimental March of the Hanoverian Grenadier Guards in Hannover, Germany, until 1866. It had also been taken into the Royal Prussian Army March Collection's Second Volume earlier, as Army March AM II, 52, during 1821.
- Some people like a motorbike,/Some say, 'A tram for me,'/Or for any bonnie lorry they'd lay them doon and dee is the beginning of "A Transport of Delight" set to the same melody by Flanders and Swann
- The University of Liverpool School of Medicine's Medical Students' Society anthem, 'Jack Leggate's Song', is set to this tune.
- A rather bawdy version exists about the grenadier suffering and spreading syphilis. This song is well-known and popular as a drinking song amongst historical re-enactors.
- The melody is used in a pro-labor song "The Eight Hour Day" which appears on the album American Industrial Ballads by Pete Seeger.
- The tune was used as the startup theme for Associated-Rediffusion, when they made the first British commercial television broadcast in September 1955. British Grenadiers was used with the movie Blithe Spirit by Richard Addinsell for at least another year.
- The melody is used as the basis for Hornet Squadron's song in Piece of Cake, with new lyrics.
- British Grenadiers is also the Regimental Quick March of the Fort Henry Guard. It is also frequently used by the Drill Squad of the Guard as a marching song.
- The tune is used in The Biochemists' Songbook's song "In Praise of Glycolysis" Text .
- The tune is used in the PC game Sid Meier's Pirates to represent the English presence in the Caribbean.
- The tune is occasionally heard in the animated TV series Skunk Fu!.
- The beginning of the tune is heard at the start of each level in the iPhone/iPod Touch game "Crazy Tanks".
- A school in New South Wales, Australia, Wagga Wagga High School has an adapted version of this for its song.
- For 20th-century Northern Baptist and Disciples of Christ hymnals, the tune, called SHEFFIELD, or SHEFFIELD to distinguish it from other tunes named SHEFFIELD, is commonly set to the text "Hail to the Lord's Anointed" by James Montgomery.
- It also appears on the BBC drama series Ashes to Ashes, in the two last episodes of the series
- The 2012 anime series Girls und Panzer features a version of the theme, as the leitmotif of St. Gloriana Girls' School. The song also appeared in the Girls und Panzer der Film.
- The Fall song "Gross Chapel-British Grenadiers" incorporates a section of the song.
- In the AMC series '', Captain Simcoe of the British Army hums the tune during Episode 3, Season 1 to antagonize his American captors when he believes a Tory militia is on the way.