Yet, the Top Secret Drum Corps, from Basel,
Switzerland which performed at the 2012 Edinburgh Tattoo, and which is made up of 25 non-military
drummers and color guard members, have shown that military music can produce
beauty of form, rhythm, harmony and expression of emotion as real music is
supposed to do. All of which played by civilians
not members of the military.
The challenge now is to bring military justice everywhere
with the same amalgam of melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre, structure and occasional
silence with increased participation by civilian members of society to challenge this enduring citation by Clémenceau.
Actually the quote should be attributed to Robert Sherrill who titled his book (Military Justice is to Justice as Military Music is to Music, (New York: Harper & Row, 1969), pertaining mainly on the harsh conditions of US military prisons in Camp Pendleton, CA (USMC) and Presidio Stockade Prison (US Army) (where a mutiny took place on Oct 14, 1968 after a guard shot a prisoner). Sherill summarized Clémenceau's quote, which in full included a first portion that we often omit: "It suffices to add 'military' to a word for it to lose its meaning. Thus military justice [...]" or in French "Il suffit d'ajouter "militaire" à un mot pour lui faire perdre sa signification. Ainsi la justice militaire[...]."
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