Royal Samoan Police Band

The Royal Samoa Police Band (RSPB) is the musical police band of the Samoa Police Service. Being that Samoa has no standing army (the New Zealand Defence Force is responsible for defense country), it is the chief unit of the state to support the government with music.[1] As such, it plays at official police ceremonies, as well as ceremonies of state. It serves as a key component in some of the Ministry of Police's Community Engagement Programs.[2] The band marches in traditional Samoan Lavalavas.[3]

The band marching to Apia for the flag raising ceremony, 9 February 2009.

Duties

The Royal Samoan Police Band performed American Samoa's anthem before the United States Marine Forces Pacific Band, 2010.

The band marches to the Capitol Building in Apia on a daily basis to raise the national flag of Samoa in a ritual has existed since the 1970s.[4][5][6] In April 2010, the band performed with the visiting United States Marine Forces Pacific Band during the 110th Flag Day celebrations that month.[7] In the summer of 2015, band visited to Australia for the first time since its establishment to celebrates the end of the protectorate of German Samoa. It had only travelled as far as New Zealand and were given special permission by Prime Minister Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi to perform a concert and at the Carriageworks centre in Sydney for three days.[8] While at the latter, it performed Siamani Samoa by Michel Tuffery. The Legislative Council of New South Wales later honored the band's visit to New South Wales through a motion headed by Liberal Party member David Clarke to recognize the work of the band led by Superintendent Nafo'itoa Alesana Laki and Inspector Sala Opetaia Lauina.[9]

In August 2019, the Australian Army Band Kapooka gave the band 18,500 AUD worth of musical equipment.[10]

gollark: Also also, "convention over configuration" being stupid. Yes, the choice of four spaces vs two isn't too significant, but being able to choose means you'll have code you can possibly read a bit more easily, and also public/privateness via *capitalization* just (in my opinion) looks ugly and is annoying if you want to change privacy.
gollark: i.e. generic slices/maps/channels but not actual generics, == being ***maaaaagic*** (admittedly like in most languages, I think), and `make`/`new`.
gollark: Also, as well as that, how it just special-cases stuff instead of implementing reusable solutions.
gollark: e.g. no map function existing or even being possible means that you have *readable* code with a for loop, but it's harder to understand *why that's there* and *what it's for*.
gollark: The main problem I have with it is that it conflates readability (you can see what the code is doing at a low level) with comprehensibility (you know what and why it's doing at a higher one).

See also

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.