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  • Military Cadence
  • Military cadence
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  • A military cadence is a traditional call-and-response work song sung by military personnel while running or marching. Many cadences have a call and response structure of which the commanding officer, such as a sergeant, initiates a line, and the remaining soldiers, his subordinates, complete it, thus instilling teamwork and camaraderie for completion. The cadences move to the beat and rhythm of the normal speed march or running-in-formation march. This serves the purpose of keeping soldiers moving in step as a unit and in formation, while maintaining the correct beat or cadence.
  • Requiring no instruments to play, they are counterparts in oral military folklore of the military march. As a sort of work song, military cadences take their rhythms from the work being done (compare sea shanty). Many cadences have a call and response structure of which one soldier initiates a line, and the remaining soldiers complete it, thus instilling teamwork and camaraderie for completion. The cadence calls move to the beat and rhythm of the normal speed (quick time) march or running-in-formation (double time) march. This serves the purpose of keeping soldiers "dressed", moving in step as a unit and in formation, while maintaining the correct beat or cadence.
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abstract
  • Requiring no instruments to play, they are counterparts in oral military folklore of the military march. As a sort of work song, military cadences take their rhythms from the work being done (compare sea shanty). Many cadences have a call and response structure of which one soldier initiates a line, and the remaining soldiers complete it, thus instilling teamwork and camaraderie for completion. The cadence calls move to the beat and rhythm of the normal speed (quick time) march or running-in-formation (double time) march. This serves the purpose of keeping soldiers "dressed", moving in step as a unit and in formation, while maintaining the correct beat or cadence. The word "cadence" was applied to these work songs because of an earlier meaning, in which it meant the number of steps a marcher or runner took per minute. The cadence was set by a drummer or sergeant and discipline was extremely important, as keeping the cadence directly affected the travel speed of infantry. There were other purposes: the close-order drill was a particular cadence count for the complex sequence of loading and firing a musket. In the Revolutionary War, Baron von Steuben notably imported European battlefield techniques which persist, greatly modified, to this day.
  • A military cadence is a traditional call-and-response work song sung by military personnel while running or marching. Many cadences have a call and response structure of which the commanding officer, such as a sergeant, initiates a line, and the remaining soldiers, his subordinates, complete it, thus instilling teamwork and camaraderie for completion. The cadences move to the beat and rhythm of the normal speed march or running-in-formation march. This serves the purpose of keeping soldiers moving in step as a unit and in formation, while maintaining the correct beat or cadence.