RN Documentary: Soldiering On
Series: RN Documentaries
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide
Length: 00:29:30
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Piece Description
"Throughout the history of warfare technology changes rapidly. In the space of twenty years you can have a revolution in technology but the human emotions of those involved in a battle remain the same. Earliest surviving accounts can identify the same underlying emotions as those who fought in Vietnam. Fear and euphoria . . . they don't change." Warfare is used by nations as a way to control and determine events. Leaders and demagogues have used it since the birth of civilisation to enhance their powers and destroy others. It causes death, destruction and mayhem on an almost unimaginable scale and yet it is resorted to so frequently to resolve disputes that it has become almost second nature to the human species. But what of the soldiers who must fight those wars? Their individual stories are all too easily forgotten in the greater picture and the distanced recounting of historical events. Millions of men have lost their lives and endured appalling hardships in battle. In ‘Soldiering On’ two veterans of the Second World War tell their stories. Accounts which can be seen as a history of the common soldier through the ages.
3 Comments
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Review of RN Documentary: Soldiering OnA soldier's view of the experience of war. The rather matter-of-fact way that these men discuss the horrors that they experienced is very moving. It made me wonder how these men live with the knowledge that they have about the violence that war is. What will be the memories of those soldiers in Iraq or Afghanistan come 60 years from now? How similar will their memories be? The descriptions of men killing and dying,the speaker's comments on being wounded, and the complete pointlessness of war is something that could use a hearing in our hero-driven view about people in combat. It seems that despite Hollywood's rendering of war through films, that not everyone who dies does so while making a heroic guesture. |
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Review of RN Documentary: Soldiering On
Billed simply as a look at a soldier's experience in battle, but it goes much further. The music is depressing, but the content is not always, even though we are talking serious and emotional issues.
This piece alternates between World War II veterans Robert Taylor and John Jones, and historian Steven Bromwell. The historian is there for perspective, but not simply World War II (he comments on the uniqueness of the way Arnhem -- part of the unsuccessful Operation Market-Garden -- fell into small unit battles, battles within battles), he puts us into the minds of a soldier through Waterloo, Wellington and Napoleon. Not just Wellington, but of the men on the field, the men who couldn't see beyond the effective firing distance of their muskets. I can't underscore how effective this is. They are not building parallels between battles, but of emotions of battles, of the state of mind of the soldier, of having five bullet holes in your parachute canopy, but none in you. Of seeing rows of beautiful French homes dropped to piles of rubble and licked with flames. This all alternates with a dry historian talking about what motivates a soldier... patriotism can only take you so far. Boom, back to World War II and one of the veterans. Boom, back to Bromwell. Probably this isn't a new technique, and while I'm not as well-listened as I'd like, I don't think I've heard this type of thing done this well before. I had to listen hard, and to the beginning twice, because I didn't pick up the accents that well, and the dynamics are all over the place. This could be a problem on the one-shot-is-all-you-got radio, but it is so intimate that you can hear the kinks in the voice, the sighs "I'm not going to make it." "Who is gonna next? Am I gonna get it, or is he gonna get it?" No emotion is edited out. The sound effects of battle, used sparingly, are used effectively, and mostly (maybe always) when the historian is speaking, or in bridges between the vets and the historian. The sfx do not impede the piece, just adding the sounds to help the brain along, nudging it toward the realizations that the voices were pointing to. Piece goes well beyond war, to questioning why, and what did it accomplish, why should I kill a fellow man? The war went on. The buildup in Europe took longer than the fighting, but the fighting took long enough, and in brutal conditions, cold, hunger, pain, doubt, fear. These two veterans, Taylor and Jones, bring us close into the fold. I'm not going to pretend I know the fear of battle, but I know what veterans feel. There is nothing to date this to one year... mark a spot for timely pieces for the final Monday in May and look for this piece again. |
Transcript
Documentary: SOLDIERING ON
Produced by: Chris Chambers
Length: 29’30”
Music: Eric Satie/Gnossienne III (threading through the introductory clips)
Details: (C208310) CDC 7474742 EMI
Composer: Eric Satie
Performer: Aldo Ciccolini
Title: Gnossienne III
Track 6
Clip: Robert Taylor
Fear is there all the time. The fear on the man’s face and the fear in the eyes. The colour of the skin even changes. Let me get through and if you do then allelujah.
Clip: John Jones
Funny thing war. It’s a horrible thing. It’s violent, no pity. Self survival. It’s a horrible thing.
Clip: Robert Taylor
I think myself anyone who says he was never frightened is failing to face up to the fact.
Link: Radio Netherlands presents ‘Soldiering On’. A look at a soldier’s experience in battle.
Clip: John Jones
Still vivid in my mind. Your body. Tiredness. I didn’t sleep for five days a...
Read the full transcript
Musical Works
Music: Eric Satie/Gnossienne III (threading through the introductory clips)
Details: (C208310) CDC 7474742 EMI
Composer: Eric Satie
Performer: Aldo Ciccolini
Title: Gnossienne III
Track 6





Joseph Dunlap
Posted on June 11, 2005 at 09:57 PM | Permalink
Review of RN Documentary: Soldiering On
Having been deeply interested in the history of World War II, I have watched many documentaries and read many first hand accounts of battle similar to the descriptions given by the two gentleman in this piece, but nothing I have ever read or watched approaches the immediacy of listening to the graphic, emotional, yet measured accounts of battle set down by these two men. No one who has not experienced battle first hand could ever completely understand the emotions experienced during battle (truely a cliche', but true nonetheless), but they do their level best to convey it.
A well thought out and produced piece, skillful interweaving of FX and music and short, concise bridging by the narrator. The only thing I would have done differently would to have added a more detailed introduction about Market Garden and Arnhem.
Should be required listening for all politicians.