Sydney Youth Band
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sydney Youth Band of The Salvation Army | |
|---|---|
| Also known as | SYB |
| Origin | Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
| Genres | Brass Band |
| Years active | 2001 – present |
| Labels | Salvationist Publishing & Supplies Ltd |
| Website | www.sydneyyouthband.com |
The Sydney Youth Band of the Salvation Army (or SYB) is a brass band based in Sydney New South Wales, whose membership is that of people aged 13–30. It is primarily made up of Salvation Army members, including soldiers and others that attend The Salvation Army. It is a part of the Salvation Army's NSW/ACT Division but functions more as a regional youth band for the Sydney, Newcastle and Wollongong area.

- SYB performed with the Melbourne Staff Band[1][2] when they toured in 2007.
- They participated in 2007's Salvation Army commissioning weekend activities playing in a concert with Sydney Congress Hall Band, The Sydney Veterans Band and Brisbane City Temple Band. These four bands then combined to make a "mass band" celebrating Sydney Congress Hall's 125th anniversary celebrations.
- The band performed at 2008's World Youth Day celebrations in front of 200,000 people. Specifically, at the re-enactment of the Stations of the Cross at Barangaroo on Friday 18 July.[3]
- A group of six performers from the band performed the Salvation Army hymn tune Abide With Me on Channel Seven's Sunrise morning program.[4][5]
- The band toured Victoria from 29 to 31 August in 2008. They visited South Barwon and Warragul Corps as well as Melbourne City Temple.[6]
- SYB played with James Morrison and The Onfire Big Band at Sydney Congress Hall in November 2008, for a Christmas concert.
- The 'PNG Tour 09', which commenced in early July 2009, saw the band playing their unique style of Brass in crowds of up to 3000+ people, they were the first foreign Salvation Army band to tour Papua New Guinea since The Salvation Army, Campsie Corps Band in 1985.
Bandmasters
| Bandmaster | Period Served |
|---|---|
| Graeme Press | 2001–2002 |
| James Hill | 2002–2009 |
| Joshua Mann | 2009–2013 |
| Brad Lucas | 2014 |
| Captain Peter Gott | 2015–2017 |
| Ron Prussing | 2018–present |