ADVANCE AUSTRALIA FAIR

The National Anthem booth at the 2005 Floriade, Canberra - on the J. Verbeeck fairground organ.

'Advance Australia Fair' is the official national anthem of Australia. Composed by Peter Dodds McCormick, the song was first performed in 1878, but did not gain its status as the official anthem until 1984. Until then, the song was sung in Australia as a patriotic song. In order for the song to become the anthem, it had to face a vote between the Royal anthem ''God Save the Queen'' and the "unofficial anthem" ''Waltzing Matilda.'' Other songs and marches have been influenced from ''Advance Australia Fair,'' such as the Australian Vice-Regal salute.

Contents
History
Lyrics
'Missing' verse?
Copyright status
Criticisms
Media
External links

History


''Advance Australia Fair'' was composed by Peter Dodds McCormick, originally under the pen-name 'Amicus' (which means 'friend' in Latin), in the late 19th century, and first performed by Andrew Fairfax at a Highland Society function in Sydney on 30 November, 1878. The song quickly gained popularity and an amended version was sung by a choir of 10,000 at the inauguration of the Commonwealth of Australia on 1 January, 1901. In 1907, the Australian Government awarded McCormick £100 for his composition.
Before its adoption as Australia's national anthem, ''Advance Australia Fair'' saw considerable use elsewhere. For instance, during World War II, Australia's national broadcaster, the Australian Broadcasting Commission, used it to announce its news bulletins. It was also frequently played at the start or end of official functions.
In 1973, the Whitlam government decided that the country needed an anthem that could represent Australia with "distinction", and started a competition to find one. The Australia Council for the Arts organized the contest, which was dubbed as the ''Australian National Anthem Quest''. The contest was held in two stages; the first seeking lyrics and the second music, each having a $5,000 AUD prize for the winning entry. On the recommendation of the Council for the Arts, none of the new entries were felt worthy enough, so the contest ended with the suggestions for ''Advance Australia Fair'', ''Waltzing Matilda'' and ''Song of Australia''. [1]
''Advance Australia Fair'' emerged as the most popular choice for the national anthem after an opinion poll in 1974 (the Australian Bureau of Statistics polled 60,000 nationally).
At the same time as the 1977 referendum, a national plebiscite was held to choose the National Song. ''Advance Australia Fair'' received 43.6% of the vote, defeating the three alternatives: ''Waltzing Matilda'' (28.5%), ''Song of Australia'' (9.7%), and the then-current national anthem ''God Save the Queen'' (18.7%).
''Advance Australia Fair'' was adopted as the national anthem on 19 April, 1984 by a decision of the Labor government of Bob Hawke, and a proclamation by the Governor-General Sir Ninian Stephen.

Lyrics


The lyrics of ''Advance Australia Fair'' express reasonably uncontroversial Australian self-beliefs and aspirations.
For its adoption as the national anthem, the second and fourth verses were dropped from the "Official Lyrics", as they emphasised the British and Irish aspects of Australia's heritage, along with the virtues of Britain, and verse two of Official Lyrics was based on the third verse of the adaptation sung at Federation in 1901, rather than the original third verse.
Three lines were changed, in order to promote non-sexist language and to reflect the fact that Australia is no longer a 'youthful Commonwealth'. For example:

★ the first line of the first verse: "'Australia's sons' let us rejoice" to "'Australians all' let us rejoice".

★ verse 3A (verse 2 of Official Lyrics), line 3 : "To make this 'youthful Commonwealth'" to "To make this 'Commonwealth of ours'".

★ verse 3A (verse 2 of Official Lyrics), line 5 : "For 'loyal sons beyond' the seas" to "For 'those who've come across' the seas".

'Official Lyrics' Note: Only the first verse is sung in most events
:Australians all let us rejoice,
:For we are young and free;
:With golden soil and wealth for toil,
:Our home is girt by sea;
:Our land abounds in Nature's gifts
:Of beauty rich and rare;
:In history's page, let every stage
:Advance Australia fair!
:In joyful strains then let us sing,
:"Advance Australia fair!"
:Beneath our radiant southern Cross,
:We'll toil with hearts and hands;
:To make this Commonwealth of ours
:Renowned of all the lands;
:For those who've come across the seas
:We've boundless plains to share;
:With courage let us all combine
:To advance Australia fair.
:In joyful strains then let us sing
:"Advance Australia fair!"
'McCormick's original lyrics' (1879)[2]
:Australia's sons let us rejoice,
:For we are young and free;
:We've golden soil and wealth for toil,
:Our home is girt by sea;
:Our land abounds in Nature's gifts
:Of beauty rich and rare;
:In history's page, let every stage
:Advance Australia fair!
:In joyful strains then let us sing,
:"Advance Australia fair!"
:When gallant Cook from Albion sailed,
:To trace wide oceans o'er,
:True British courage bore him on,
:Til he landed on our shore.
:Then here he raised Old England's flag,
:The standard of the brave;
:With all her faults we love her still,
:"Britannia rules the wave!"
:In joyful strains then let us sing
:Advance Australia fair!
:While other nations of the globe
:Behold us from afar,
:We'll rise to high renown and shine
:Like our glorious southern star;
:From England soil and Fatherland,
:Scotia and Erin fair,
:Let all combine with heart and hand
:To advance Australia fair!
:In joyful strains then let us sing
:Advance Australia fair!
:Should foreign foe e'er sight our coast,
:Or dare a foot to land,
:We'll rouse to arms like sires of yore
:To guard our native strand;
:Britannia then shall surely know,
:Beyond ocean roll between,
:Her sons in fair Australia's land
:Still keep their courage green.
:In joyful strains then let us sing
:Advance Australia fair!

'1901 adaptation'
Verse 3 of the original was changed to;
:Beneath our radiant Southern Cross,
:We'll toil with hearts and hands;
:To make our youthful Commonwealth
:Renowned of all the lands;
:For loyal sons beyond the seas
:We've boundless plains to share;
:With courage let us all combine
:To advance Australia fair.
:In joyful strains then let us sing
:"Advance Australia fair!"

★ note, some modern sources erroneously include both versions of the thrid verse in a five verse arrangement. While the five verse arrangement has subsequently been proformed, (as have several six and seven verse adaptations), this obfuscates the historical development of the Australian National Anthem
'Missing' verse?

Despite McCormick's original composition only having five verses, there is a claim that a missing sixth verse has been discovered. The sixth verse, unlike the others, had an overtly Christian overtone. While it has been performed in public before, the first performance in recent memory of this verse was during the Global March for Jesus in 1998. [3] The verse went as follows:
:::With Christ our head and cornerstone,
:::We'll build our Nation's might.
:::Whose way and truth and light alone
:::Can guide our path aright.
:::Our lives, a sacrifice of love
:::Reflect our Master's care.
:::With faces turned to heaven above
:::Advance Australia fair.
:::In joyful strains then let us sing
:::Advance Australia fair.
Some people think this was the original version, but it was not McCormick's own (see above). The explicitly Christian verse has been misattributed to McCormick, despite its absence from the original composition. It is not known who the true author of the verse is, nor when it was first penned and used. The most recent known performance of the verse was at a special service at St. Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney, on July 10, 2005 with Prime Minister John Howard present.
Copyright status

Even though any copyright of Peter Dodds McCormick' original lyrics has expired as he died in 1916, the Commonwealth of Australia does copyright the officially proclaimed lyrics and particular arrangements of music. Non-commercial use of the anthem is permitted without case-by-case permission, but commercial use does require permission. [4]

Criticisms


The anthem attracts occasional discussion in Australia, with allegations that both the tune and lyrics are mediocre, lacklustre or uninspiring. Another complaint is that it is not as popular or well known as other national songs, particularly ''Waltzing Matilda''. In particular the word "girt" (the passive form of the verb "to gird") meaning 'encircled' or 'surrounded' is criticised as obscure.
The Sydney 2000 Olympic Opening Ceremony highlighted the fact that most of the large audience was unfamiliar with the second verse of the anthem, sung by Julie Anthony (the first verse was sung by Human Nature).
The song has a very wide melodic range which presents difficulties for untrained singers.

Media


External links



Brief history

★ Australian Government websites:


Official proclamation by the Govenor-General


Official published words, music with band parts and sound recordings


Four-part musical score & words PDF 169 KB


Department of Foreign Affair and Trade's webpage on Advance Australia Fair


Online scores held by Australian government libraries (The MusicAustralia collaboration)

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