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. Between that timeframe, the song was used inside of Australia as a patriotic song and to announce the news from the Australian Broadcasting Commission. 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.
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.
It 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, fairly convincingly 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, although it required a proclamation by the Governor-General for the decision to become official. The proclamation was signed on the same day by Sir Ninian Martin Stephen, the Governor General.
The opening of the Sydney Olympic Games in 2000 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).
As part of New Year's Eve 2004 celebrations, Clover Moore, Lord Mayor of the City of Sydney, commissioned a dance remix of Advance Australia Fair with a verse of Waltzing Matilda in it, receiving mixed reactions. A previous remix of the song, released in 2003 by comedian Adam Hills, set the song lyrics to the music of Jimmy Barnes's Working Class Man.
A major rival for "Advance Australia Fair" is Waltzing Matilda, which is often regarded as a much finer tune and which has been part of the Australian imagination almost since its composition 110 years ago. Many non-Australians simply assume the tune is Australia's anthem. However, "Waltzing Matilda"'s lyrics, detailing the exploits of an itinerant who steals a sheep and then drowns himself in an effort to avoid capture by the police and the local squatter (land-owner), are regarded by some Australians as unsuitable as an expression of Australian values, and, indeed, as unsuitable topics for discussion in a national anthem. Nevertheless, its long-lasting popularity suggests that other Australians have a lingering sense of identification with the romantic figure of the swagman, his precarious existence, his stubborn defiance of authority and his working-class status.
For its adoption as the national anthem, the second, fourth, and fifth verses were dropped from the "official" version, as they emphasised the British aspects of Australia's heritage, along with the virtues of Britain, and 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:
Some people think this was the original version, but it was not McCormick's own (see above). The explicitly Christian has been misabtributed to McCormick, dispite its' exclusion from the original compositiobn. 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.
National anthems | Australian culture | Australian songs
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It uses material from the
"Advance Australia Fair".
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