Anne meets performers and watches Edinburgh Military Tattoo rehearsal
The princess is patron of the event, which will run for 25 shows throughout August.
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Your support makes all the difference.The Princess Royal has visited an Army barracks to watch one of the final rehearsals of this yearās Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo.
Anne watched international teams perform their displays of military drill, music and dancing at Redford Barracks in Edinburgh on Thursday.
She met with many of the performers and bands after they rehearsed their routines on the parade ground, running through the show as it will appear on the esplanade at Edinburgh Castle.
At the end of the performance, juvenile world champion Highland dancer Rosey Watt presented the princess, who is patron of the Tattoo, with flowers as the organisers thanked her for attending.
This yearās event, which runs from Friday for 25 shows throughout August, will see the US Air Force Band perform for the first time ā providing a freestyle depiction of āAmericaās great songbookā.
Other visiting bands include the Trinidad and Tobago Defence Force Steel Orchestra, who will put on a lively performance of contemporary Caribbean music.
The RAF is the lead service at this yearās Tattoo, which will feature music from video games like Battlefield 2, Final Fantasy VII and Dragon Age: Inquisition.
Traditional Scottish music, including the famous skirl of the massed pipes and drums, remains a central part of the show.
The theme for this yearās event is āStoriesā, with 800 performers from around the world seeking to captivate the festival crowds.
Michael Braithwaite, creative director of the Tattoo, told the PA news agency: āThereās the right kind of nerves, a little bit of tension before a show is always good for a performance.
āBut weāve had some very good rehearsals now and everythingās looking and sounding great.
āWeāve got some new innovations in the show ā weāve got some gaming music in there with the RAF.ā
The video game music was chosen to provide āsomething relevant to the servicemen and women of todayā, he said, adding: āGaming is a way of communication and also a way of telling stories and living out stories and role play.ā
As with last yearās Tattoo, there will be a āvisual tributeā to mark the war in Ukraine and show support.
Mr Braithwaite said this yearās show will be āeven more exciting and enhancedā than last yearās, which was the first after a pause due to the pandemic.
Colonel Don Schofield, commander and conductor of the US Air Force Band, said it is āincredibly specialā to bring the military band to Edinburgh for the first time.
He told PA: āOne of the most special things for us is to be able to meet the other band members and other performers, learn about their music, learn about their culture, get to know them a little bit.ā