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A veteran interview with

Len Tyler

Len provides a fab interview all of energy and entertainment. One can only imagine what it was like to play with so many other musicians. You can see him again in the Chase Bridge film where he had the pupils in the palm of his hand.

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About Len Tyler

In 1965, Len Tyler entered the Army as a Junior Bandsman. By the time he left in 1994, he was the Director of Music of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers.

Len’s love of music may never have started without Leicestershire’s ‘radical’ music programme, which provided free instruments, music lessons, and weekly coach journeys to children who needed them. Before leaving school at 16, with little knowledge of what he wanted to do, he stumbled across an army information wagon. Little did Len know that the recruiter behind the counter was in-fact a sergeant from the 4th Royal Anglian Band.

As a Junior Bandsman, Len’s first posting to Malta was also his first time abroad, where he married a Maltese girl. When their son was later born with medical complications, Len became the first student on Kneller Hall’s pupil’s course to receive his own quarters – a wonderful three-bedroom house in Hounslow.

Len had an exciting time as part of the ‘Golden 8’, made up of the top eight players on the course. Together, they performed at high profile events like the Queen’s Silver Jubilee in 1977. Later in 1992, as Director of Music of the REME, Len would also perform for the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Philip, at the Royal Albert Hall, as part of their 50th anniversary celebrations.

When he was deployed to the First Gulf War, Len worked on helicopter landing sites. Reflecting on his experience of entering a war zone, in this interview Len recalls how musical people often struggle to become military people, however he luckily adapted well.

Credits

Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
Reviewed by:
Toby Boddy

Transcripts:
Please note that transcripts and closed captions in the video player are automatically generated by Vimeo.

Copyright:
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Home | Veterans | Len Tyler

A veteran interview with

Len Tyler

Len-Tyler-scaled

Len provides a fab interview all of energy and entertainment. One can only imagine what it was like to play with so many other musicians. You can see him again in the Chase Bridge film where he had the pupils in the palm of his hand.

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Cite this interview:

MLA Style:
Tyler, Len. A Veteran Interview with Len Tyler. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee, n.d. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/len-tyler/. Accessed 21 May. 2026.
APA Style:
Tyler, L. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Len Tyler [Interview by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Retrieved May 21, 2026, from https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/len-tyler/
Chicago Style:
Tyler, Len. n.d.. A Veteran Interview with Len Tyler. Interview by Martin Bisiker. Legasee. Accessed May 21, 2026. https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/len-tyler/
Harvard Style:
Tyler, L. (n.d.). A Veteran Interview with Len Tyler. [Interviewed by Martin Bisiker]. Legasee. Available at https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/len-tyler/ (Accessed: 21 May 2026)
Vancouver Style:
Tyler, L. A Veteran Interview with Len Tyler [Internet]. Interview by M. Bisiker. Legasee; n.d. [cited 2026 May 21]. Available from: https://www.legasee.org.uk/veteran/len-tyler/
An interview with

Richard Donovan

From Caribbean Shores to Malayan Jungles, a remarkable journey with the Royal Welch Regiment.

Richard Donovan's military journey with the Royal Welch Regiment began in 1951, when he narrowly missed deployment to Korea and instead embarked on an adventure in the Caribbean. Stationed at Park Camp in Jamaica, Donovan enjoyed the sun-soaked island life, even encountering Hollywood legend John Wayne on a beach. However, his time there wasn't all leisure; his regiment was tasked with internal security, facing challenges such as riots, a devastating hurricane, and disturbances in Grenada and British Guyana. After serving as an instructor, Donovan was finally sent to Korea, but fate had other plans. Just as he arrived, a peace treaty was signed, and his battalion was rerouted to Malaya. Here, he engaged in the harsh realities of the Malayan Emergency, conducting dangerous jungle patrols with the Ghurkhas against the Malayan Races Liberation Army (MRLA). Donovan's vivid accounts reveal the grueling tactics employed to weaken the MRLA, terrifying encounters with wildlife, and a near-trap sprung by two POWs. Leading a platoon through the dense jungle, Donovan's experiences included tracking a rogue elephant and surviving friendly fire incidents. Reflecting on his service, his only regret was retiring too early. In later life, he became a dedicated historian of the Royal Welch Regiment.
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Service:
Interviewed by:
Martin Bisiker
An interview with

Peter Lee

Peter avoided being sent back to base for a mundane duty and instead was assigned to SOE.

Peter Lee was at the War Office when his superior tried to have him posted elsewhere but he was able to join Special Operation Executive (SOE). Initially he was at SOE HQ in London, in charge of field agent’s security. After this he was posted to north Africa and later Italy, where he worked with secret agents recruited from First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY). He also supervised two Russian agents who were parachuted into German occupied Italy. Peter was responsible for the training many of the FANY’s and ensuring the secrecy of their missions. One of these operations was the destruction of a huge steel press used to make German tanks. It was realised at the time that many agents sent out would never return and this unnerved some of the trainers. He regards the war as the most interesting time of his life and was in some ways sorry when it ended.