I actually think this little bit fits in with the theme of the show really well, especially the segment its bieng played in. Does sound like an extremely difficult feature though.
Yeah there would have been no way this would be clean with even 12 people playing it. The music is hard enough but the heralds themselves are so difficult to control…I bet this was a daily struggle for them all summer.
They don't as far as I can tell. They call them Horns these days. My last year marching, in 1989, we still played 2 valve G-bugles that were bugles only in name. They were much more like a 2 valve Cornet with some extra pipe to improve low notes. My parents marched in the old American Legion days and a bugle was defined as a straight bell-front brass instrument pitched in G. So by the old American Legion definition, I marched a bugle. They were even a bugle when the 3 valve G instruments came into play the next year, 1990. 2000 was when they stopped being bugles because that was when DCI approved B-Flat and F instruments. I remember the Cadets and Blue Devils were the first to switch, with the last corp switching in 2010 or 2011.
I actually think this little bit fits in with the theme of the show really well, especially the segment its bieng played in. Does sound like an extremely difficult feature though.
the amount of control needed to play this batshit is crazy
Nice
I like the idea and the arrangement of it, but I wish there where 2 to 3 times people playing.
yeah, but might be too difficult. it has some dirt already. hopefully they can clean it up for finals
Yeah there would have been no way this would be clean with even 12 people playing it. The music is hard enough but the heralds themselves are so difficult to control…I bet this was a daily struggle for them all summer.
I don’t get why people keep trying to say these are bugles
My favorite snack (bugles)
Made in Milwaukee
They don't as far as I can tell. They call them Horns these days. My last year marching, in 1989, we still played 2 valve G-bugles that were bugles only in name. They were much more like a 2 valve Cornet with some extra pipe to improve low notes. My parents marched in the old American Legion days and a bugle was defined as a straight bell-front brass instrument pitched in G. So by the old American Legion definition, I marched a bugle. They were even a bugle when the 3 valve G instruments came into play the next year, 1990. 2000 was when they stopped being bugles because that was when DCI approved B-Flat and F instruments. I remember the Cadets and Blue Devils were the first to switch, with the last corp switching in 2010 or 2011.
Why does the lower split seem more blown out
why was this in my recommended videos lol
Welcome to drum corps :)
Its how they getcha, one minute you’re watching rehearsals next you go to an audition camp
this sounds really annoying up close and not with the rest of the show
I hear it, seems forced in
Yeah, good concept though
ig but it fits with their show thematically.
Rushing
you do it then lmao
mr lesser