Sarie Marais is a tradional South African song that dates from the Anglo Boer war, and speaks of this lone soldier who longs for his love, Sarie Marais... I think the melody is based Annie Laurie that also dates from the American Civil war era.
Paul van Landschoot ik ook. Maar vind jij het ook niet gek dat een liedje dat is ontstaan uit een oorlog tegen de Engelsen en eigenlijk behoorlijk anti-Engels is nu blijkt de mars van de Engelse mariniers te zijn. Ik snap het niet erg.
@@frankteunissen6118 Dat was onwetenheid Frank. In de eerste en tweede klas van de "lagere school" werd je wel meer bijgebracht waar je nu de "kriebels" van krijgt.
@@frankteunissen6118 Churchill was erg geïnspireerd door de Boeren. Hij hervormde het Britse leger en de Marine, de Mariniers adopteerden Sarie Marais uit respect. Het leger werd van regimenten tot commando's hervormt, iets wat in de Tweede Wereldoorlog doorslaggevend was voor het Britse legers om de Nazi-Duitsers te verslaan.
At 2:22 I LOVE how the us handles the mace, but I so dislike their marching style. It looks like their taking a stroll in the park. Great performance nonetheless.
The stride is the same. The only two differences were the arm movement of the Duch Marines and the European show step of the snare drummers. Both are acceptable to competition field judges and are sometimes utilized by the American Military Bands when doing a competition presentation. But not for an official function and Pass-in-Review for dignitaries.
The American style of marching is actually much older than the style used by the British. The American drill comes from the 18th century when efficiency was more valued, while the British drill comes from the Victorian era when people wanted the army to look more flashy and flamboyant.
What are you looking at? The Brits and the Dutch have plain old quick marching steps and then along comes the USMC with that high stepping prancing style which then changes to an ordinary walking step. If the Europeans are "flamboyant" then you don't know what the word means. This comment by an American by the way.
Are Yes, The Royal Marines were the best, The Dutch were very good, then the USA walking like they'd shit themselves, which isn't unusual for the Americans
Defileermars der Koninklijke Marine is één van de beste marsen!
Sarie Marais is a tradional South African song that dates from the Anglo Boer war, and speaks of this lone soldier who longs for his love, Sarie Marais... I think the melody is based Annie Laurie that also dates from the American Civil war era.
I love the Dutch, fantastic people.
Regards from a Brit.
the feeling is mutual brit
Gorgeously, we love you all here in Holland
dit liedje leerde ik op de tweede. klas van de lagere school. Er werden veel afrikaanse liedjes gezongen
Paul van Landschoot ik ook. Maar vind jij het ook niet gek dat een liedje dat is ontstaan uit een oorlog tegen de Engelsen en eigenlijk behoorlijk anti-Engels is nu blijkt de mars van de Engelse mariniers te zijn. Ik snap het niet erg.
@@frankteunissen6118 Dat was onwetenheid Frank. In de eerste en tweede klas van de "lagere school" werd je wel meer bijgebracht waar je nu de "kriebels" van krijgt.
@@frankteunissen6118 Churchill was erg geïnspireerd door de Boeren. Hij hervormde het Britse leger en de Marine, de Mariniers adopteerden Sarie Marais uit respect. Het leger werd van regimenten tot commando's hervormt, iets wat in de Tweede Wereldoorlog doorslaggevend was voor het Britse legers om de Nazi-Duitsers te verslaan.
1:58 not the regimental march of the dutch marine corps it is the regimental march (if you call it that) for the dutch navy
Service march would be the correct terminology in English, I think.
Brilliant evening out.
At 2:22 I LOVE how the us handles the mace, but I so dislike their marching style. It looks like their taking a stroll in the park. Great performance nonetheless.
The stride is the same. The only two differences were the arm movement of the Duch Marines and the European show step of the snare drummers. Both are acceptable to competition field judges and are sometimes utilized by the American Military Bands when doing a competition presentation. But not for an official function and Pass-in-Review for dignitaries.
Well , you see we yanks just do not have to prance.
The American style of marching is actually much older than the style used by the British. The American drill comes from the 18th century when efficiency was more valued, while the British drill comes from the Victorian era when people wanted the army to look more flashy and flamboyant.
What are you looking at? The Brits and the Dutch have plain old quick marching steps and then along comes the USMC with that high stepping prancing style which then changes to an ordinary walking step. If the Europeans are "flamboyant" then you don't know what the word means. This comment by an American by the way.
synchroon ??
echo ?
Did you notice the USA band copied the Dutch uniforms ?
It's the standard summer uniform with navies all over the world.
I think you will find that it is the other way around.
As far as I know the Dutch implemented American uniforms in the 1940s when Americans trained the KNIL in the Dutch East Indies/Indonesia.
@@hendrikdependrik1891 only uniforms rnlmc took from the usmc were the dungarees, the hym with the tamboers en pipers, the rest is dutch own.
@@jmille1666 nope
🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱
Are Yes, The Royal Marines were the best, The Dutch were very good, then the USA walking like they'd shit themselves, which isn't unusual for the Americans
👍🤣
Well yeah but there has been no one will have the guts to tell US Marine he has shit in his dress uniform Semper Fi.
@@rogerwilson9892 The guy was just trolling. :) We all friends and allies here
That voice over is amazing haha
Useless. What a waste of money.
Harder men than most!
@@cjsb22lrso? Waste.
You are useless
Considering Beating Retreat actually makes more money than it spends, not really sure how it's a "waste of money".