It's a Long Way to Tipperary (1912) Military Quick March (Instrumental) • United Kingdom (1801-)
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- Опубліковано 13 жов 2024
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A personal favourite version, played by a band during the Remembrance Day veterans parade of 1985
Info:
"It's a Long Way to Tipperary" (or "It's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary") is a British music hall song first performed in 1912 by Jack Judge, and written by Judge and Harry Williams
It was recorded in 1914 by Irish tenor John McCormack. It became popular as a marching song among soldiers in the First World War and is remembered as a song of that war. Welcoming signs in the referenced county of Tipperary, Ireland, humorously declare, "You've come a long way" in reference to the song.
it's a long way, to go🎵
great work
Beautiful!
Very good video, well done.
Well done lads for king and country!!
For King and Country !!!
But Tipperary is not in your Country anymore and it does not have a King.
@@FionanUaMurchadha It was what they used to say.
@@FionanUaMurchadha They have problems to understand .
Magnificent.
Thank you
God Save The King! *FOR KING AND COUNTRY LADS!*
Fear God, Honor the King
wasnt this the one they played in a parade in the 80s
@@eII_gato which parade?
@@bugattiveyron8282 Remembrance Sunday 1985 from ua-cam.com/video/avwQu7hRuF4/v-deo.htmlsi=hUWZQon1F9qzcWgK
@@bugattiveyron8282 This is the audio from a Rememberance Parade
@@Jaffacake317 thanks
altough i am not british, i already feel patriotic
Salute
Does anyone know what regiment/battalion the soldiers in the photo are? It definitely looks like a picture from 1914 so I assume most of them were part of the original pre war army decimated in 1914.
Remember Sunday
Your country needs you to join out to help Belgium and France
Don’t wanna be that guy but the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland hasn’t existed since 1801 it was the Untied Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
The recording is from 1985 so it's still correct
@@AkashitheCapitalist Just isn't, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland lasted from 1January 1801 until 6 December 1922. The modern United Kingdom is technically the same state but is not when you include that fact that we left.
It is legally considered to be the same state. And everyone really wants their country to be old, right?