My friend and I were walking past when they hit that hit. It was our *first* experience being blasted by a hornline, and my god. Our faces dropped so hard to them.
@@michaelburchett6895I believe he’s referring to how in 79 the troopers had an incident that led to many members having to take time off for medical reasons and coming back late season and still making finals, and having a sunburst while blaring ecstasy of gold
Sorry but this is reducing music to nothing more then a fitness / sports exercise. This is the muscle car mentality applied to music: who can play the loudest.
@@ChrisEchoeslmao what do you mean “make it right” Actin like they are violating a moral code of music If you think about it then being loud is kinda poetic and exactly what marching band is about, a bunch of people doing the same thing at the exact same time. Everyone existing in unison Also saying this is reducing music to nothing more than an activity is like saying that track is reducing running into nothing more than a sport
this is not only elitist, it's also fucking stupid because you're taking a snapshot, out-of-context clip and using it to wholly judge their entire show.
@@haileysmith1349 I'm sure what they mean is that they are sacrificing sounding good for sounding loud. You can do/be both, but there seems to be a deliberate attempt to avoid being clean over being loud.