I recall being in high school in the band and I got the band to play this at football games no one knew what it was it just sounded good and we would play it for football games 😆😆😆
and did you know that it was Adolf Hitlers favorite march? To always be played when he arrived at some function or other There is a wonderful scene in "the tin drum" where Oskar Matzerath changes it to a waltz and everybody dances
Ja, ein erfolgloser "Kunstmaler" aus Österreich. Es gibt leider noch so viele verirrte und ewig-gestrige, die diesem Massenmörder immer noch nachhängen :-(
Der Titel erinnert an das Gefecht vom 12. August 1914 bei Badonviller in Lothringen. „Die Leiber“ errangen dort am Beginn des Ersten Weltkrieges einen ersten Sieg gegen die Franzosen. Zu dem typischen Eingangsmotiv sollen den Komponisten die Hupen der Sanitätsfahrzeuge angeregt haben, mit denen die Verwundeten abtransportiert worden sind. Er zeichnet sich außerdem durch sein wuchtiges Posaunenmotiv im Trio aus.
As a German Bavarian decent person I love those German uniforms, boots, helmets, goose stepping march nothing like today version of nothingness 🇩🇪🤔🇩🇪👍🇩🇪💪🇩🇪⚔️🇩🇪🪖🇩🇪
@@TheSpike7667I agree 1000% My mom is originally from Wiesbaden. She was still a baby when WW2 started in Europe. She still remembers the bombing raids. Her father, my Opa, was in his mid 30s when he was drafted into the Wehrmacht, where he was a payroll master. I have some old photos showing Opa in his dress uniform when he was home on leave. Boy, did he look SHARP!!! He looked like an officer even though he was a sergeant. My mother said his jackboots were so shiny, she could see her reflection in them. Yes, those uniforms made an ordinary enlisted man look great. ❤
The "Badonviller-Marsch" (AM II, 256) is a Bavarian military march by composer Georg Fürst (1870-1936). After 1934, with its name Germanized to "Badenweiler Marsch" by the Nazis, it was used as the official march of Hitler in his role as Führer, to signal his arrival and therefore personal presence at public events. Fürst composed this tune as the Badonviller-Marsch for the Royal Bavarian Infantry Guard Regiment. The title refers to fighting on 12 August 1914 near Badonviller in Lorraine , where the Royal Bavarian Infantry Guard Regiment (Königlich Bayerisches Infanterie-Leib-Regiment) achieved a first victory against the French at the beginning of the First World War. The composer's lively two-tone entrance motif was by some accounts inspired by the duotonic sirens of field ambulances, with which the wounded were removed. This march is included in the Heeresmarsch collection as HM II, 256. After the death of Paul Hindenburg 1934, the march was used as a personal "Führer-Marsch" for Hitler alongside his possession of a personalised standard. As mentioned in Henry Picker's edition of Hitler's so-called "Table Talks", the march's role was to evoke the presence of Hitler as the leader of the Nazi Party and head of the German state.
It's National-Socialist, not "Nazi". That's a buzz word coined by British propaganda to replace the previous speech rules of for example "Herr Hitler" or "The German Reichschancellor" etc.
Miguel Serrano was actually a pro Nazi sympathizer, president of Chile, he was actually into paganism, mysticism, metaphysics, Vril, ancient Aryan spirits/ ancestors, anti Christian faith, and dark arts. He was actually like that till his death in 2009.
The old Prussian/Junker military traditions died in the ruins of Berlin in the spring of 1945…the modern German army formed in 1955 was largely an American clone it wasn’t until the late 80s and early 90s that was a true German army with its own strategic and tactical doctrine…
Duela a quien le duela alemania con un rusia solo les gana pero habian muchos paises en contra no era solo rusia admiro mucho como fue el ejercito aleman en 1945 una bestia imparable lejos lo mejor
No association with Nazism!!! This March is Bavarian Heimat, a German Heritage, Culture, you either child or uneducated moron if you associated this Great Great Great March and Music with Nazi Germany!!! Start now association of Russian songs with fascist dictator Putin then...
Боже, как оно актуально сейчас. Вся Европа готова сейчас, как и 80 лет назад под эти марши ринутся на нас. Видать забыли, чем всё это для них кончается.
The Japanese Imperial military killed twice as many Asian people as the Nazis did. Civilians as well as Allied POWs. The Chinese and Koreans still hate the Japanese from what I have heard, and I don't blame them. There is a book titled "The Rape of Nanking" by Iris Chang. It describes how the Japanese soldiers tortured, raped, and murdered innocent civilians during the invasion of Nanking in 1937. I have read the book, and it is very interesting, but some parts are very graphic (there are photos too).
Great march!!! Prussian Glory!!! Sorry, this Bavaria Glory, anyway it's Germany Great March, nothing do to with Nazi and Fascism, it's just a bravo march, you can play at your good morning, this march is rich in Germany cultural inheritance, it's Glory, Heritage, Heimat... But bad boys happened in history, now look in Russia, are you prohibit Russian folk songs, just because stupid dictator start bloody war with his neighbor state of Ukraine 🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦???
@@ComanderMca anyway it's great march and great music. This wasn't fault of German people that they allowed 12 years of Nazi darkness, and march was written well before that, on eve of First World War!!!
Muito triste esses jovens terem servido ao líder errado e a uma ideologia diabólica. Morreram à toa, por uma causa perdida. Ou seguiam ordens ou eram fuzilados como traidores. Era matar ou morrer, simples assim.
English translation: Very sad these young people have served the wrong leader and a diabolical ideology. They died for nothing, for a lost cause. Either they followed orders or they were shot as traitors. It was kill or be killed, simple as that.