You can hear 7th regiment practicing their drum break in the background. I heard the blast from there and I missed my cue on the star trek interlope that run. Holy crap these guys were good
@@joshuagrant2330 if you play a conical bore instrument, like baritone or tuba, you need to be carefull so that you don't overblow and your sound breaks, you also need a lot more support from the corners of your embouchure for playing at such high volumes with a good tone
UNBELIEVABLE! An entire section playing unison with ZERO beats! This is some of the best training that I've ever seen. These players will be able to take what they've been taught there with them for the rest of their lives. Amazing.
@@brandonwhitney1189 That is awesome! What a privilege to have played with people so committed to excellence. That kind of attitude influences literally everything that you do.
@@CertifiedGFmusic The end chord Crown plays is a Bb minor. If you listen after the release, you can just hear Bluecoats in the background on Bb major. I think it's cool personally.
Sadly it is hard to learn high notes, i have been practicing for months, and i always either use a bad embiture, or press against my face. This would be LIT thoo
hmm, I think that there should be a dynamic difference between mezzo-piano, mezzo-forte and fortissimo. But if find it difficult with recordings as they are "toyed with" too often.
To drop the hammer is the idea of pushing the throttle to the floor, and placing a heavy hammer on it to hold it down. Which fun fact: Was the way old car drivers used to use a hammer as a means of cruise control. No, I am not joking. Also, "Dropping the hammer" is the action of pressing hard to do an action. To break new ground and surpass limits. Plus it can mean bringing a lot of pain to an act of Injustice or someone you really really hate. To "Drop the hammer" by overwhelming the person or persons with overwhelming force.
Is there anything musical about this? The “conductor” gestures are bizarre. Which ones are ignored (redundant)? Is DC about musical expression or compliance to egomaniacs?