Oh when you're down and you're looking for some cheering up Then just head right on up to the candy mountain cave When you get inside you find yourself a cheery land Such a happy and joy filled and perky merry land They've got lollipops and gummidrops and candy things Oh so many things that will brighten up your day It's impossible to wear a frown in candy town It's the mecca of love the candy cave They've got jellybeans and coconut with little hats Candy rats, chocolate bats, it's a wonderland of sweets Buy the candy train to town and hear the candy band Candy bells, it's a treat, as they march across the land Cherry ribbon stream across the sky and to the ground Turn around, it astounds, it's a dancing candy treat In the candy cave imagination runs so free So now Charlie, please, will you go into the cave? Boom! 💣💥💥💥
@drkmge4 It was a private school, most of us had been trained since we could hold the damn things. Besides, the soloist [non existant in my opinion on this vid] was an 8th grader. She was great. AND it was the Jazz band. We were miles above the rest of the band.
hey, this is drkmge4, and I admit, I didn't practice my scales and arpeggios as much as I should have, but while looking back after actually getting serious, I admit that it would be conceivable to do with a lot of practice. On that note, I highly recommend working on the chromatic scale, as well as major/minor scales and arpeggios and getting them as fast as possible and being able to start anywhere on them, it definitely makes songs like this easier.
....Your absolutely right about the Middle Schoolers....but for this Generation!!...High School Kids cannot write or even add without Electronics.....Back in the 1960's my Middle School Band could probably compete with Pro players...........We learned to do Math the real way, learned Cursive writing...;.And We had Manners!..... :-)
The clarinet soloists are really great! The rhythm section is really good to, but there are a few wind players in the sections who are a little (or more) stiff when it starts to swing. Good fun in any case.
i remeber when i first got my clarinet and i tried to play this the teacher said i can play almost anything if i play it super slow so i got my metrenome and set it to 15...
100326 vues c' est top...et surtout 52 commentaires c' est rare, je les ai lus, pour ceux que j' ai bien compris ils me semblent trés instructifs... A 2 ou 3 prés, ils sont tous en Anglais, mais je pense qu' il serait interressant de les traduire correctement...
@drkmge4 I know in america we dont influence music to kids to that rigor but in other areas its actually quite incredible. I agree that i doubt any middle schooler can perform at this quality but heres an example of some young kids who are phenomenal. /watch?v=0OgQbEhJc3Q&list=FLmKbU40Y6vfq-G8r4JVdsCQ&index=45&feature=plpp_video
Polka is Polish! This is a "Grandfather polka", who flies in Polish radio to start the summer! So why are you dressed as German ?! I do not understand this.
You have to realize that this polka has many names and is played throughout the entire alpine region, not just in Poland. Germany - Bavaria in particular - for instance just so happens to call it "Klarinettenmuckl", whereas you might call it "Grandfather polka". I don't know where it originated from, maybe it was Poland, maybe it wasn't. But in todays time it is part of many cultures, so they have every right to choose traditional alpine(I'm stressing "alpine" because the costumes they're wearing aren't solely worn in Germany) costumes if they so desire ;)