John Corigliano: Symphony No. 3 “Circus Maximus” Played by Michigan State University Wind Symphony Video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nwcTP-wHdcY.htmlsi=gx3AgszMB19GvGcZ
imagine not being a subservient worm to the govt. and thinking they have power over everything you do. also do you speak English? your sentence makes no sense 'and not the news one?' huh? you embarrassed yourself, give up commenting your not clever its out of your league , enjoy your rollblox and Minecraft.
Oh Roz, any real Fan of Orchestra & Operas would know this piece features the mock gunfire, there is no shell in there its all gunpowder, more then safe. essentially fire crackers. another great featuring the same is the theme from The good the bad and the ugly.
that aint a huge ass gun thats a pretty normal size one want a huge ass gun? look up M82A2 its a modified M82A1 to be bullpup (feeds rounds from behind the trigger) and that aint even then biggest gun
this guy isn’t American, he’s from Russia, his name is Aleksandrovich Samaratov, he lives in St. Petersburg, Russia but he is currently in Vienna, Austria (he is performing as we speak) And the fact I made this up in less than half a minute is crazy
@@GeographyEnjoyer you almost got me there. You can't have a given name "Aleksandrovich". That would indicate his father's name to be "Aleksandr". You still would need a given name before that
@@alexanderjager6768 in the eye of they, who are watching. In the sense of them, who are dying. Everything with high emotions is an art - but some art is not cost their feelings ._.
@@sikusuyu I was making fun that percussionists love to try to be as loud as possible... I mean American Percussion loves the 4th of July every year when they get cannons to play
percussion has to be loud. they’re the ones keeping everyone else together. The dude waving his arms about can only do so much. Also the gun is right behind him. It likely has more to do with the physical feeling you get from a gun going off more than the sound. They’re literally all part of a symphony. I doubt the gun is much louder than all of the instruments combined playing at full volume.
@@kittiekillahyou're right that constant decibels are harmful to ears, but a gunshot, especially indoors, is much louder. Will crack eardrums in feeling, vs the sound of the symphony will not. True also that the shock of the vibrations can be discomforting, but those waves are caused by the force which makes the loud sound. Therefore, the sound of the gunshot is to be feared, and what causes ppl to shoot off target - they flinch about the sound before it even happens. Is there an instrument there. otherwise, where players flinch, just to play, bc the impending sound? No, bc none, not even the aggregate, are as loud as that shotgun blank indoors. Ppl don't flinch in anticipation of a band or symphony to start, but will flinch w small calibre gun like a .22
In a band setting where percussion tends to be constant I can see how percussion keep everyone else together. In many -- heck, most orchestral pieces that is not the case at all.
@McHaletheScott it's a mossberg 500, looks a lot like a Remington 870, but I'm 100% sure it's a mossberg. Benelli m4 is too modern of a gun. Just search up benelli m4 than search up mossberg 500 and you'll see what I mean
@@seancallihan4555omg bro you’re so funny! how did you ever come up with such a cool, original, not at all overused joke?? Did you dig it out from your asshole???
I JUST came from the bee trapped under the bottle cap video and someone literally asked if Bee was an instrument!!!! I'm dyingggggggggggggg🤣🤣🤣🤣☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️
Isn't there a mission where you replace a theater prop gun with a real one? Kinda similar vibes, killing someone on stage while everyone believes it's part of the show
@@lucyann1573 so "gun" COULD be an instrument, and between TF2 Soldier and his "war horns" and... the entirety of enter the gungeon... yeah its possible
@@mauritaschut8466guns changed history more than any other invention. You can protect your family or end villains with them. They are a metaphor for masculinity on several levels. An armed city is a polite city. Laws banning guns dont affect criminals who don't obey laws.
@@mnk_7907Yes, exactly what I was thinking too. I loved that mission, just like nearly every one in Blood Money. I wish they remade that game for current gen.