@@nekhlioudovbolkonsky2901 Philip V was alright but by unifying Spain as he did it made the Catalonians more than a bit giddy, it was good since it removed the tax benefits the Aragonese got while the Castilians bore the brunt of taxes in the Habsburg era, which they tried to change unsuccessfully.
Good collection. Its a shame there are no titles to the calls. I have a collection but they're on vinyl and I have no player. From that collection I know the first call is the Grenadiers' March, which subsequently became the current Spanish national anthem. The one at 4:40 is "La Carga" i.e "Charge". Given the fast pace of the instruments, you can almost visualize an infantry charge.
It's your Choice = _You prefered being SLAVES , belong to USA_ , Instead of being Free citizens of the Spanish World. _I Thank God you Remained Good Catholic Christians_ All spilled blood was worth That alone . You forgot our language, and now speak English.
Some of these tunes were played when an order was given such as assembly, reload, charge, retreat etc. So they might sound a bit different from a ceremonial march made for parades.
@@jumpinthefire23 drum commands and music are not the same thing - These are the equivalents of "The British Grenadiers", "Aupres de ma Blonde" and such. Which were often shortened like these when played in the field. The guy has a valid point that Spain has their own tunes, not copied from German or English. The only command these would be accompanied by is ¡Avancen!
@@ilovemuslimfood666 I take Spanish for a GCSE and still don't know bugger all about the language lol - I think I just used Google translate or copied a game's subtitles for that, apologies for the typo
Is called touch of "Generala",in spanish army,this touch is for general alert to all troops,for general movilization. In this video is the old touch for Generala,for XVIII and XIX centurys,the present touch of Generala is this: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-HzYTZDVPaEI.html Greetings.
@@jumpinthefire23 I spent my weekend trying to find at least a name, and the best things that came up were Hino Patriotico and something called "La Speranza", whose name doesn't sound portuguese at all
@@Testacabeza I realise that,I am just saying the Brits were the benefactors and main beneficiaries so the British fife and drum would have been appropriate.