Performed by Inagakuen Wind Orchestra in 2010 Spring Concert at Omiya city. This performance of "Spirited Away" by a wind orchestra is the first time in the world.
this is quite literallt my favorite piece of all time. this performance is by far the most amazing thing ive heard, good job. you really conveyed the emotions for the song and it made me imagine what each scenes were ! the dynamics were so godly too. im literally in love with this arrangement 😭😭😭
Oh my......so glad to see this back on youtube. This is....was one of the best school wind clubs ever! Solid with great instrumentation, dynamics.....well rehearsed, and quality musicians. Thank you.....for the repost. Arigatou.
So many of the girls in this group wear ponytails. I can almost guarantee you the student president of this band is someone with profound musical and leadership ability who commands great respect.....and she probably wears a ponytail. Japanese girls often have a near obsessive admiration for the female upperclassmen who exemplify the ideal woman and try to emulate them in every way they can, including hairstyle.
except they don't ALL sport the parted hair, and not all of them wear tails. Yes, the girls sport more than one hairstyle...even on this stage. I count at least 5 or 6 hairstyles. But that parted look is held by roughly half of them...I don't doubt that the president of the band possesses that hairstyle. They are not ALL obsessive....I'm only describing a very real aspect of the senpai/kouhai dynamic.
No. Take a look at this different group (Saitama Sakae): /watch?v=0IMI5oQNVCY Notice how although there are a few girls here and there that are wearing pony tails, not nearly as many as the girls at Inagakuen.....Really I'd say there are about half as many. In fact the standard in this recording of Sakae tends to be more towards short hair. I didn't cherry pick a group to prove my point either.....Both Sakae and Inagakuen are consistently among the top 10 HS bands in Japan.....uniformity among all the girls, either by standard of dress or by cultural emulation tends to take precedence over utility or convenience.