The instrumentation in this is so genius. Not just the riffs and solos. Right down go the subtle accompaniment by the accordion! Brilliant! Sometimes less isn't more, it's perfect!
I'm crying with laughter, nearly falling off my chair here, thought it'd be a lame cover but... It's absolutely brilliant, well done guys. Going to follow you. Keep up the good work.
Check out their incredible version of "Highway To Hell" absolutely the definitive version! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-n_gtGfAail4.html
This is so disturbing. To learn, after all these years, that Guns n Roses stole songs from a Polka band. Talk about destroying a young man's innocent illusions.
Congratulations to Heimatdamisch Group for making "Sweet Child o' Mine" an even greater hit by playing it with just wind instruments! Wonderful performance!
When I started listening, my first thought was "how are they gonna pull the solo off". Then when the sax came on... jeeeeez! Hair raising, in the best possible way - my arms.
When the sax came in it very positively reminded me of The Madness.....great interpretation that proves a great song is a great song, even when played with different instrumentation
Ich weiss nicht, ob ich mal ein Comment hinterlassen habe - aber euer Lied hier lass ich mindestens 1x Tag spielen. Weil es mir einfach gefällt. Macht mehr so geniale Sounds. Moderne Volksmusik (sofern das Lizenzrechtlich machbar). Absolutes Daumen hoch von mir. :)
That female lead singer is Conny Kreitmeier from munich, germany ... well known with her Orchester Bürger Kreitmeier and many more projects. Greetz from munich, bavaria
First time I heard this, I thought it was *only* a HOOT! Which it is. But those folks are *serious* musicians. The Sax solo at 3:40 is good stuff! Got me into finding more music by The Heimatdamisch . ❤
The Heimatdamisch are well on their way to a million views with this amazing, punchy cover. It's tight, a lot of fun and surprisingly powerful at the end. Who new there could be such a fresh take on this classic?
I just love this version. I have this on my download list when I am driving along and always gives me a smile. Surely one of the best covers of this rock classic. Rock on and More please 🇦🇺🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Wow, wow, wow, wow, wow!!! What a vocal, what a sax solo, what an arrangement, what a band, what a performance! There have been several very creative and well done covers of Sweet Child O'Mine but I believe this is the best. Absolutely love it! Thank you!
Wow, I love her attitude in addition to the amazing singing and voice. I can't help but think this is a better performance than the original. Please do more of these for us!
I went to see this group last night in London, if you get the chance to go and see them live you will not regret it, I cannot remember having been more impressed by a band.
@Lucy Bartley So they played London? How big was the audience and their reaction, please? No wonder you have a certain affinity to Bavaria; after all BARTL is a pretty common family name there.😊
@@againstallodds3300 It was a healthy sized enthusiastic crowd considering it was a cold Sunday night in a hard to get to part of the city and almost impossible to get home if you use public transport and live outside of London, I missed the last train back to Surrey and ended up walking 6 miles to get home but it was well worth it, at a guess it was about three-quarters full, they received an excellent reception by the crowd and most folks ended up singing along (I certainly did), they sound exactly like they do on the RU-vid clips to be honest. I think my surname is derived from Bartholemew and is fairly common in Britain, it is hard to spell for the mostly uneducated population in the past and the full name was shortened. A majority of English are of Anglo Saxon descent so it would be of no surprise if the name had German roots.
@Lucy Bartley Oh, that was a quick reaction! Thank you so much for it - and the detailed narrative. Six miles = about ten kilometers in the middle of a cold night! Others would call this a nightmare or an ordeal. Yet, you say it was worth it. Nice. Die Heimatdamischen Leute would like it. On the other hand: 8.3 million (and counting) from around the world cannot be wrong. As far as I have seen, there are only very few people who are critical of this here version - almost all of them from Germany who like to foul their nest as, it seems. One of them even deemed it fit to call it Nazi-Musik. Grotesque. We (sic! I'm German) once brought a lot to England in terms of vocabulary and grammar and, a bit later, in the person of Prince Philipp.😉 But Bartholomew (in Germany: Bartholomäus) is Aramaic. By the way: Bartholomew reminds of Hamilton Bartholomew, Walter Matthau's character in CHARADE (with Cary Grant, who else!). And Surrey reminds me of EWELL where I once also had to undertake an involuntary nightly walk.
@@againstallodds3300 Strangely I only live a few miles from Ewell in a town called Coulsdon, I used to go and see bands at the Green Man pub in Ewell village in the 1980s, I actually ended up walking from East Croydon station which was a bit of a trial but in truth I would be willing to do it again if the Heimatdamischen played London in the future. I went to a Bavarian Oktoberfest in Edinburgh with my daughter a few weeks before the gig and it would have been a prime spot for the band to play to a bigger crowd. I'm not 100% sure but I think Bartholomew was an Apostle and is regarded over here as a Saint (A hospital in London is named after him).
@Lucy Bartley re Ewell: I was there as what back then was called a paying guest. The lady host did not wait for me at Victoria Station, though, but relied on my finding the way to her home in THORNDEN GARDENS, nonetheless. She was right it turned out. But it was stressful: In a foreign country for the first time, which train to take, when to leave that (commuter?) train in the middle of the night? Luckily that was one of those old trains with compartments etc. One of the passengers was attentive enough to notice the facial expression of that stressed young boy (lad?) permanently looking out of the windows on both sides. Right in time, he asked me where I wanted to go. "Get out, get out!", he promptly shouted because that was EWELL (and STONELEIGH, if I remember correctly). - Edinburgh Oktoberfest: Given that LEDERHOSEN and DIRNDLS (just like their singer's, Conny Kreitmeier (pronounced Krritemyer)), are thee typical Bavaria clothes, that Edinburgh Oktobersfest and The Heimatdamisch would have been a perfect combination. Perfect tour planning is not easy, it seems. I had vague memories of a Bartholomäus-Nacht way back in France, but had to google it. I used to go to concerts a lot. Among the musicians from the "Island" were the Rolling Stones, of course, but also Eric Burdon, Steve Winwood, also his early band TASTE (actually TRAFFIC), Jethro Tull (still one of my favourites), Rory Gallagher from Ireland, John Mayall, Dire Straits, The Who, Bad Company (ex Free with Paul Rodgers) and many musicians and bands from the U.S., of course. Contemporary popular music does not interest me much. Luckily there is YT now with all the old ones since the early 1960s plus the black blues artists of the 1920sff who were the idols of British teenagers who then formed bands of their own and made musical history (see the London Sessions of 1965, I think).
What a performance. That screaming sax, the lady excellent singing, even if you get dirived by the depht. A very good parody of the original Gunc N' Roses...
Very nice "Heimatamisch" very nice indeed. You're like a sound puzzle... each piece or instrument, including the beautiful voice, does it's own part to bring it in all together. Great job!
Dies ist ein Meisterwerk! Eine der besten Coverversionen, die ich je gehört habe! Madame ist wunderschön, die Musiker sind großartig! In die Bar mit solcher Musik würde man auf jeden Fall gehen! Erfolge in der Kreativität! Grüße aus Russland.
hahaha..30 times in 2 days..yeah, your comment really made me laugh! Cause in my mind I was thinking how many times I'll end up watching. This is band is hilarious!