I owe a lot to The Hymn of Acxiom, it introduced me into a whole new genre of music and was a big inspiration for me in high school. Truly a great ballad, and Bloo absolutely nailed it.
Update - I went to a Vienna Teng concert a few weeks ago where she took requests, and yes, I requested The Hymn of Acxiom. It was the best 3 minutes of my life. Go see Vienna on tour, she is immensely talented and a true joy to watch perform live.
For me it was this years marching show called synthesesia. Idk what was in the music but it gave me enough to start practicing and do what I should’ve done in freshmen year. Now I’m a sophomore I am so much better than I was a year ago. Hopefully as a junior I’ll be where I want to be higher level.
This piece shows the player the truest aspects of music; patience, intonation, timing, and balance. You cannot have a good piece, group, or teaching without these. This can also be applied to other real world applications.
And how exactly did this brass dirge change marching band forever? If you’re going to make such a statement then you need to explain yourself. Suggest you see the very fine movie called “Brass Off.” That is how the brass section is to sound!
Man, this dynamic range exhibit A!! The fortissimo section was distorting either in the recording or the audio I’m listening on. Would been great to have heard it live. Terrific ensemble in this band, with a really passive conductor-basically a visual metronome. Very impressive!
As gorgeous as this is as an instrumental piece, and I'm going to perform it next month in a brass choir, the lyrics are so powerful that I think they at least need to be projected during the performance. I love the original artist's version with a vocal harmonizer. It's such a powerful warning about the dangers of A.I.
It was more than delightful. I'm sorry the composition doesn't appeal to me more, but this Bluecoat group is out of the ballpark awesome! I know that all of you will cherish the memories of playing in such a great ensemble!
THIS. Coats should have to play Grow Til Tall in every encore for the rest of time to make up for the fact that they belted the best part of that song to the back stands….
I was in the Pitt Varsity Marching Band, 1964-8. One of, maybe my most memorable and helpful college experiences. I don't think we played this, tho this number sure brings back those good memories. Thank you for posting. :-)
The whole Aims album by Vienna Tent should be adapted for a marching show. I wrote an arrangement of the opening track "Level Up" for percussion ensemble, but I've never had a group that could actually pull it off.
I would love to see this arranged for a full wind ensemble and have the beginning be played primarily by woodwinds, the middle section by brass, and then the full ensemble at the end. Given that he has provided the full brass transcription, I may entertain scoring this out myself since I do still remember how to write music after nearly 30 years away from being a music major :)
I'll tell you what, that is the best marching band I ever heard. I will admit though, that I think the marching band I was in in high school has sounded just as good. Well done guys. I could've cried very easily to this if I had this on repeat long enough 😂 and also this kind of sounds like it would perfectly fit in a war movie or video game 👍
Ahhh this is The Bluecoats drum corps. Drum corps are ensembles that consist of brass, front ensemble, drumline and color guard. No woodwinds. If you’ve never seen a drum corps show, I highly recommend you search some up on RU-vid!
there's something very exciting and powerful about the brass section of a band that gives music the fuel to give brass players the power to express themselves and expand their horizons!!!!!!!!! becoming one not only with just the conductor. but with your fellow classmates and instruments as well!!!!!!!! never give up never give in and always always ALWAYS believe in yourselves and the music!!!!!!! and always give one hundred percent!!!!!!!!!
That's what I was wondering. It is a nice, relaxing melody, but I fail to see how it is in any way revolutionary as slower songs like this are not unheard of in a program, especially if it's during the middle portion.
@@jelly_man326 Of course. Thanks. Actually went to finals in Indy that year so I got to experience Tilt in person and should have remembered, but some life has occurred between then and now.
so a couple of things about the title to this video. I am probably missing the back story to this, but that was not a band, it was a drum and bugle corp minus the drums. Also, they were not marching. New title of the video - The song that changed standing still drum and bugle corp minus the drums forever.
Title needs fixing, this isn't a marching band, it's a Drum and Bugle Corp. Big difference. This is exactly the scenario that brought me to the world of drum corps. I attended a practice to observe "just to see what it's all about". The horn section was in a large room, the first time they hit a major chord and held it, I about fell over. I'd never heard anything like it. I was hooked.
The only single song that changed marching band forever was Medea. Star 93 fundamentally changed the way that people approached arranging and thought about tension and release in the context of marching band. While it was a lot of fun, Bloo 2014 wasn't super influential, you didn't see people en masse gravitate towards simpler concepts with more esoteric and modern music choices in the years after. If there's any Bluecoats show that changed the activity forever it was 2016 with the emphasis on body movement, ditching the headgear an military inspired uniforms once and for all, using props as essentially part of the drill to allow for feature staging and unique physical movements, and the innovative use of electronics and unique front ensemble arranging. That said, this is probably the most hyped ballad from the last decade, which is an achievement in and of itself since a lot of people usually view ballads as fairly forgettable moments in most shows.
This is beautiful and that tubas arc covering the entire back of the stage looks incredible. I saw this show live on the field. Forgive a question from this dumb drummer. This is a wonderful ballad but how did HoA change marching band forever?
i think it was something about the non traditional uniforms and less strict roles of the people in the show, like sliding around those walls and the wink, etc could be wrong tho edit: i am now realizing that you were talking about hymn of axcicom specifically and not the show myb
@@cwilson101 that was Bluecoats 2016, and I agree that show changed the activity forever. HoA was from Tilt in 2014, which honestly didn't change the activity at all.
Thank God percussion wasn’t there. The only thing you would hear at that cut off what’s the tacky DUT DUT DUT DUT. I swear… the snare drum always wants that solo
Call me old-fashioned, but I expect marching band music to have the same number of beats in each bar (preferably 2 or 4) and keep strict tempo until the last chord. That way you can march to it!
This sounds like a nice piece of music, but it doesn't sound like good marching music. Marching music sounds the way it does because the heavy, regular beat syncs up with the footsteps of the band (and historically, the troops marching behind the band), and helps to keep everyone in step. Long drawn out notes provide time for steps to falter by a tiny bit, and especially for following troops marching at close-interval, just a little falter is enough to start stepping on people's heels. (The instruments, themselves, do force band members far enough apart to not hit each other, although missteps might result in playing a note at the wrong time, too). I was expecting a "song that changed Marching Band forever" to be one of Sousa's early pieces.
How did this song change marching bands? I see no band marching or explanation what this really is. All I got from this was a group of loud noises. Please explain yourself as it gets tiresome when people post incomplete information that no one knows anything about.