You should really make playlists for British songs from different time periods or wars, like the 1700s, 1800s, WW1, WW2, really would be a nice addition.
I am actually planning that, I have a lot of suites planned, but it takes a while to compile, I’m planning on realising a WW1 video soon, about an hour of British ww1 songs, but it’s hard to find a lot of footage from that era, but I have had 17th, 18th and 19th century videos on my mind. I work on it in between videos, adding more songs each time, about an hour in length.
For those wondering: the song is incomplete, and actually has a punchline that revolves around the the period slang usage of "hot stuff": the last stanza talks about how they'll give hot stuff to the nuns when they're done. And they don't mean the kind that comes from their muskets--well, not the ones made of metal and wood...
Might be, if I remember right, there’s an almost rotating group of singers that this album used for their period songs, and I believe that this singer is the “Irish” one.
He means they are part of Lascelles' 47th Regiment of Foot, rather than William Shirley's 50th Regiment of Foot. Basically, he's correcting Montcalm, the French commander, for misidentifying the unit they belong to.
Because I go straight from upload to public, it’s a 4K video, but it takes longer to process 4K versus 360p, and since it’s set to public, the 360p loads faster just wait an hour for the rest.
@@Imperial_Britannia Your response is greatly appreciated , you answer questions with politeness and civility at all times ; never disregarding someone’s points , only discussing your views regarding them
Most scenes are from ‘Revolution’ a film about the US revolutionary war from the 80s, and the other from a film about the 7 years war, ‘Barry Lyndon’ there are a few others with some seconds of footage, but I’ve forgotten them.
Technically, the Kingdom of Ireland was a separate kingdom that was in a personal union with the Kingdom of Great Britain during the 18th century, though the British sovereign was also the King of Ireland, making the two united. Officially, Great Britain and Ireland weren't unified together until 1801, when they formed the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, with Ireland becoming a Viceroyalty of the UK.
Ireland and England/Britain weren’t a unified nation until 1801. Before that the dynasties of England ruled over both England and Ireland, as Lords of Ireland, and Kings of England, as separate realms ruled by the same person, separated governments and politicians, but a shared head of state. In 1542 Ireland became a kingdom. In 1603 the Scottish crown inherited the title of ‘King of England’ and ‘King of Ireland’ on top of being ‘King of Scotland’ same king, different kingdoms. Even after the island of Great Britain unified, it was ‘King of Great Britain’ and ‘King of Ireland’ Asking where Ireland is during this period would be the same as asking where Hanover is, it’s a different nation, even if they share a head of state.
England came to its present shape in the 920s AD but if you go by just the name and the kingdom even when it was smaller, like most nations do, then it goes back further
@@rat_king- the French have little to do with it. we tried to tell the Normans to sod off and they turned the entire isles upsidedown 😆 but to be fair, if it weren't within a couple of weeks of the last true viking invasion William probably would have had is arse kicked back in time and his head displayed on a spike in Westminster.
@@rat_king- Eh? I'm pretty sure that was when the Normans came and conquered us and replaced our English/Anglo-Saxon Aristocracy with Norman ones and changed our language and lot of our culture to be more French.
You should really make playlists for British songs from different time periods or wars, like the 1700s, 1800s, WW1, WW2, really would be a nice addition.
I am actually planning that, I have a lot of suites planned, but it takes a while to compile, I’m planning on realising a WW1 video soon, about an hour of British ww1 songs, but it’s hard to find a lot of footage from that era, but I have had 17th, 18th and 19th century videos on my mind. I work on it in between videos, adding more songs each time, about an hour in length.
@@Imperial_Britannia Please do!
@@Imperial_Britanniathat would be really nice 👍
@Imperial_Britannia please I actually enjoy your songs
I like that song! Had to smile at giving the ba****** hot stuff😅
nice finally a song about my home country of canada
For those wondering: the song is incomplete, and actually has a punchline that revolves around the the period slang usage of "hot stuff":
the last stanza talks about how they'll give hot stuff to the nuns when they're done. And they don't mean the kind that comes from their muskets--well, not the ones made of metal and wood...
OH HECK NAHH 💀
Brilliant!
Another banger from the motherland of Britain! Cheers on 7k too! Love to Britain from Texas!
I first misread it as a Year 7 War Song.
I know, I just read it too fast.
I love the name Hot Stuff lol thx for a piece of art!
Damn nice! You don't hear this one often enough. Thank you!
GOD SAVE THE KING.
LONG LIVE THE KING.
F's in the chat for my boy Sergeant Botwood
F
God save England 🇨🇱❤️🇬🇧
We love europe 🇬🇧🤝🏻🇩🇪🇫🇷🇵🇹
But Chile is a spanish colonia
🇨🇱🦧🐒👩🏿🦲👨🏿🦱
God save Latinx❤
Yes please
@@Traumada69gogogo Aqui te responden tus queridos Ingleses
God bless Chile!! 🇨🇱🇨🇱🇨🇱
Is that an Ulster accent I hear?
Might be, if I remember right, there’s an almost rotating group of singers that this album used for their period songs, and I believe that this singer is the “Irish” one.
Just don't look up the ommited last line of the song lol
What does he mean when he says you lie we are with Lascelles?
He means they are part of Lascelles' 47th Regiment of Foot, rather than William Shirley's 50th Regiment of Foot. Basically, he's correcting Montcalm, the French commander, for misidentifying the unit they belong to.
@@sakkra93 Thanks man!
@@90Degrees_ No worries.
the quality lol
Because I go straight from upload to public, it’s a 4K video, but it takes longer to process 4K versus 360p, and since it’s set to public, the 360p loads faster just wait an hour for the rest.
@@Imperial_Britannia Your response is greatly appreciated , you answer questions with politeness and civility at all times ; never disregarding someone’s points , only discussing your views regarding them
What is the name of the movie/show used to clip the video?
Most scenes are from ‘Revolution’ a film about the US revolutionary war from the 80s, and the other from a film about the 7 years war, ‘Barry Lyndon’ there are a few others with some seconds of footage, but I’ve forgotten them.
I wanna visit chile
"New France" was all well and good, but I prefer Upper and Lower Canada myself. :)
I prefer the Republic of Lower Canada :)
(im from quebec)
Where is Ireland?
Technically, the Kingdom of Ireland was a separate kingdom that was in a personal union with the Kingdom of Great Britain during the 18th century, though the British sovereign was also the King of Ireland, making the two united. Officially, Great Britain and Ireland weren't unified together until 1801, when they formed the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, with Ireland becoming a Viceroyalty of the UK.
@@sakkra93this is not an alliance. England conquered Ireland in 1603.
Ireland and England/Britain weren’t a unified nation until 1801. Before that the dynasties of England ruled over both England and Ireland, as Lords of Ireland, and Kings of England, as separate realms ruled by the same person, separated governments and politicians, but a shared head of state. In 1542 Ireland became a kingdom. In 1603 the Scottish crown inherited the title of ‘King of England’ and ‘King of Ireland’ on top of being ‘King of Scotland’ same king, different kingdoms. Even after the island of Great Britain unified, it was ‘King of Great Britain’ and ‘King of Ireland’ Asking where Ireland is during this period would be the same as asking where Hanover is, it’s a different nation, even if they share a head of state.
@maximilienrobespierre6276 look: you like Robespierre so that says something about you 🤣
im wondering what happens in 2066... you know, the first century of england..
England came to its present shape in the 920s AD
but if you go by just the name and the kingdom even when it was smaller, like most nations do, then it goes back further
@@greg_4201OK go from 1066 the day we told the french to sod off.
@@rat_king- the French have little to do with it. we tried to tell the Normans to sod off and they turned the entire isles upsidedown 😆
but to be fair, if it weren't within a couple of weeks of the last true viking invasion William probably would have had is arse kicked back in time and his head displayed on a spike in Westminster.
@@rat_king- Eh? I'm pretty sure that was when the Normans came and conquered us and replaced our English/Anglo-Saxon Aristocracy with Norman ones and changed our language and lot of our culture to be more French.
@@fyrdman2185 English culture is not french.