@@HPD1171 No - more like 1 in 1000 because the alarm isn't limited to just the 12 notes in rhe scale - it can be any frequency between the notes as well, like when an instrument is out of tune. The human ear can hear very small pitch differences!
@@ejb7969 where did 1000 come from? technically it is zero chance that the note is EXACTLY one of the 12 notes since frequency distribution is continuous. we classify a note based on which of those 12 exact pitches it is closest to, of which there are 12. a violist playing a B flat out of tune for example is still playing a B flat, just badly unless they are really out of tune enough to be an A or B natural but you would still assign it to one of the 12 western pitches. and this could change depending on what tuning your using, A=440 is usually assumed when unspecified so no need to worry about that.
That kid is like: "Hey, wait for me, my legs are only little". To top it all, there was a damn "FIRE ALARM" going off!!! ... What would it take to pick up your damn (probably only 2-year-old) kid and carry her out?
FYI - I hope all violists know that we actually love you guys, and viola jokes are not true reflections of our opinions. That violist totally rocked it, & my ears were nothing but blessed by his playing.
Most of you can evaluate and play too. As for the pianist that's messed up her instructor wanted her to continue. Is the recital more important to her than the safety of her student and the audience?
I think its a combination of people being like probably a false alarm and being in state of confusion, yes a alarm goes off but where to now? Is the nearest exit even safe?
Honestly, if it's a Concert Band/Orchestra/Symphony, it's the conductor's choice to end the performance and actually evacuate the performers. The audience, probably were following the players, since they weren't leaving it might have been okay for them.
@@lukeluke1798 Fuck the conductor, if a fire alarm goes off I'm leaving even if I'm the soloist. Any respectable conductor would have immediately ended the performance and directed people safely off-stage.
It's okay I'll keep playing my teacher said so, it's just another Tornado I mean what's the worst that can happen, we get sucked out of the roof and die but let me keep playing just a little more 🤣🤣🤣🤣
John OzLocks hahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahhahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahhaahhahahahaahhahahahahaahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaahahahhahahahahàhahaha
Number 5, nothing better than a fire alarm to go along with the song. Number 4, the band goes on, ish Number 3, the band also goes on, ish Number 2, I thought it was a drill, but I was wrong, that could have been bad, but it wasnt, horray Number 1, the alarm was right in sync with the note she played, loved it.
Getting musicians to stop while performing is nigh impossible, my teacher once told me that,”it doesn’t matter if everything around you is falling apart, or your audience is being murdered, your music needs to continue going because it will be the last thing they hear
When I was in high school ('63-'65) there would be random fire drills once in a while during the day. I was in a concert band rehearsal when it went off. Our director told us to leave our instruments on our chair and walk carefully out. We were on the 3rd floor, long walk down and when the drill was over, all 100 of us plus who ever else was assigned to that stairwell had the long walk back up. When we resumed the rehearsal some how my clarinet wouldn't play. I couldn't blow through and at that time I had a brandnew pro horn.......I couldn't figure out why it wasn't working. When I attempted to swab it out my swab wouldn't go through. My band director had placed a dime between my barrel and the end of the top joint so no air could get through! VERY FUNNY.....ha, ha. He was always pulling stuff like that. He had a Doctorate from Julliard on clarinet. During that period we had a nationally known band. We marched through the '64 New York World's Fair as the Honor Band on Wisconsin Day, three Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parades, three Rose Bowl Parades, the Washington Cherry Blossom Festival, and several Walt Disney World Electric Light Parades through the grounds. The senior 1st Chair clarinet player graduated from Julliard with a Doctorate on Clarinet and has been the professor of clarinet at the University of North Carolina-Chapple Hill for the past forty years performing all over the world. Another senior also went to Julliard on trumpet. Others studied music at various other colleges. My sister won a full tuition scholarship to the Eastman School of Music on harp. She was the harp faculty at the University of Denver, first call union harpist and played with the Denver Symphony Orchestra. I don't think there were any concert interrupted performances as far as I knew.
The same sort of thing happened during our Halloween concert, while we were playing "Ghostbusters." The fire alarm went off and no one really knew if it was part of our show or an actual fire alarm.
An adult and a child need to be taught that when a alarm is activated you react to it and exit the building or area. DO NOT ASSUME IT IS A FALSE ALARM. Shame on all that don't!!!💨
pipesmoker its not that, it’s that as musicians, they’re trained to keep playing no matter what. For example in the titanic the band kept playing until the boat was completely submerged and they fell off, just like these people would. Sadly however, they must evacuate
Amy except I am :/ I’ve been playing piano for 3 years and am currently being classically trained. I’ve also been playing my school instrument for 4 years now and am in a division 1 finalist band. Even if I wasn’t what difference would that make? It’s still something you get taught even in middle school bands. That’s like telling someone that told you that you have the right to remain silent while being arrested or taken to custody, “well, you aren’t a police officer”.
@@goldennebula5013 I congratulate you on being classically trained. In addition to that there are times when one must act irresponsibly and react to a potential life threatening situation. This is for your safety as well as others who you may need to help if they do not react to a potential danger.
We need to carry on if something happens as that would mean we would stop to a phone ringing or a person collapsing. Unfortunately that means we cant stop at any immediate distraction such as a fire alarm. If a member of staff tells everyone to evacuate, then we take our instruments as they are irreplaceable and cost us our entire livelihoods. It’s just how things are.
Like how the last person wanted to stop playing but the piano girl just continued playing with a dead Pokerface like nothing in the world was going to stop her 😂 that’s the spirit
Was in a production of Don Giovanni (with a modern staging) the opening scene already had flashing police lights, but on the last show the fire alarm started going off during the scene. Because the audience thought it was part of the new production, they stayed in their seats while the soprano and tenor were singing, who then stopped and waved while the stage manager got on the speaker to tell people to evacuate. The audience evacuated, meanwhile, the cast and orchestra stayed in costume downstairs, alarm still going off, waiting for the all clear. After about 10 minutes the alarm stopped, the audience returned and the opera resumed
My junior year Christmas concert someone pulled the fire alarm as all the chiors were about to go onstage. So we just sang the last song together outside among the audience. I think it was one if the best performances of my high school career.
What amazes me is how everyone just looks around to see what's going on and if the person next to them gets up and leaves the building (for fire). When that alarm goes off you get out as fast as you can. I've experienced this in a print shop where I worked, when a fire drill one week turned out to be a real fire the next week. Guys were working an the roof with a blow torch putting on new roofing felt and the roof caught fire and within minutes it went up like a tinderbox. As you may know a print shop is full of ink and paper, highly flammable items. With the place filling up with smoke and flames starting to come in from the roof, everyone just stood around to see what was going to happen. And who's shouting at everyone to get out fast? Well that was me as I quickly got to the front door. That one in ten, or even a hundred false alarms can turn out to be the real thing.
Omg listen to the alarm!! Coming from a musician (sax for 10 years, vocalist for 15). If everything is fine, you'll just pick up where you left off. If everything ISN'T fine, you'll be glad you, oh I don't know.... *listened to the alarm*
I't amazing how they all HEAR THE ALARM and just stay there _wondering_ if they should move or not. In my work place we have alarm drills for fire and tornado and the safety people get really pissed off and disappointed when people don't get out of the building when fire or down to the basement when tornado fast enough.
As a parent, I am so upset at that teacher for telling her to ignore a tornado siren. Not only did that risk her safety in this instance, but it teaches her that 'adults ignore those things so I will too'. Great example.
Some of y'all just don't get 1- the musicians mentality of "whatever you do don't stop playing" and 2- the midwesterners mentality of "oh it's just a tornado siren. It's fine."
Well, I have been a volunteers at an annual international classical concert festival in the UK for the past 18 years. We had our share of fire alarms, and I can tell you, at the first tone of the fire alarm, the performance stops and the audience is evacuated ! It is utterly incomprehensible how these kids and adults continue to play and keep sitting in their seats as if nothing happens. Very unprofessional venue staff.
Don’t know if anyone ever recorded it but a few years ago my school and a few others performed the premiere of a piece called the elements with the BBC singers, which ended with loud exclamations of “Fire! Fire!” as a rousing finale. Well anyway, just as that was happening the fire alarm went off 😂😂
I was in one of 5 bands performing in a high school, fortunately we were on and out first. The show runner had a fog machine going the whole time and around the time the third band was out, sure enough the fog set the fire alarm off. Last time he tried that.
It's shocking how many people just keep sitting there, not batting an eyelid while a deafening alarm goes off. What happened to your survival instincts? If I'm hearing a fire alarm, I'm hauling my ass out of building ASAP, no matter what!
Sometimes a fire alarm is set off to warn against an active shooter and so maybe some of them stayed seated because of that idk, but the tornado one yeah deffo get out of there!
It’s a musician thing... we’re taught from day 1 to play through as long as possible. Even if we’re the last ones in a room. Most musicians are accustomed to playing through distractions, and there are plenty of false alarms, or things they have ways of being accustomed to. Tornado warnings? I got them all the time. I’ve lost track of how many items I woke up at 2am from an alert on my phone and just went back to bed
A fire alarm was pulled when we performed for my school. We had to wait outside in 5°F weather for about 20 minutes. Luckily, it was just a toddler who pulled the red shiny enticing fire alarm. I have no idea what its parent was doing though. What really sucks is that we never got another chance to perform that music. 2 months of learning 3 4-8 minute peices... It sucked lmao
I think during my junior year of high school, the fire alarm was pulled by some parent volunteers putting some decorations away lol. I think we were also playing Sleigh Ride ironically.
Our church has a public prayer time during our service. I'm a volunteer fireman, and while I was praying once, my phone app went off loudly with a fire call. Needless to say, I got very distracted. I didn't hear anybody laugh, but I'm sure there was some smirking going on.
XXMB4, Now THAT'S very "inside" and obscure!!! Brett and Eddy have a large following, but the chances running into one of you on a random site is special. My sister played with the Denver Symphony Orchestra, was the harp faculty at the University of Denver and the first call union harpist. Her husband has a Doctorate on cello from Northwestern University and recently retired from playing for 34years with the Denver Symphony Orchestra and 25years with the Colorado Central City Opera Orchestra (an annual seasonal summer gig). I'm retired from forty years of teaching with my clarinet/sax studio. Small world...........
That moment when the fire alarm is in the same key of the piece you are playing!
I noticed it straight away and thought, what are the odds?! :D xD
@@benjaminsolis4950 the odds are 1 in 12
You mean the viola sounds like a fire alarm horrible noise on lower register
@@HPD1171 No - more like 1 in 1000 because the alarm isn't limited to just the 12 notes in rhe scale - it can be any frequency between the notes as well, like when an instrument is out of tune. The human ear can hear very small pitch differences!
@@ejb7969 where did 1000 come from? technically it is zero chance that the note is EXACTLY one of the 12 notes since frequency distribution is continuous. we classify a note based on which of those 12 exact pitches it is closest to, of which there are 12. a violist playing a B flat out of tune for example is still playing a B flat, just badly unless they are really out of tune enough to be an A or B natural but you would still assign it to one of the 12 western pitches. and this could change depending on what tuning your using, A=440 is usually assumed when unspecified so no need to worry about that.
“Go ahead honey it’s only one tornado just keep going I’m sure it fine”
Ryan Clary that was a violation of duty of care, unnecessarily putting a child under danger by ignoring a tornado warning like that
In my state and many others in the Midwest they test the tornado alarms every month on a certain day therefore it’s not a violation I’m pretty sure
Memerman oh I see. Sorry I didn’t know that, I’m not American
My thoughts too. If a tornado had hit that venue, it would want to hear that kid playing amazing grace.
Your thought to not stop for anything
3:40 "you were so hot the fire alarm went off" that was great lol
That was the truth . They were perfectedly synchronized .
lol
Yeah that was my favorite part too
I first understood this dude told her "You are sooo hot!!!" 😂😂😂
@@falafeldurum2095 "...this dude..." was me, the videographer. It happened at the John J. Cali School of Music, Montclair State University.
2:07 that siren kind of fit beautifully I thought. It made me picture like a post-apocalyptic kind of somber landscape. Lol.
I pictured something completely different
I felt the same. Like from a movie
@@MASTEROFEVIL what did you picture?
@@professorswaggamuffin7572 you don't want to know
siren note is Fa (4)
3:12 I thought she was doing some sort of jazzy glissando 😂😂😂😂😂
TOTALLY. She was like, "wow, how did I ever just pull that off! Oh, wait, wasn't me"
Haha ikr! “Oh my gosh new skill...oh wait...nah never mind time to evacuate” 😂
LOL I thought the same thing. It really sounds like violin like enough that I just assumed she was doing some really weird modulation.
Hahaha me too
Me too lol!!!
"My teacher told me to keep going"
*Tornado swoops in swipes teacher*
Swiper no swiping
Student shouts out to teacher as she is blown away..."SHOULD I KEEP GOING?!"
* what does it mean when the conductor is rapidly spinning
Triangle solo
Like on the sinking Titanic... They continue to play until the bitter end
And so might it actually be...
#2 made me kinda sad
@@cheycl293 This whole world is kinda sad as it is...
@@mysterygirl30011 thats true but its always good to look on the bright side
@@cheycl293 Amen
1:00 hey wait for your kid
I think it was another music instructor from the school. I think the others knew her and would watch the kid. But 🤷
yea lol
That kid is like: "Hey, wait for me, my legs are only little". To top it all, there was a damn "FIRE ALARM" going off!!! ... What would it take to pick up your damn (probably only 2-year-old) kid and carry her out?
Was looking for this comment. 😳
@@Music-tg5is that's ok, she'll make another one!
Fucked up, right?
TWOSETVIOLION:The fire alarm have saved everybodys ears from viola.
We're everywhere !!!
了反取子名 gooooooold
I agree.
@@Nathan-tc7gj HECK YEAH WE ARE!
FYI - I hope all violists know that we actually love you guys, and viola jokes are not true reflections of our opinions.
That violist totally rocked it, & my ears were nothing but blessed by his playing.
2:05 the siren somehow added to the music. Kind of felt like a movie.
PoCanDo _ if only it harmonized with the song...
Hey, u know the music name pls?
@@potato_0326amazing grace
Some of these people in the comments don’t know how the life of a musician is. We continue playing no matter the situation.
That was literally drilled into me from day one
Most of you can evaluate and play too.
As for the pianist that's messed up her instructor wanted her to continue. Is the recital more important to her than the safety of her student and the audience?
I be WinWining sad and depressed so we don’t care
whatd you do to hyunjin?
I love that in a bar setting.... And the band played on
Scariest thing is how casually everyone responds to what they must have heard too many times as a false alarm.
Should not we evacuate immediately after hearing an alarm?
I think its a combination of people being like probably a false alarm and being in state of confusion, yes a alarm goes off but where to now? Is the nearest exit even safe?
Kevin Li Once you start, you have to commit, enen if you are on fire
Honestly, if it's a Concert Band/Orchestra/Symphony, it's the conductor's choice to end the performance and actually evacuate the performers. The audience, probably were following the players, since they weren't leaving it might have been okay for them.
@@lukeluke1798 Fuck the conductor, if a fire alarm goes off I'm leaving even if I'm the soloist. Any respectable conductor would have immediately ended the performance and directed people safely off-stage.
Fire alarm goes off.
Keeps playing, crowd stays seated.
Good job.
#1
It's okay I'll keep playing my teacher said so, it's just another Tornado I mean what's the worst that can happen, we get sucked out of the roof and die but let me keep playing just a little more
🤣🤣🤣🤣
John OzLocks hahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahhahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahhaahhahahahaahhahahahahaahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaahahahhahahahahàhahaha
Sucked out the roof 😂
@@video1248 it's true hey
@@nailpolishinhale lol
Number 5, nothing better than a fire alarm to go along with the song.
Number 4, the band goes on, ish
Number 3, the band also goes on, ish
Number 2, I thought it was a drill, but I was wrong, that could have been bad, but it wasnt, horray
Number 1, the alarm was right in sync with the note she played, loved it.
At 2:08 --she should have transposed it up a 4th and played in the key of the siren. That would have been funny.
The last one was the most chill reaction to a fire alarm I have ever seen
1:38 bruh that’s one of my favorite parts of any song I’ve ever played in wind ensemble, I’d be so upset if it got ruined lol
Jeez; don't mess with a tornado siren! Stop playing!
Griwhoolda
Teacher wtf . Keep playing . Well fack you there is tornado .
"And kiss all the fame goodbye? *NEVER* ! Well, over all your dead bodies..."
Getting musicians to stop while performing is nigh impossible, my teacher once told me that,”it doesn’t matter if everything around you is falling apart, or your audience is being murdered, your music needs to continue going because it will be the last thing they hear
@@ryanguerra2024 If you stop playing and do something like a sensible person, then it might not be the last thing they hear....DUH
@@mysterygirl30011 Become someone in this space before saying such things. We'll stop if we need to evacuate. We don't hold on that much.
When I was in high school ('63-'65) there would be random fire drills once in a while during the day.
I was in a concert band rehearsal when it went off.
Our director told us to leave our instruments on our chair and walk carefully out.
We were on the 3rd floor, long walk down and when the drill was over, all 100 of us plus who ever else was assigned to that stairwell had the long walk back up.
When we resumed the rehearsal some how my clarinet wouldn't play. I couldn't blow through and at that time I had a brandnew pro horn.......I couldn't figure out why it wasn't working.
When I attempted to swab it out my swab wouldn't go through.
My band director had placed a dime between my barrel and the end of the top joint so no air could get through!
VERY FUNNY.....ha, ha.
He was always pulling stuff like that. He had a Doctorate from Julliard on clarinet. During that period we had a nationally known band. We marched through the '64 New York World's Fair as the Honor Band on Wisconsin Day, three Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parades, three Rose Bowl Parades, the Washington Cherry Blossom Festival, and several Walt Disney World Electric Light Parades through the grounds.
The senior 1st Chair clarinet player graduated from Julliard with a Doctorate on Clarinet and has been the professor of clarinet at the University of North Carolina-Chapple Hill for the past forty years performing all over the world.
Another senior also went to Julliard on trumpet. Others studied music at various other colleges.
My sister won a full tuition scholarship to the Eastman School of Music on harp.
She was the harp faculty at the University of Denver, first call union harpist and played with the Denver Symphony Orchestra.
I don't think there were any concert interrupted performances as far as I knew.
Chris K when you mentioned 63-65 I thought you meant measures lol. Cool story!
The same sort of thing happened during our Halloween concert, while we were playing "Ghostbusters." The fire alarm went off and no one really knew if it was part of our show or an actual fire alarm.
An adult and a child need to be taught that when a alarm is activated you react to it and exit the building or area. DO NOT ASSUME IT IS A FALSE ALARM. Shame on all that don't!!!💨
pipesmoker its not that, it’s that as musicians, they’re trained to keep playing no matter what. For example in the titanic the band kept playing until the boat was completely submerged and they fell off, just like these people would. Sadly however, they must evacuate
Well you aren't a musician
Amy except I am :/ I’ve been playing piano for 3 years and am currently being classically trained. I’ve also been playing my school instrument for 4 years now and am in a division 1 finalist band. Even if I wasn’t what difference would that make? It’s still something you get taught even in middle school bands. That’s like telling someone that told you that you have the right to remain silent while being arrested or taken to custody, “well, you aren’t a police officer”.
@@goldennebula5013 I congratulate you on being classically trained. In addition to that there are times when one must act irresponsibly and react to a potential life threatening situation. This is for your safety as well as others who you may need to help if they do not react to a potential danger.
We need to carry on if something happens as that would mean we would stop to a phone ringing or a person collapsing. Unfortunately that means we cant stop at any immediate distraction such as a fire alarm. If a member of staff tells everyone to evacuate, then we take our instruments as they are irreplaceable and cost us our entire livelihoods. It’s just how things are.
1:03 Unconcerned mother marching off and leaving her kid to catch up, it's a good job the rest of the people didn't panic to get out.
The third building in the video brings back so many memories to me. It almost made me tear up.
MAC
Like how the last person wanted to stop playing but the piano girl just continued playing with a dead Pokerface like nothing in the world was going to stop her 😂 that’s the spirit
Was in a production of Don Giovanni (with a modern staging) the opening scene already had flashing police lights, but on the last show the fire alarm started going off during the scene. Because the audience thought it was part of the new production, they stayed in their seats while the soprano and tenor were singing, who then stopped and waved while the stage manager got on the speaker to tell people to evacuate. The audience evacuated, meanwhile, the cast and orchestra stayed in costume downstairs, alarm still going off, waiting for the all clear. After about 10 minutes the alarm stopped, the audience returned and the opera resumed
My junior year Christmas concert someone pulled the fire alarm as all the chiors were about to go onstage. So we just sang the last song together outside among the audience. I think it was one if the best performances of my high school career.
LOL, the best comment for Aurora Mendez @ the end... He nailed it! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
i like to imagine all of these musicians just playing as the building around them crumbles to pieces as they just keep going, barely audible
As a musician we are told to keep going no matter what, so this isn't far from reality lol
Tornado sirens went off in the middle of a musical I was in. That was back when they were set off by county so nothing happened near us.
What amazes me is how everyone just looks around to see what's going on and if the person next to them gets up and leaves the building (for fire). When that alarm goes off you get out as fast as you can. I've experienced this in a print shop where I worked, when a fire drill one week turned out to be a real fire the next week. Guys were working an the roof with a blow torch putting on new roofing felt and the roof caught fire and within minutes it went up like a tinderbox. As you may know a print shop is full of ink and paper, highly flammable items. With the place filling up with smoke and flames starting to come in from the roof, everyone just stood around to see what was going to happen. And who's shouting at everyone to get out fast? Well that was me as I quickly got to the front door. That one in ten, or even a hundred false alarms can turn out to be the real thing.
Oh don’t worry it’s just a tornado that could kill you just keep going
The show must go on is what my band says 😂
Yes but phone ringing during performance and clap in the middle of the performance ... are the worst at least for me
Omg listen to the alarm!! Coming from a musician (sax for 10 years, vocalist for 15). If everything is fine, you'll just pick up where you left off. If everything ISN'T fine, you'll be glad you, oh I don't know.... *listened to the alarm*
0:24 A performance that set the room on fire! LOL
I't amazing how they all HEAR THE ALARM and just stay there _wondering_ if they should move or not. In my work place we have alarm drills for fire and tornado and the safety people get really pissed off and disappointed when people don't get out of the building when fire or down to the basement when tornado fast enough.
As a parent, I am so upset at that teacher for telling her to ignore a tornado siren. Not only did that risk her safety in this instance, but it teaches her that 'adults ignore those things so I will too'. Great example.
The performances were just that 🔥 that the alarms had to go off
Imagine being a tornado and not being able to hear good nice music because every time you get close everybody hast to run away ;(
She was playing amazing grace to herself as the tornado approached
3:26 Will, The Real Slim Shady please stand up?
I repeat will, The Real Slim Shady please stand up?
We're gonna have a problem here.
What's wrong with these people?! As soon as I hear an alarm I'm
" 💃💨💨💨💨"
Alarms: YOU ARE ALL GOING TO DIE!
People: but but but music...
The tornado one was so scary lmao
Some of y'all just don't get 1- the musicians mentality of "whatever you do don't stop playing" and 2- the midwesterners mentality of "oh it's just a tornado siren. It's fine."
That's a good husband right there! He was like "no hunny, don't tell your student to keep playing. We have to go NOW."
Well, I have been a volunteers at an annual international classical concert festival in the UK for the past 18 years. We had our share of fire alarms, and I can tell you, at the first tone of the fire alarm, the performance stops and the audience is evacuated ! It is utterly incomprehensible how these kids and adults continue to play and keep sitting in their seats as if nothing happens. Very unprofessional venue staff.
It’s a high school band there isn’t “venue staff” it’s the high school theater
Well the first one was lit so
Btw as a musicians we play till the death 😂
like on the Titanic
Tornado sirens are no joke. You have seconds to get to safety. Thank God for His amazing grace that they were not all harmed.
Don’t know if anyone ever recorded it but a few years ago my school and a few others performed the premiere of a piece called the elements with the BBC singers, which ended with loud exclamations of “Fire! Fire!” as a rousing finale. Well anyway, just as that was happening the fire alarm went off 😂😂
I can see the reaction on the ladies faces as the evacuation announcement came on 3:32
Huh im lucky that its hella rare to have a tornado in C. America
I was in one of 5 bands performing in a high school, fortunately we were on and out first. The show runner had a fog machine going the whole time and around the time the third band was out, sure enough the fog set the fire alarm off. Last time he tried that.
thats the most emotional tornado siren ever :*(
2:09 ... is it bad if I preferred the tornado siren to the recital?
Well, I cant bash you on an opinion, but......yeah
It's shocking how many people just keep sitting there, not batting an eyelid while a deafening alarm goes off. What happened to your survival instincts? If I'm hearing a fire alarm, I'm hauling my ass out of building ASAP, no matter what!
Sometimes a fire alarm is set off to warn against an active shooter and so maybe some of them stayed seated because of that idk, but the tornado one yeah deffo get out of there!
It’s a musician thing... we’re taught from day 1 to play through as long as possible. Even if we’re the last ones in a room.
Most musicians are accustomed to playing through distractions, and there are plenty of false alarms, or things they have ways of being accustomed to. Tornado warnings? I got them all the time. I’ve lost track of how many items I woke up at 2am from an alert on my phone and just went back to bed
The tornado alarm during the violin piece just sounds something from Godspeed You! Black Emperor
I love how the guy casually paused, bowed and slowly proceeded to leave the building when there is a possible FIRE in the building
Imagine Haydn's "Fire" symphony (#59) interrupted by such an alarm.
I think the alarm in the same key as the piece made them continue for a bit ahaha it was so awesome
3:12 lol the alarm when you pass by the prison or in Fort Zancudo in GTA 5
the last one...i must say the alarm fit the song hahah wow that was all a good performance. Pity it must stop
I like how the sirens are in perfect tune!
A fire alarm went off in the middle of my middle school's orchestra concert, turns my friend's little brother pulled it lmao
this is how we are supposed to evacuate in school but we know everybody would give in to panic
The music was so fire the alarms were triggered.
Fire alarm:
Once people were talking so the conductor stopped us and turned around and WENT OFF
In the first clip, the pianist looked so shy
I know the last girl 😮 She lived here in Chile some years ago. Good to see her again!
Number 4 is like me when I'm practising - I will finish this piece before I answer the phone! Although maybe the band didn't hear the alarm!
Personally, depending on the situation, I would just ignore it and keep playing. My university is made out of brick.
@@joeylawn36111 Ah, my country doesn't really get tornadoes. The odd twister pulls off a roof.
You are an ASS. Learn something in that University......
"Oh, just ignore that tornado alarm and keep playing." . . . Right next to that giant bay window.
fire alarm saved the christmas concert.
#1 " *You are so hot!* "...the fire alarm got turned on. 🤣
Kudos to the man who made that comment.
3:11 The siren takes over seamlessly from the violin.
That last one, it actually sounded like it was part of the music.
A fire alarm was pulled when we performed for my school. We had to wait outside in 5°F weather for about 20 minutes. Luckily, it was just a toddler who pulled the red shiny enticing fire alarm. I have no idea what its parent was doing though.
What really sucks is that we never got another chance to perform that music. 2 months of learning 3 4-8 minute peices... It sucked lmao
The fire alarm sounded so real on the first clip, I thought my dorm was going through a fire drill! O.o
I think during my junior year of high school, the fire alarm was pulled by some parent volunteers putting some decorations away lol. I think we were also playing Sleigh Ride ironically.
that first fire alarm just wanted to duet
Fire alarm: hey uh.. there's a fire!!!
Band: PLAY ON!!
Our church has a public prayer time during our service. I'm a volunteer fireman, and while I was praying once, my phone app went off loudly with a fire call. Needless to say, I got very distracted. I didn't hear anybody laugh, but I'm sure there was some smirking going on.
One time I was at a music camp where the fire alarms were malfunctioning and in one day they went or 5 or 7 times!
The one with the tornado alarm looks like a scene out of a movie.
*Maybe the performance was that LIT*
It doesn’t seem like the alarms are alarming anyone
Anyone else not like how they tell you what’s going to happen? I like to be surprised
The viola playing was so bad, ling ling burned down the place.
XXMB4 4EnderYT Ling ling probably took him already...
Venus Barth Its true that the viola player could have practiced more but I don't hate people for playing poorly ... he tried, that's what counts
Ling Ling Loving you Ling Ling. You are totally right !
No ling ling just burned the viola
XXMB4,
Now THAT'S very "inside" and obscure!!!
Brett and Eddy have a large following, but the chances running into one of you on a random site is special.
My sister played with the Denver Symphony Orchestra, was the harp faculty at the University of Denver and the first call union harpist. Her husband has a Doctorate on cello from Northwestern University and recently retired from playing for 34years with the Denver Symphony Orchestra and 25years with the Colorado Central City Opera Orchestra (an annual seasonal summer gig).
I'm retired from forty years of teaching with my clarinet/sax studio.
Small world...........
If he were quick with a joke, he should've said..."Well, when you're on fire, you're really on fire"
Amazed she could still play through the siren!!
Honestly when the fire alarm was going off they didnt seem too concerned the first time.
The same happened to Joyce DiDonato at Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires
2:13 reminds of Key & Peele: *KEEP DANCING*
I like the comment to the violin player in the last one, "You are so hot!" She set off the fire alarm!! LOL!!
Quite telling of musicians’ way of life how long everybody kept playing
Omg I thought the fire alarm one was happening in real life until I paused it lol
Reminds me of a scene from the movie Spinal Tap, when they were playing at the airbase.
Musicians: tie fo a relaxed concert
Natural disasters: hole my turbulence