Changing of the Guards then and now - British Berlin Tattoo 1981

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
  • Changing the Guards between the 18th Century Regiment of Grenadiers and the 20th Century Grenadier Guards. Shown at British Berlin Tattoo 1981. Recording from German TV.

Комментарии • 15

  • @Goldenblitzer
    @Goldenblitzer 3 года назад +11

    what a bizzare display, very interesting though!

    • @TokenChineseGuy
      @TokenChineseGuy 2 года назад +3

      I can't tell if the 18th century band is playing British Grenadiers, Let Erin Remember or some bizarre mix of the two.

  • @michatvberlin
    @michatvberlin 4 месяца назад

    Was amazing i saw as a kid Tattoo 1986 1988 and 1992

  • @PetrovFed
    @PetrovFed 3 года назад +4

    Thank you!!!

  • @patriot4786
    @patriot4786 3 года назад +2

    Awesome!!

  • @nirkabelwireless8486
    @nirkabelwireless8486 10 месяцев назад +1

    what's the song the old guard playing at 6:20?

  • @jacobkeppler1984
    @jacobkeppler1984 Год назад

    Who was the drum major leading regimental band corps of drums grenadier guards 💂🇬🇧

  • @jacobkeppler1984
    @jacobkeppler1984 2 года назад +1

    First regiment of foot guards changing the guard 💂🇬🇧

  • @indrajitgupta3280
    @indrajitgupta3280 Год назад

    Utterly fascinating to see the older formation of guards (still designated the regiment of grenadiers) march off to that rhythm, so emphatically not the modern 120 bpm quick march introduced by Napoleonic armies.
    Since the first regiment of grenadiers was so designated in 1815, after their performance at the Battle of Waterloo, 56 years after the first regiment in the commonwealth to be designated a grenadier regiment, they would certainly have heard, regularly, the French 120 bpm. That would have seemed to shatter the illusion, so they were seen marching off to the older, traditional 90 bpm. The illusion remains, but only to drill and march Nazis who might have expected the bearskin after 1815, along with the grenadier designation, and the 'new'' marching beat.
    Very nicely imagined programme, but for the jarring note of the crowds laughing when they needed to shut up if they were unfamiliar with a certain way of doing things.

  • @billathighwoods4289
    @billathighwoods4289 Год назад

    Excellent ex 2nd Btn Scots Guards 1960s

  • @tepidbudgie
    @tepidbudgie 8 месяцев назад

    2:57 👌

  • @sidpheasant7585
    @sidpheasant7585 Год назад

    Indeed, you tried twice, and improved, but the proper term is "Changing the Guard" (or even Guard-Changing)

  • @FrenzyPlaysMinecraft
    @FrenzyPlaysMinecraft Год назад

    Why was there laughing at 4:18

    • @sidpheasant7585
      @sidpheasant7585 Год назад

      The video is so old that we can't see too much, but probably it was the particular "relaxed" position the soldiers took up when they were allowed, by order, to "take their ease"...

    • @indrajitgupta3280
      @indrajitgupta3280 Год назад +1

      @@sidpheasant7585 I think it was an audience not used to this command, and reacting to what might have seemed to them, hearing it for the first time, as risible. Uncalled for, but excusable for a foreign audience that might have been used to an entirely different set of commands. That is, if it did know about command sets.