Wagakki Band Gobousei + Homura Reaction | The energy is on another level

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • Join Uncle Kevin, as he listens to wagakki band homura
    Performed by Waggakki Band
    I definitely recommend watching the original video without interruptions, here
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Комментарии • 13

  • @aethernity8270
    @aethernity8270 3 года назад +6

    They are the most badass looking band with great looks and instruments ❤️❤️

  • @_goliath2577
    @_goliath2577 2 года назад

    10Q (thank you) for the content.

  • @phoebeflagg2694
    @phoebeflagg2694 3 года назад +2

    Probably my most favorite video. Ever!

  • @DrAcula-os1nz
    @DrAcula-os1nz 3 года назад +2

    The instrument you were wondering about is called "Koto" originally from China. This is another version of homura. You may find as many as 6 different versions of it.
    Wagakki band consists of 8 people
    Yuko Suzuhana - vocals
    Machiya - guitar, vocals
    Beni Ninagawa - tsugaru shamisen (3 strings look like guitar / banjo)
    Kiyoshi Ibukuro - Koto (Japan's National Instrument)
    Asa - bass
    Daisuke Kaminaga - shakuhachi (Bamboo Flute)
    Wasabi - drums
    Kurona - wadaiko (Japanese Traditional Drums)
    Can recommend "Hotarubi" from Premium Symphonic Night Vol. 2

    • @aethernity8270
      @aethernity8270 3 года назад

      Well koto is Japanese instrument derived from the Chinese zheng

    • @ぴーのぴろしき
      @ぴーのぴろしき 3 года назад

      正確には琴は中国ではない

    • @DrAcula-os1nz
      @DrAcula-os1nz 3 года назад +1

      Sorry. The last thing I want to do is let China steal the koto from Japan.
      But the literature I read tells me that the instrument came from China around the 700s. originally as part of the court music gagaku. Over many centuries, a distinctive musical tradition developed for the instrument, the koto music (sokyoku 筝 曲), independent of the gagaku orchestra. Classical koto music today dates back to the 17th century. There is also a large selection of innovative contemporary koto music today. Koto is related to other East Asian long guitars, such as the Chinese guzheng, the Korean kayagum / gayageum and the Vietnamese long sitar đan trành.
      So this is not true? 😩

    • @DrAcula-os1nz
      @DrAcula-os1nz 3 года назад +1

      @@aethernity8270 This is from a Japanese website.
      Historians think the koto was born around the fifth to third century B.C. in China. Originally it had only 5 strings but increased to 12 strings and then to 13. It was the 13-string koto that was carried to Japan during the Nara period (710-794).

  • @keshanizm
    @keshanizm 3 года назад +1

    can you react to BABYMETAL

  • @user-dp6yb4fq1f
    @user-dp6yb4fq1f 3 года назад +1

    (⌒‐⌒)、(⌒‐⌒)、🎵🎵ありがとー😉👍🎶🎵