Dear Sir, I don't how long it took you to transcribe this. I guess quite a while. Thank you. Thank you for the laugh with the anotations "jump side to side" and "prepare to engage honk". I cried laughing. You are my new hero.
Interpreting this piece seems quite hard, technically and musically. If you have the level, doing that without an explosive laugh is impossible. These guys are freaks, I love them!
Well, William Tell was actually a Swiss folk hero I believe. There's more to the William Tell overture than just the parts we are familiar with. And it's beautiful.
Oh man this unlocked a deep memory for me. Six years ago I was fortunate enough to be able to perform with this group, got a lesson from their tubist too. Was an incredible experience.
I'm a clarinetist and when my symphonic orchestra played William Tell, I did the glissando start at the fast part. Only one trombonist got it but he enjoyed it immensely :D
Can't stop rewatching this everytime it shows up in my feed. 🤣 Ever since, I couldn't unhear William Tell and Heidi's theme song together. It's such a cursed combination that oddly fits.
It's called Enharmonics, and most composers love it, despite it being one of the most god-awful things in music theory. But hey, at least it's not a double flat.
@@connorcmusician most often it’s done for no real reason other than it can be done. Too many accidentals and just covering the lines with them (like Washington post March), without good cause.
@@jamesblare475 Sooo, this is wrong. They are most often done for a few specific reasons. If the piece is traveling to a sharp key it will spell some notes as sharps instead of flats (for traveling to a flat key from a sharp key, vice versa). Also, it is used for chromatic lines as well, up is sharp down is flat. If you are traveling to a brighter key with an ascending line, you probably want to use sharps.
@@anakinskywalker70 That's fair. Mainly when I have to deal with enharmonics, it's in Sousa marches, where it's done for no particular reason and doesn't add much.
Thanks for posting this video. I had this group pop up in my Spotify recommended feed last year and I forgot to save them. After watching this video I searched up Mnozil Brass and recognized the songs I listened to last year!
The part PDFs are in the correct pitches, I just put this video into concert pitch for sake of simplicity. Corrections: Bars 7/8, the A in the voice line should be a middle C. Around bar 180 I'm pretty sure the trumpets were playing the descending passages with the trombone, it was just very quiet. Or maybe I was in fact just imagining it.
@@kuru9157 Depends. In symphony orchestras, trumpet players will typically use the trumpet in C. In concert bands and jazz bands, and when one initially learns the trumpet, we use the standard trumpet in Bb, which is a transposing instrument (not in concert pitch). In this video, all 3 trumpeters are playing Bb trumpets, and trumpet players don't always like transposing on sight (not that we can't), so it's usually nice to put the pitches of the trumpet staves in their respective keys to make for an easier reading/playing experience. This happens a lot with transcriptions for trumpet, so it's only mildly irritating :)
I have a fondness for this song. I arranged this piece for a 6 man marching bass drum line for percussion ensemble class in high school and got high marks for it.
If you have a bflat trumpet and wondering why it’s sounds wrong when you try to play along, it’s because at least for the trumpets the notes are two intervals lower then there supposed to be. So d# would be f natural and so on. Though assume the players might be using horns that are not b flat but I maybe wrong, a great transcription otherwise
My dumbass sitting here wondering why the second trombone keeps getting highlighted in the sheet music. It was the fifth time it happened that I realized it was the stage in the background shot and the sheet music was slightly transparent.
“Prepare to engage honk” is my favorite thing to have seen in sheet music so far
"Wanting to be heard"
'when the band director leaves the room'
Timestamp? I missed it
@@lcope2004 Tuba part, just after 3:00
@@-NGC-6302- thanks! That's really funny!
as a Trumpet player, i can confirm trumpet players would 100% be singing completely different songs at random intervals
Great work but could you do the first couple bars? I’m having trouble with pronouncing the farm sounds
It takes years to master that art form!
@@antoniolopes8776 It's truly the supreme farm of art...
I'll show myself the way out.
Not sure but the first few notes are e, i, e, i and o
@@UKMikey New notes unlocked: i and o
Dear Sir,
I don't how long it took you to transcribe this. I guess quite a while.
Thank you. Thank you for the laugh with the anotations "jump side to side" and "prepare to engage honk". I cried laughing.
You are my new hero.
Seen them live, it's one of the biggest musical slaps I've taken in all my life. And one of the funniest things I've ever seen too
1:27 that transition to "Wien bleibt Wien" will always be my favourite.
Can we appreciate how in tune and majestic those chords are at the start?!
they are incredibly good!
Interpreting this piece seems quite hard, technically and musically. If you have the level, doing that without an explosive laugh is impossible. These guys are freaks, I love them!
“Wanting to be heard”
This was implied on all my music as a marching band trombonist trying to play in a concert setting
The crisp technique that they have to play those notes really refreshes me
Thanks to Mnozil Brass I can no longer hear William Tell in my head without in transitioning into Heidi
same here... 😁
Well, William Tell was actually a Swiss folk hero I believe. There's more to the William Tell overture than just the parts we are familiar with. And it's beautiful.
It's the German dubs of the Heidi anime.
Oh man this unlocked a deep memory for me. Six years ago I was fortunate enough to be able to perform with this group, got a lesson from their tubist too. Was an incredible experience.
I love how chaotic the ending is
I'm a clarinetist and when my symphonic orchestra played William Tell, I did the glissando start at the fast part.
Only one trombonist got it but he enjoyed it immensely :D
Why do the first 8 measures sound so warm and familiar?
It's the first bars of the "Heidi" Theme which is also referenced later in the piece.
@@skypentraico4322 Yea he is correct, but in the original Heidi theme (german version) It's much faster
@@Tsungeru Ah. It's beautiful and I'm probably gonna use it as an inspiration for a composition I'm working on, lol
@@skypentraico4322 ruclips.net/video/Pu7MjOd0o0Y/видео.html
Heidi
It sounds to me like the tuba is playing up an octave at 3:07, but everything else is great!!
yeah, there are many mistakes
As a German, the incorrect capitalization of the lyrics looks so wrong. But an amazing transcription, nonetheless!
the important Thing here is, that he captured the Music instead of the Notes, in the Transcript
(Gefühl über Notation, sogesagt)
Their singing is so perfectly, beautifully in tune. It's a bit surprising.
Can't stop rewatching this everytime it shows up in my feed. 🤣
Ever since, I couldn't unhear William Tell and Heidi's theme song together. It's such a cursed combination that oddly fits.
The fact that A# and Bb are used interchangeably, often in measures right after each other, is annoying to the composer in me.
It's called Enharmonics, and most composers love it, despite it being one of the most god-awful things in music theory. But hey, at least it's not a double flat.
@@jamesblare475 enharmonics have to be justified, these are not mostly
@@connorcmusician most often it’s done for no real reason other than it can be done. Too many accidentals and just covering the lines with them (like Washington post March), without good cause.
@@jamesblare475 Sooo, this is wrong. They are most often done for a few specific reasons. If the piece is traveling to a sharp key it will spell some notes as sharps instead of flats (for traveling to a flat key from a sharp key, vice versa). Also, it is used for chromatic lines as well, up is sharp down is flat. If you are traveling to a brighter key with an ascending line, you probably want to use sharps.
@@anakinskywalker70 That's fair. Mainly when I have to deal with enharmonics, it's in Sousa marches, where it's done for no particular reason and doesn't add much.
I love Mnozil brass, so glad to see them covered!
It's always funny to see "Holladrio" transcribed by english speakers. "Oh la he hooo" is a pretty good aproximation.
lmao
"when the band director leaves the room" - descends into chaos: ACCURATE
Me : it's impossible to have several songs stuck in my head
This vid : hold my brass
Incredible as always! I love that organized chaotic sound at the end. 💯🔥
oh my god, the bald trumpetplayer was my teacher for several years!!! I never imagined to see him here, thanks!!
Thanks for posting this video. I had this group pop up in my Spotify recommended feed last year and I forgot to save them. After watching this video I searched up Mnozil Brass and recognized the songs I listened to last year!
Do mnozil at the movies!!!!
Oh God YES!!!!
Now he has 😎
There are some inaccuracies, especially in the tuba part, but overall it's a good job!
The part PDFs are in the correct pitches, I just put this video into concert pitch for sake of simplicity.
Corrections:
Bars 7/8, the A in the voice line should be a middle C.
Around bar 180 I'm pretty sure the trumpets were playing the descending passages with the trombone, it was just very quiet. Or maybe I was in fact just imagining it.
ruclips.net/video/Kt8_u_i-anQ/видео.html
you don't know how happy you would make me if you did a transcription of this piece :)
At measure 180, the tuba part should be one octave up and the last not of the phrase drops an octave.
“WHY ISNT HE TEXTING ME BACK?? he must be out there cheating…”
Thank you very much bro!!!! You are so awesome!
putting trumpet music in concert pitch is a cardinal sin :)
Do trumpets transpose?
@@kuru9157 Depends. In symphony orchestras, trumpet players will typically use the trumpet in C. In concert bands and jazz bands, and when one initially learns the trumpet, we use the standard trumpet in Bb, which is a transposing instrument (not in concert pitch). In this video, all 3 trumpeters are playing Bb trumpets, and trumpet players don't always like transposing on sight (not that we can't), so it's usually nice to put the pitches of the trumpet staves in their respective keys to make for an easier reading/playing experience. This happens a lot with transcriptions for trumpet, so it's only mildly irritating :)
Unpopular opinion: non-concert pitch reading is a vestige from a bygone century and makes no sense today.
@@DrChrisF it's ok to be wrong
It's a full score it's in concert pitch for the readers benefit
If you have the chance to see then live i really recommend it they are insane
The ending had me laughing so hard
1:07 lol I think third trumpet forgot he had to play for a few seconds
That opening was fantastic!
So precious work ! Thanks
Muito bom!!! 😱😍😍
You are my hero! Thank you for this!!
The vocals sound so good with the brass, dear lord
Holy Crap, 40k subs gained in like 2 weeks, someone is gonna have a million in 2-3 months!!!
I have just done my very own arrangement of this, although had I known of this beauty I may have reconsidered and chosen something else...
Amazing work!
But it's "Ho-La-Di-O" where "Di" is pronounced like "Dee" ;)
Be shure to get your Jodeldiplom!
I have a fondness for this song. I arranged this piece for a 6 man marching bass drum line for percussion ensemble class in high school and got high marks for it.
Those first two "O la he oh!"s were freaking glorious
BRAVISSIMI W LE TROMBE! ! ! 👍👍👍💖
Well done my good Sir :)
VERY hard to play,BUT…fun and easy to listen to!
超絶技巧。服部さんも喜んではる。
Great Arrangement!!! Love it!
Amazing!!!!!
Omg triple tong much i couldn't
It is music, not science. I like that.
amazing good superrrrrrr !
Your salary will be calculated from amount of notes in the score.... Tuba player: d'oh!
I've seen this skit live. It's pretty cool.
Lol, to be able to legit sing AND play that well... Must be nice...
Didnt know the Whitakers were such good musicians🤯
Imagine one of them goes “Oh Hi Mark” in the intro randomly
Einmal mnozil live sehen und sterben...
Masterful.
1:16 in the FP measure some are still playing the quick rhythm, thats missing in the transcription
Its a trill. But yes, still missing from the score
There's a few more little things that are incorrect, but it's better than any transcription I would ever be able to make. 😉
amateur
“When the band teacher leaves the room”. Lmao.
that's insane!😅
I was at a concert about 10 years ago.
凄い!!🎶✨
100% kraut activity
I'd like this if it was more accurate. I appreciate the effort though. Keep on keeping on
Great! Transcript blue of Thomas Gansch, please
Wow playing it so fast is such a hard thing to do...!
The singing part reminds me a bit of Mariachi singers
This is why i play the baritone
👏👏👏👏
How does my dude double tongue that freaking Fast?!!
Thank you so much
If you have a bflat trumpet and wondering why it’s sounds wrong when you try to play along, it’s because at least for the trumpets the notes are two intervals lower then there supposed to be. So d# would be f natural and so on. Though assume the players might be using horns that are not b flat but I maybe wrong, a great transcription otherwise
Could you transcribe their Blue performance?
Its like every chapter of tom and jerry plays one after the other
Awesome!!
Hi ho, Silver!
classical mixing :D
Thanks a lot
Next with Mozart and Beethoven
Spike Jones meets PDQ Bach
This is the Eastern European version of small furry animals in a cave by purple floydo
Ouch.... Calling Austrians Eastern Europeans could possibly end up like it started. Some "Headless" Acting...
Love heidi
えぐすぎ
Great!
My dumbass sitting here wondering why the second trombone keeps getting highlighted in the sheet music. It was the fifth time it happened that I realized it was the stage in the background shot and the sheet music was slightly transparent.
I'd say a german would transcribe the words for bars 3 and 7 as "Holadio!"
This is a real life music shitpost
Needs more cowbell
Looks like a german version of les luthiers
I don’t know the cowbell part, please include it
Captain Obvious hat leider sehr viele Fehler schon bei erster Durchsicht gefunden. Schade. Auch, wenn die Arbeit ehrenwert ist... gut wäre sie geiler!
I hate this book, had to read it in school. The worst part is that it isnt the worst one, there are still 3 more to come 😑
The ?? just before "brauchst" are either "bada-" or "baba-" and are filler-syllables to add notes but no real words
M45: Why Fnat for some instruments but E# for Tpt. 2? Shouldn't they all be E#?
does anyone know where the part starting at 2:57 come from? it sounds familiar but i don’t know if it’s from another piece/song or what lmao
That's España Cañí, a classic paso doble piece.
Would you be able to transcribe the At The Movies bit they do?