The Band of The Royal Irish Regiment - Garryowen
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- Опубликовано: 21 июн 2013
- The Band of the Royal Irish Regiment plays the Regimental March of the Ulster Defence Regiment 'Garryowen' at Armed Forces Day, Carrickfergus 2013
FAUGH A BALLAGH!! Видеоклипы
Garryowen; a strong Military Tradition.
It’s a special tune because it highlights the Irish heritage of the Anglo nations 🏴🇺🇸🇦🇺
The best rendition I have ever heard. Bravo!
A fine ole Irish march always sends a chill so love the Irish and the Scots & Welsh for we all together make up the finest best nation in the world the United Kingdom I may be English but I am proud and willing always to stand with my fellow Celtic brothers for we have the greatest nation in the world and the most beautiful and fairest
Don''t forget the Manx.
You don't travel much, do you.
Ah, the memories! Tis the regimental march of the 7th United States Cavalry. "Garryowen, sir! The Seventh, First!" Still brings chills up my spine. I served in 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry, 1977-1980, Schweinfurt, West Germany.
Superb! I didn't know that the American military used this song,
It is the regimental march of the North Irish horse,
The Scottish and north Irish Yeomanry and
The ulster defence regiment
Garryowen is also the regimental march of the 69th Infantry Regiment, The Fighting 69th. The famous Irish regiment from America.
Interesting, I didnt know that, thanks for info
Peter Mcmullan Not to mention the US 7th Cavalry (From George Armstrong Custer onward).
Geoff Roberts You took it from the British lol as if Americans are even original.
finalfrontier001 I'd say it was more of a gift from the Irish. The Irish brought over here in the 19th century. General Custer heard some of his Irish soldiers singing it, liked the song and adopted it for the regiment.
It's not American or British although Ireland was under British rule at the time ( The north still is).
The song is from Limerick. Garryowen is a district of Limerick and it was a drinking song. The Army adopted it. The Duke of Wellington was Irish and was particularly fond of it.
Class. Faugh a Ballagh!
Just wanna point this out: the tunes being played were the old regimental marches from which the Royal Irish Regiment was descended from. They are:
0:00 & 1:32 Rory O' Moore - The Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers (Once the 27th Regiment of Foot)
0:42 St Patrick's Day - One of the marches for the Royal Irish Fusiliers (Once the 87th Regiment of Foot), this is also the march for the Irish Guards
1:04 Garry Owen - The second march for the Royal Irish Fusiliers
I would also like to point out the Rifle Green uniforms were inherited from the Royal Ulster Rifles (Once the 83rd Regiment of Foot, and the Royal Irish Rifles).
Garryowen -- the Light Brigade played it before their charge at Balaclava. And Custer's 7th Cavalry played it as they rode into Little Bighorn. I'm not sure I'd want to play that before a battle. Tempting fate -- if you know what I mean. (But it's a grand song, so it is.)
During the civil war Custer would have his personal band play Yankee doodle to signal a charge. My relative charged many times with Custer and was mortally wounded at Yellow Tavern. his soldiers said they would charge Hell itself for Custer.
@@theuniongamer4552 Apparently, George Custer was a lot like Lord Nelson in his ability to inspire loyalty in men.
brilliant
"Put an Irishman on the spit and you'll always find another Irishman to turn him." George Bernard Shaw (and some rando Redskin in 2019...)
"The Irish are a fair people: they never speak well of one another' said Dr. Samuel Johnson. Of course that doesn't apply to GBS.
Up the field Mayo and not a Kerryman in sight.
My mother's decedents were Kerrygoats! Pi%% off!
Ce'ad mile fail'te Dh'un na Gall
Could you translate that please?
@@petethechin a hundred thousand welcomes Co Donegal. Is a rough translation. BunCranncha
Strange mixed up rendition ...
Well, it's not ONLY Garry Owen (which roughly starts at 1:08), it's the old Regimental Marches for the Royal Irish Rangers (became Royal Irish Regiment in 1992). The tune playing before Garry Owen is St. Patrick's Day, known for being the march of the Irish Guards, and at least one of the marches before that one is Rory O' Moore.
Here's vid of all of them, from 0:00 to 2:26:
ruclips.net/video/kzwyhdXRMQY/видео.html
A great Irish tune it’s a shame that Custer hijacked it
Nay. He made it even more celebrated a tune -- so much so that its name would later be incorporated into the Seventh Cavalry regimental badge!
Ughhhhh they killed it its a us song now they killed it this black man would rather hear dixie they would probably kill that to. Thank God
You might want to brush up on the concept of punctuation. You sound like Joe Biden.
No such thing as a royal irish regiment....
Well, U clicked the link and probably saw them on the screen, so there is.
@@petethechin Of course there damned well is!