Field Musicians of the Civil War
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Musicians provided music during the the Civil War. Fifers drummers and buglers provided the beat to everyday life of the soldier. for information on bugles, see www.tapsbugler.com
Musicians provided music during the the Civil War. Fifers drummers and buglers provided the beat to everyday life of the soldier. for information on bugles, see www.tapsbugler.com
Пікірлер: 135
150 years later, we're looking these young men in the eye through the photos. Who would have thought of that back then.
My relatives were both Union and Confederate soldiers. Thanks for the tribute. It helps us all remember remember the importance that history has to give us.
I am glad to see a tribute to these men, some of whom were very young boys.
I’m holding my greatest grandfather’s fife right now. I live in Switzerland these days, it came with me to play.
i had nothing to do with this war but god i love that music
@seabass62yearsago
4 жыл бұрын
Obviously, you’re not American you don’t like the music
@lilporky8565
3 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure you like it *because* you had nothing to do with the war.
@michaellaudenslagerurbanex4597
3 жыл бұрын
Me also
@michaellaudenslagerurbanex4597
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks you to all VETS for your service
@kandymann2103
3 жыл бұрын
@@michaellaudenslagerurbanex4597 yes thank you
my great great grandmother was born during the civil war in 1863 on my mom's side of the family. and my third great grandfather was with the 17th Illinois cavalry regiment
I heard this playing when I was at the civil war field the other day it was about 9pm at night
That's an eerie sound, isn't it? I can only imagine what a whole full-strength brigade marching by must have sounded like.
Love the drummer boys. Imagine having drummer boys during, I don’t know, World War 1 or 2 or something like that
Again a nice video with great music. Thanks a lot.
I love marching to these in Civil War Re-enactments. Especially with the sounds of the boots and canteens.
The pre-war militia and volunteer companies often had a small band or drum line, which became the regimental band when the companies were assembled into single battalion "regiments."The bands often sent small ensembles ahead of the marching columns to play by the side of the road and keep the step lively.
@Dd-xt8hc
2 жыл бұрын
Love it
My 2nd Great GrandFather was a 17yr old Civil War Musician 3rd class with 18th Regiment Massachusetts Infantry. Company F & S. Joseph H Mantius spelled wrongly as Manteus (born 1845-1900) survived the war. His male relatives all went in too. Enlisted 08 January 1861.
@lonnieclemens8028
8 жыл бұрын
+Linda Whalen Hi Linda, thank you for sharing this bit of history with us. It makes the Civil War more of a reality to us.
@lonnieclemens8028
8 жыл бұрын
+Linda Whalen Hi Linda, thank you for sharing this bit of history with us. It makes the Civil War more of a reality to us.
@harolynallison6876
8 жыл бұрын
Linda that is something to be very proud of. both sides fought for what they believed in and died for that cause. all both north and south were victors as far as i see. to both north and south, thank you for your sacrifices, may you rest well with the Lord. refer to the Book of Psalms chapter, 144, this is the soldiers and to fight for ones country God does approve
@michaellaudenslagerurbanex4597
3 жыл бұрын
My great great grandfather fought he was in the pennsylvania platoon
My great great grand uncle started as 14 year old drummer boy in a NY regiment andromeda’s the war as an 18 year old captain! They promoted you fast if you stayed alive long enough in that war, that’s nuts!
LONG LIVE THE UNION "E Pluribus Unum"
Imagine them playing this sort of music nowadays in the middle east
the drummers provided the beat that pushed and inspired men... it beat strong and hard, face to face, rifle forward
My 4th great grandfather was a fifer in the 34th Iowa infantry. This means a lot to me 🖤
My great-great, grandfather was in the 126th, (sister regiment to the 111th). He was a drummer boy. Captured at Harper's Ferry within a month after mustering. Sent to Camp Douglas for a year and eventually discharged at Union Mills about a year later. He lost his hearing due to a disease he acquired at the Camp.
Those were brave boys who inspired even more bravery, ill never forget them..
Some guy: Gets a golf ball sized hole in his torso Musicians: 🎵🎶🕺🥁🕺🎶🎵
war is hell in any age
@seabass62yearsago
4 жыл бұрын
No shit 🤦♂️
i finally found this composition! i was looking this for so loong
Thanks for the good Music. Thumbs Up
Excellent !
True...it's always kindof neat when you get a photo like that. We've been reenacting and such since '94--as well as collecting books and so forth. My mom has a collection of ferrotypes going up until the Gay 90s, including so photographer's mistakes and some "goofing around" shots...really makes you look at the subjects as people rather than museum pieces.
My 3rd great grandfather was listed as a musician for the civil war. I’d love to see a photo of him and know what instrument he played. Thanks for the video.
Beautiful music, I can picture my ancestors gettin ready to kick some ass gettin pumped up to this music
I appreciate that you started this off with a cavalry call.
my great great great great great uncle was a civil war sargent and a mission in the civil war
Doing well... Busy time of the year but looking forward to next year!
Hey!! I love this video! I am a civil war musician myself, and I bought a civil war musicians shell, its so cool, i got it because when I saw it on this video i was like, THIS IS A MUST HAVE!!
An interesting series of photos! There are quite a few 16ish looking boys, but most of them appeared to be in their 20's or 30's to me. Nice. Thanks for posting!
Great!!!!!!
Its sad because a lot of them lost their lives
Damn this ost slaps
yanky doodle was a song from 1776 war which may have been used during the civil war but did not originate in that war
bluebelly07, i was a boy drummer in the 15th battalion the parachute regiment pipe band in 1964. by luck i didnt have to go to war at that time, did later on though, when i was a regular soldier. not very nice. also you mentioned "smile" in that situation if you didnt smile, you would cry.
How I remember being in the Parris Island, S.C. Marine Field Music School in 1954. WE also comprised the Parris Island Drum and Bugle Corps. How proud we were when we marched down the streets or played in the weekly Boot Camp Graduations. We have come a long way from then......schools have made so many of our children dummies and worthless. Shame
Civil War surgeon Dr. Max Rossvally described a double amputation he performed on a wounded drummer boy after the battle of Gettysburg. His book was made into a movie "The Drummer Boy" in 2017. Dr. Rossvally's book can be read online here: www.middletownbiblechurch.org/helpseek/coulson.pdf
Yes blutkehlchen, I realize this. That's why they always seem a little distant to us in this age. To have caught any soldiers laughing was a rare thing. And both sets of my grandparents had grim faces in their wedding pictures, the one taken in 1913, the other around the same time. And pardon ME for knowing no German at all. I'm figuring "kommentar posten" means "post your comment", right?
while probably not barefooted, you are correct. they often wore leather skins on their feet
god bless america
@worldof00t I saw you asked about Yankee Doodle and got your response. Just in case you are not from the USA, it started to be popular in the American Revolution, but was adopted by the North in the Civil War. My best to you.
(sorry... had to break the post up because it was too long) I'm sure the boys would have an adult in command who would have posed with them in the group shots, and the older adults might have been nostalgia pictures after the war, but still, the numbers surprised me.
Drummers and Buglers are from the Federal City Brass Band
It is strange how every soldier of the time was convinced he must put on a serious face when taking a picture. An unwritten rule strictly adhered to. So universal in practice that it does make them seem remote. Except for those drummers.
@thomasgriffin5340
4 жыл бұрын
toobyu2859 2 minutes to expose photographs on glass plates before celluloid film was invented. If you moved in the slightest the picture came out blurry
Maybe some of the images have both "active" musicians and "alums" who had switched over but sat in for the photo op anyway? And/Or maybe some weren't "able" soldiers for some unapparent reason? I don't know, but it's interesting to ponder.
Isn't that version of Yankee Doodle a War of 1812 arrangement? Would it have been played the same in the 1860s if it is? Exposure times were long...easier not to smile than to hold one for a minute or so. VERY interesting photo that. Excellent video...thanks!
How come there's nothing with the song "Gathering Clouds" ? I love that song.
that true and also it's the best way to due with insults.
Trust me, there's much more you'd rather not see and hear than the stuff you want to :P
epic
Newer research underway using a variety of official and unofficial records (pension records, regimental histories etc,), both North and South, now place the casualties at well over 800,000 by including those who died after their discharge etc as the result of wounds, disease or injuries suffered while in the service.
haha, I know... I spend an awful lot of time looking at images from the era in the pursuit of accurate ideas for clothing & accessories. This was a little off track, but combined the two interests... cw reenacting and f&d. It's not hard to do, really, just a few columns for the items your looking for and tally marks as you scan the images. Doesn't take long once you're used to it.
they did have a good sense of humor back then
At 2:20 to 2:28 or so is a sight I have never seen in any civil War photo. The row of drummers are laughing about something off camera. I have hardly viewed any photos of any soldier smiling, let alone laughing as they are here. It must have been a candid shot that caught them off guard. Makes them seem more like people we would know instead of the usual grim visages displayed in most of the pictures of the time.
Notice how the fife song has the characteristic flat sound common to earlier eras of music...or maybe that's just me.
Yankee Doodle (Fife and Drums)
@mynamearekid They did! I have lots of film in color!
@rebelstang, it is Deo Vindice, not dio vindice.
GOD they were just kids...war is hell for sure. Love the music though
where can i download these songs, i need them for a project
@worldof00t Fife and drum version of Yankee Dootle
Nice tribute. That war killed more Americans than all American wars combined. George Vreeland Hill
where can i get an creative commons download of this song
2nd song, whats it normally called to?
What is the name of the bugle song at the beginning?
Whats the third song?
whats the good drums at 1:43
yes nice !! 5***** i know more of these musics & and each time I'm impressed to note that sonorities really teh same those of the French military musics during our Revolution and our 1st Empire in France between 1789 & 1815 And even the tactics of the battles also ^^ since the 50 years which separate the wars from the 1st Empire and your Civil War had almost not evolved on the tactical level (only weapons had evolved of course)
what the name of song at 0:33
what the name of the song at 1:45
what is the name of the drum-only song at 1:54? It would be really helpful if u could responds ASAP because I would like to use it in a Civil War Project due in two days... And if at all posible do you know of any mp3 downloads for that song (free perferably)
Are there any recordings of just the drummers with no bugles or fifes? Nothing against the latter instruments, but I love to hear the drums by themselves.
Barney!!!
Mr.Jari, this is Taylor Brownfield, who are the people that are playing in the background music (the buglers and drummers.) Are they a corps?
Does anyone else feel like the first few parts of the video sounds like the old Barney song?
Drummer boys were usually first shot 🇺🇸💜🇺🇸
@anibalcesarnishizk2205
5 жыл бұрын
J Burnett They shall remain forever young.
what´s the name at 0:33 i have been looking ofr it long time ago...plis
@shikada82
8 жыл бұрын
Yankee doodle
@davidpe9916
8 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@nizeprize0078
6 жыл бұрын
Barney!!
Haha, true...one the few times you see people actually smiling in these ferrotypes. lol
GOD BLESS, DIXIE! May She Rise Up! Out of The Ashes! Dio Vindice!
very nice video. Deo Vindice, God bless Dixie!
Name of the sound at 2:51 please ?
@ThePapo1980
4 жыл бұрын
Thomas Shelby bugle and drums
BOP
That's what I've always heard and read, but when I look closely at these photos, I see a surprising number of men who had left 15 behind some time ago... Of those I could reasonably identify: 60 are "boys" (15 or under, although quite a few look like late teens to me) 31 are "men" (20s - 30s) 2 seem like more "mature" men... 40s? I'm not counting non-musician soldiers One group had what looked like 15 adult musicians and 7 boys.
anyone who understands this and knows the song plz tell me "buuuum bum buuuum tsh tsh buuuum bum buuuum tsh tsh
00:35 what is music of name ?
@somevideos1633
6 жыл бұрын
-KadirMutluVEVO- yankee doodlee
What is the song at 0:40. Thanks guys
@kodyremer5864
10 жыл бұрын
I think its Yankee doodle.
@cameronherman-music3309
9 жыл бұрын
Its Yankee Doodle Dandy, military style edit.
Who is playing?
Are these all Union tunes?
dang! 1:20 looks like 3 kids
0:32
wikipedia?That is highly unlikeley if wiki said it
Honors confederate vets
Gostei muito 🙎🏿♂️🚩 PT 🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺👮🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺
Funny.
Yankee Doodle
DIXIE LAND IS CURSED! I SHALL NEVER STEP UPON IT!
@harponercam
3 жыл бұрын
Studying the bridge at Old Plank way....
the drumline doesnt sound clean at all