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Thread ID: 150619 2022-04-25 06:50:00 Can't anyone play a bugle any more? Roscoe (6288) PC World Chat
Post ID Timestamp Content User
1485771 2022-04-25 06:50:00 I was very disappointed to hear them playing the Last Post at Anzac services around the country, on the news, on a trumpet. Is a bugle too difficult? It just does not sound the same. A bugle has a raw sound to it - the sound of a trumpet is too pure. So why a trumpet?

The only place I heard a bugle was on a story on the news about an Anzac parade in Sydney. So much better.
Roscoe (6288)
1485772 2022-04-26 00:20:00 Does it matter? The point is meant to be remembering the dead people....and which most forget - the horror and pointlessness of war. piroska (17583)
1485773 2022-04-26 00:38:00 Looking at battlefields:

"Behold the grass, all that remains of the dreams of warriors."

The book takes its title from a haiku poem by the great 17th century Japanese haiku poet, Matsuo Basho. In his poem, Basho looks at a field where a battle once took place. “Summer grasses,” he writes, are “all that remains / of great warriors' dreams.”
zqwerty (97)
1485774 2022-04-26 06:58:00 Does it matter?

You have said yourself that you are not musical so you would obviously not perceive the difference.

But apart from that difference, playing the last post on a bugle is traditional. Perhaps you don't care about tradition either?:waughh:
Roscoe (6288)
1485775 2022-04-26 07:20:00 You have said yourself that you are not musical so you would obviously not perceive the difference.

But apart from that difference, playing the last post on a bugle is traditional. Perhaps you don't care about tradition either?:waughh:

Mate, just chill. This was probably a bit more obnoxious than was necessary.
allblack (6574)
1485776 2022-04-26 07:58:00 Mate, just chill. This was probably a bit more obnoxious than was necessary.

So what you're saying is that you can't tell the difference and you don't care either. Oh well, we can't all be musical.:waughh:
Roscoe (6288)
1485777 2022-04-26 08:04:00 Roscoe...Roscoe...Roscoe.

And no, I'm not. I've never understood sheet music or been able to work out how a guitarist knows where to put his fingers.
allblack (6574)
1485778 2022-04-26 08:50:00 And no, I'm not . I've never understood sheet music or been able to work out how a guitarist knows where to put his fingers .

It's like any other skill that you master . If you had a musical upbringing you would know that, but as I said, we all can't be musical . You most probably have other skills that musicians do not have . And, of course, you need to be interested as well, which you obviously are not .

And so far as knowing where to put his fingers on the guitar - that is just something that you learn . It's not difficult . All you need is the motivation and the interest to learn .

But I hope that you at least enjoy music and that music is a small part of your life, otherwise it could be a rather dull existence .
Roscoe (6288)
1485779 2022-04-26 21:31:00 Perhaps you don't care about tradition either?:waughh:

Hah, probably.

Tradition is nothing but ancestral peer pressure.

Tradition is the living faith of those now dead.

In countries around the world, Human Rights Watch has documented how discriminatory elements of traditions and customs have impeded, rather than enhanced, people’s social, political, civil, cultural, and economic rights.

I could list a bunch of "traditions" but let's not get off the subject completely.
piroska (17583)
1485780 2022-04-26 21:42:00 Yes, get back to tradition, and play it on a trumpet

"The "Last Post" is either an A or a B♭ bugle call, primarily within British infantry and Australian infantry regiments, or a D or an E♭ cavalry trumpet call in British cavalry and Royal Regiment of Artillery (Royal Horse Artillery and . . . . . "

"The famous tune is usually played on a trumpet, cornet, or bugle,"

"Over the years, the piece has changed - not in the music but in the performance . Notes are held for longer, the pauses extended, the expression more mournful, so that it now lasts around 75 seconds, rather than the 45 seconds it used to take to mark the end of the day . And it has been infused by a mass of memories and memorials, so that what was once jaunty is now simply sorrowful .

OMG, so the last post has changed & evolved over the several hundred years .
So what is this "traditional" way . Do we go back to the 1700's and play it that way ?
1101 (13337)
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