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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 | ||
| 1485781 | 2022-04-26 22:56:00 | Like this.... youtu.be Ken |
kenj (9738) | ||
| 1485782 | 2022-04-26 23:26:00 | www.youtube.com | Zippity (58) | ||
| 1485783 | 2022-04-27 20:12:00 | www.youtube.com Thank you, Zippity. That was more like it.:clap |
Roscoe (6288) | ||
| 1485784 | 2022-04-28 05:58:00 | I two had noticed the absense of bugles, which are a fairly primitive instrument with no keys. I noticed only cornets being used but I can't pretend to have seen all parades on ANZAC day. In another age (pre 1961) I played a cornet, and later a flugel horn in various brass bands. it seems a pity that the old style bugle seems to be out of favour. When I did my CMT training at Burnham Camp, all bugle calls were canned! | Brucem (8688) | ||
| 1485785 | 2022-04-28 10:39:00 | The bugle calls are no longer required in the modern army. It has been found with modern teaching methods, intensive training sessions and annual refresher camps, it is possible to teach almost 76.375% of soldiers to tell the time. Thus it is now possible for NCOs (and a few officers) to order soldiers to wake up, eat, sleep or have a break without requiring a musical alarm for each occasion. Sailors and Pavlov's dogs still respond only to bells ;) |
R2x1 (4628) | ||
| 1485786 | 2022-04-29 02:48:00 | Brucem Linton Camp CMT Reveille and Last Post were taped versions, but they still had personnel follow-ups for the sleepy heads. lurking. |
Lurking (218) | ||
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