how these soldiers come into such skill is totally amazing to me. I'm born musician from family of musicians, but to watch these men is relatively mind-blowing because I began playing euphonium at about 10 and I knew much much music from age 3, so things like Holst or Sousa or whatever dumped in front of me was like duck swimming. My brother, tubist/ bassist, sister bassoonist, another sister, horn player, mother very skilled pianist, so my head an encyclopedia of music long before I held my instrument. For Gurkhas, it's all new and they have definitely one of best bands in world. They should do Band Week. They have the ability to compete with the best. They should train a bit with Isle of Wight Band because they are that good.
It's not that hard, it's how I learned trombone in a competitive marching band. Mind you, it takes 3 months or so of individual training, before being incorporated into the band itself. Say, start a group in September, and by May, you can have a unit competent enough to take to a competition field. Even faster for them, because they are training full time. The US military would never do it this way. You would have to pass 2 interviews, and 3 auditions, before even considered fit for training.
Why are the Bahuns and Chettris also included in the British Army? The general perception is that the brave and honest Gurkhas come exclusively from the Matwali communities, such as the Gurungs, Limbus, Rais, Tamangs, and Magars.
Why do we have matwali netas, teachers, actors, singers, artist etc these days. Evolve my frn, we r in 21st century. Once u r in uniform, u carry the legacy of all those people. In India, whoever officers command Gorkha Regiments despite their caste, they become Gorkha. I hope u understand my point. It is the merit what matters, not the reservation.
@@MrPrakashgurung Having Matwalis as politicians, teachers, or musicians is entirely different from serving in the British Army. Fields like politics, education, or the music industry don't demand the same level of bravery and honesty that the Gurkhas are known for, especially in politics where honesty is often lacking. I hope this clarifies my point.
Thank you brave men from Nepal - we Britons are not worthy of your service to our country. Thank you!
Well done...we luv you all.
how these soldiers come into such skill is totally amazing to me. I'm born musician from family of musicians, but to watch these men is relatively mind-blowing because I began playing euphonium at about 10 and I knew much much music from age 3, so things like Holst or Sousa or whatever dumped in front of me was like duck swimming. My brother, tubist/ bassist, sister bassoonist, another sister, horn player, mother very skilled pianist, so my head an encyclopedia of music long before I held my instrument. For Gurkhas, it's all new and they have definitely one of best bands in world. They should do Band Week. They have the ability to compete with the best. They should train a bit with Isle of Wight Band because they are that good.
It's not that hard, it's how I learned trombone in a competitive marching band. Mind you, it takes 3 months or so of individual training, before being incorporated into the band itself. Say, start a group in September, and by May, you can have a unit competent enough to take to a competition field. Even faster for them, because they are training full time. The US military would never do it this way. You would have to pass 2 interviews, and 3 auditions, before even considered fit for training.
Smiling assassins. These guys are so awesome, we are blessed to have our great Ghurka's on our side. God bless you all.
Got a picture of a fighting knife. They're special people 🎉
Why are the Bahuns and Chettris also included in the British Army? The general perception is that the brave and honest Gurkhas come exclusively from the Matwali communities, such as the Gurungs, Limbus, Rais, Tamangs, and Magars.
Why do we have matwali netas, teachers, actors, singers, artist etc these days. Evolve my frn, we r in 21st century. Once u r in uniform, u carry the legacy of all those people. In India, whoever officers command Gorkha Regiments despite their caste, they become Gorkha. I hope u understand my point. It is the merit what matters, not the reservation.
@@MrPrakashgurung Having Matwalis as politicians, teachers, or musicians is entirely different from serving in the British Army. Fields like politics, education, or the music industry don't demand the same level of bravery and honesty that the Gurkhas are known for, especially in politics where honesty is often lacking. I hope this clarifies my point.
@@John_Abdul_Shiva Jai ho.
@@John_Abdul_ShivaKhas, gurung and Magars were the real Gorkhali’s what are you talking about? 😂😂 I smell envy😂😂
Why do you keep repeating stories ?????????