Our school orchestra played this. Considering the oldest player was 13 I reckon we did a pretty good job. At the age of 63 I'm still in touch with some of those musicians. Its not a piece you forget in a hurry. I was a flautist in those days.
I just want to share something. This song played on my way home from the hospital on the day my son was born almost two years ago. It perfectly encapsulates the emotion I felt that day and it still moves me to tears whenever I hear it. The wonder of fatherhood, life and love is magnified by this work of divine art.
A few years ago I did a 250km bike ride. This came on my playlist as I was getting to the top of the last real mountain and it was raining heavily. Truly one of the most magical moments of my life.
In my high school orchestra we'd play this at the very end of the senior graduation ceremonies. Finally after 4 years I was able to walk the graduation and hear this song as I exited high school and took my first steps into the unknown.
Flat-out the single most _majestic_ piece of music ever written. Others may be more bombastic, more powerful, or more thrilling, but for the sheer essence of MAJESTY, nothing touches this.
We played Pictures at an Exhibition my first season in the marching band, so it always has a special place in my heart. I distinctly remember shedding a couple of tears while playing this one, and thinking "I can't believe us clumsy, goofy middle and high school kids are actually making these sounds". I am clinging hard to that association right now, and trying not to wonder what will happen to Kiev... 💔
Actually, it was Harley Race when he was king and used that piece for his entrance. Later, it was Haku in 1988, then Hacksaw Jim Duggan in 1989, Macho Man Randy Savage (using his own theme), and finally Jerry Lawler in 1993.
This is indeed a phenomenal piece. If I'm not mistaken, I think it was Ravel who orchestrated Pictures which was composed by Mussorgsky for solo piano. Perhaps Rimsky-Korsakov also orchestrated it but I believe it is Ravel's that is the more famous and more often performed.
I can literally see the gates opening (the size of Imperial entrance in Aya Sofia or San Giovanni in Laterano) and imperial/royal entourage entering. Majestic music!
After listening to this breathtaking performance , I might have a dream of Mussorgsky walking in the crowds of somecity in Russia , talking to Ravel , I am a person who believes in reincarnation and the immortality of the soul I was certainly seeing Mussorgsky and Ravel in the crowds of somecity in Mother Russia , I give Mussorgsky and Ravel a great admiration From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🇯🇵
Great Gate of Kiev is tremendously like the depth and poignancy of O How A Rose Eer Bloometh. I first heard it on Leonard Bernsteins Symphony one Saturday evening in 1966. For 56 years, the melody never lost its majesty to me.
It’s Currently December 2024, I’m in the hospital eating Cheetos and drinking coke, ready to change my life-never wanting to be back at this point ever again! I have chronic pancreatitis and it has seemingly stolen everything from me, but I’m on the up and up after listening to this!!!
I was teaching assistant to Lelia Haller, director of the Loyola Ballet in the 1970s. She choreographed this piece for a class and I had the privilege of dancing it. She was the choreographer for the New Orleans Opera Ballet and had studied at the Paris Opera and danced for a year with Diagelev. This piece should be played to demonstrate support for the people of Ukraine and Kyiv.
When my high school music Director died just before Graduation. My Principal asked me to take the Baton conduct the school orchestra for the Graduation ceremony. I wasn't scheduled to graduate until the next year. But I mixed this Musica piece with Pomp and Circumstancewith The French March Militar for the Graduation Entrance March. It became a regional high school hit. Because I had a little freshman kid named Jack on the Symbols going overboard and the kettle drums shocking the audience. RIP Mrs. Lottie Tobin of L.I.C. High School Music Department.
As a 2nd generation Russian-American, age 76, Mussorgsky's "Great Gate" has always been my True North. The dynamic music demonstrates the Russian paradox of sensitivity, as in the arts and literature.....contrasted with majesty and sheer power, bordering on savagery.
@@grahamsmith4831 Hi Graham, "Are you related to the famous Czech composer, Bedrich Smetana" ? .....Many people have asked. Smetana is widely regarded as the father of Czech music. He composed "The Fatherland," "The Bartered Bride," and many other beautiful works. Our only similarity with him is our name. His name is pronounced phonetically: "SMEH-tuh-nah". We pronounce our name, phonetically, as: smeh-TAH-nuh." He was Czech, highly educated, lived in Prague, and was a Roman Catholic. My ancestors were Russian ("Rusnak"), poor, uneducated, & Russian Orthodox Christians (as am I). My ancestors lived in a rural region called Galicia in the Carpathian Mountains, an area which today is at the intersection of western Ukraine, the Slovak Republic, and southern Poland. My grandfathers' tools weren't pianos & manuscripts, but picks, shovels,& strong backs. They worked in the coal mines & rubber mills in the USA after migrating from "The Old Country" to America in the early 1900s seeking a better life.
@@garysmetana7040 Hi Gary!! Thanks a lot for getting back to me - appreciated. Wow! That is SO interesting (your family background and history). I have long had a fondness for (most) things Russian (except vodka!!! lol!!!). And especially the composers. Never mind the name - we are ALL related through beautiful music eh! Enjoy!! God Bless!
“The following contest, is a Table match. The only way to win this match, is to place your opponent through a table. On the way to the ring, from Memphis Tennessee, weighing 245 pounds, Jerry The King Lawler!” - Howard Finkel
"He maybe be a King, but Lawler is a snake in the grass if you think he is going fight fair. And take what I said with a grain of salt, Ladies and Gentlemen." - Jim Ross
Just to provide a bit of a historical perspective. The great gates of Kyiv was a design /sketch made by Hartmann as part of a contest to built a gate to honor the Russian tzar Alexander II after surviving an assassination attempt. Mussorgsky was a Russian composer and composed the piece after seeing the painting. The great gate of Kyiv doesn't exist, it was never built. The golden gate does exist and was built in the 11th century. This piece of wonderful music has nothing to do with the people of Ukraine and everything with an ode of Mussorgsky to his friend Hartmann.
You are absolutely right! Reading other comments, I started to feel sick. I hate it when people mix politics with art. In addition, they are pathological ignoramuses.
Yes, every student taking music appreciation knows about Borodin and Hartman's painting. Afterwards a gate was built in Kiev in honor of Borodin's masterpiece.
@@moriahjacobs6131 You have mixed up, this music was written by Mussorgsky. The real name of this piece of music is "Bogatyr Gate". The Hartman Gate project was never implemented. There are no monuments or gates dedicated to Borodin or Mussorgsky in Kiev. Both composers lived in St. Petersburg and have never been to Kiev.
@@ОльгаГофман-о8у the Golden Gates was built after Mussourgsky' s death. There is also a graffiti door in the city that is called the great gate in commemoration. I was traveling to Ukraine this year, but that's on hold...
My college wind ensemble performed this for our annual outdoor concert, and they got the brass section from the 2nd band to act as an antiphonal chorus. Needless to say, we went balls to the wall on this one.
I was introduced to this piece in Music Appreciation class and it brings me to tears! Still love it to this day! I always wanted to make a video of the 1980 USA Hockey team winning the gold medal against USSR to this song! Not as a slight but just because it “seemed to fit” the accomplishment musically! A triumph of music and sport. What a WONDERFUL piece of music!
Mussorgsky's created this as a tribute to his late artist friend. Ravel orchestrated the piano piece. I have yet to hear the Rimsky Korsikoff version. I love this rendition so much!
My dear friend Roy who used to work for the Pennywise thrift store here in Houston, Texas and I both agreed that we wanted this fantastic piece played at our funerals.
I've got a memmory from my childhood that just come back to me i was one of wise men in a activiry play at my school when i was 10 and knowing how much of a Wrestling fan i was to here this song play as i came out with my two other friends Jamie And Peter
I played this 40 years ago in orchestra, and can still remember what my movements were. I played violin.
Me too and it was one of my favorites-Hey Putin Russians are cool too.
shop99er I played this last year
I'm playing this now I play bass
Our school orchestra played this. Considering the oldest player was 13 I reckon we did a pretty good job. At the age of 63 I'm still in touch with some of those musicians. Its not a piece you forget in a hurry. I was a flautist in those days.
shop99er I'll play it in Milan on 8th April... wish me good luck!😄😄
I just want to share something. This song played on my way home from the hospital on the day my son was born almost two years ago. It perfectly encapsulates the emotion I felt that day and it still moves me to tears whenever I hear it. The wonder of fatherhood, life and love is magnified by this work of divine art.
Hope you've stopped crying bro
@@David-hk1stwhen my first child was born, i cried for 20 minutes non stop. I could not stop the owerwhelming emotion.
A few years ago I did a 250km bike ride. This came on my playlist as I was getting to the top of the last real mountain and it was raining heavily. Truly one of the most magical moments of my life.
Still awesome after all these years😊😊
In my high school orchestra we'd play this at the very end of the senior graduation ceremonies. Finally after 4 years I was able to walk the graduation and hear this song as I exited high school and took my first steps into the unknown.
Pretty sure it was Pomp and Circumstance and not The Great Gate of Kiev. Pomp and Circumstance is known as the graduation song.
@@greekmonkey9790 hahahahah There you go but it would have been interesting hahahaha
They had both pomp and circumstance and this at ours.
We did play pomp and circumstance on repeat while everyone grabbed their diplomas but we'd cap off the graduations with this song.
This song is much better than Pomp and Circumstance. Pomp and Circumstance is a stupid song.
Flat-out the single most _majestic_ piece of music ever written. Others may be more bombastic, more powerful, or more thrilling, but for the sheer essence of MAJESTY, nothing touches this.
@Voracious Reader everyone knows it's an opinion mate
Yes, this is as perfect a piece of music as ever was written, and Ravel's orchestration is brilliant.
I played 2nd chair trombone with the Melbourne (FL) High School bands from '64-'67. This fabulous work still stirs my heart like it did then.
@@steveberry515 Yes and given the darkness that is coming for the city this composition has become more majestic and poignant .
Gong, cymbals, bass drum, tympani, chimes… a percussionist's dream. One of the greatest orchestral pieces. Extra fortissimo everyone!
I can't help crying every time I listen to it, it's so epic, beautiful and powerful
Check out Emerson Lake and Palmer's version. Greg Lake wrote lyrics for that version. It is so powerful and epic.
and check out the version from Isao Tomita. When I hear it, I get goosebumps and almost start crying because it's so sensitive.
We played Pictures at an Exhibition my first season in the marching band, so it always has a special place in my heart. I distinctly remember shedding a couple of tears while playing this one, and thinking "I can't believe us clumsy, goofy middle and high school kids are actually making these sounds". I am clinging hard to that association right now, and trying not to wonder what will happen to Kiev... 💔
А что было с Белградом, Багдадом, Газой, ты задавался вопросом, тупая русофобская тварь?
This music is so powerful, that even Jerry 'The King' Lawler had to make this his intro when he was on WWF.
before him, King Harley Race
Actually, it was Harley Race when he was king and used that piece for his entrance. Later, it was Haku in 1988, then Hacksaw Jim Duggan in 1989, Macho Man Randy Savage (using his own theme), and finally Jerry Lawler in 1993.
It was looped strangely at one part, though. Having said that, it was done very well.
@@Rlotpir1972 you sure know your WWF history.
yeah, that's not a reason why this music is so powerful.
Jerry the king of nothing is a fake and he's not even fun.
Thank you Mussorgsky for composing this magnificent piece and TNO devs for introducing me to it.
Thank also Ravel for orchestating it
Can you tell the name of that song ?
Tno Devs 🍆🍆🍆
When does it play?(what country/event)
@@HeavyOfficialfromTF2 it plays when Komi under Stalina reunites russia
we never use words like majestic or breathtaking in our everyday conversation. until we hear this, or see places like Alaska.
T. Alaska resident
What a majestic/timid piece of music.The peace. The grandiosity. The means of modern transmission: ELP. Heard it in '72. Loved it since.
It's splendid grandiosity indeed. Ironic that this was composed by someone who's first name is Modest.
"Ten Four" on EMERSON LAKE AND PALMER ❗🎶 😊
Three cheers for ELP!
When you have once gained sight, it is impossible to feign bllindness.
I'm in tears... one of the greatest finale ever
Hope you've stopped crying bro
@@David-hk1stHope you become capable of the full human experience bro
I hope they can play this again in peace open air in Kiev
Do you think putin sleeps to this
yes awesome tune
They will
Only in occupied ukraine
Btw. Let's show support by using the Ukrainian spelling "Kyiv".
lady of steel
I played this 2 years ago in my youth orchestra. I was co-concert master and the entire Pictures At An Exhibition was so fun.
fuck I wish I got to play pictures at an exhibition at my school when we played this song, I would've loved playing that trumpet solo.
40% comments : This great masterpiece brings tears to my eyes...
60% comments :
J E R R Y. T H E. K I N G L A W L E R !!!
10% comments:
TNO Stalina Komi moment.
@@maxlin200 Me: Adoring fan of Cliff.
Harley Race and Haku for me!!
The real succession of the WWF crown:
•King. Harley. Race
•King Kaku
•Macho King
•Hacksaw King Duggan
...that's it. No more king-wannabes
1% Michael Jackson history tour
This master piece still thrills me everytime I hear it.
Why is that chromatic line so gorgeous?!?! I’ve never heard horns project that much!!! 4:25
They’re pushing their souls through their horns.
Everyone with ears and emotions can tell when the brass are spending their souls on their sound.
I’ll always associate this with Jerry Lawler. The greatest ever announcer/wrestler alive today.
2:42 always gives me chills.
Currently, Jerry "The King" Lawler still uses this theme song.
Played this with my amateur orchestra last night. Absolutely love this piece.
"Nice to see you back, Banana Nose, because I hate seeing your front!" -Jerry "the King" Lawler
"The One thing that hadn't gotten smaller was that big mouth of yours" -Lance Russell
The Adoring fan at Dive Rock, anyone??????
MR. Bucket 2006 memories
Yesss
YES
Holy fuck i didnt realize this was the song but YESSS
Yes sirrr
When you heard this in the late 90s, you knew commentary was gonna slap-
this song is so beautiful and sweet and it comforts me ❤❤
It is not a song. Songs have words, this has none. It’s an orchestral piece.
@@englishrose47shut up
ウクライナに平和を
When the music comes back in at 3:15 just...chills, man
"Once you have gained sight, it's impossible to feel blindness"
- Svetlana Stalina
tno reference
The Iron Lady Triumphs!
This is indeed a phenomenal piece. If I'm not mistaken, I think it was Ravel who orchestrated Pictures which was composed by Mussorgsky for solo piano. Perhaps Rimsky-Korsakov also orchestrated it but I believe it is Ravel's that is the more famous and more often performed.
bcing75 you're right
Wow I never knew that
Yup
Exquisite....
The piano version is inordinately challenging.
I remember playing this when I was a freshman! The memories
I went to a concert today.Memories too! i love the tune.
TheHgcop were playing this in marching band.
I can literally see the gates opening (the size of Imperial entrance in Aya Sofia or San Giovanni in Laterano) and imperial/royal entourage entering. Majestic music!
Played this on tour in Cologne, it was fantastic!!
I walked down the aisle at my wedding to this
That's awesome
You deserve it, as you are The King Of Wrestling...
And marriages
After listening to this breathtaking performance ,
I might have a dream of Mussorgsky walking in the crowds of somecity in Russia , talking to Ravel ,
I am a person who believes in reincarnation and the immortality of the soul
I was certainly seeing Mussorgsky and Ravel in the crowds of somecity in Mother Russia ,
I give Mussorgsky and Ravel a great admiration
From Tokyo of the Land of the Rising Sun 🇯🇵
@Göran Ingvarsson
Thankyou so much to your wonderful and impressed comment
Please live well
I hope you are well
Everything will be fine 2022
Pertinent today.
Majestic and magnificent
Great Gate of Kiev is tremendously like the depth and poignancy of O How A Rose Eer Bloometh. I first heard it on Leonard Bernsteins Symphony one Saturday evening in 1966. For 56 years, the melody never lost its majesty to me.
"When you have once gained sight, it is impossible to feign blindness"
- Svetlana Stalina
Ah, another TNO fan 😌
Emerson, Lake & Palmer sent me here.... thanks, ELP!!
It’s Currently December 2024, I’m in the hospital eating Cheetos and drinking coke, ready to change my life-never wanting to be back at this point ever again! I have chronic pancreatitis and it has seemingly stolen everything from me, but I’m on the up and up after listening to this!!!
Another great example of Mussorgsky's genius. Listen to how majestic he makes the music sound at 3:14.
… and Ravel’s
I was teaching assistant to Lelia Haller, director of the Loyola Ballet in the 1970s. She choreographed this piece for a class and I had the privilege of dancing it. She was the choreographer for the New Orleans Opera Ballet and had studied at the Paris Opera and danced for a year with Diagelev. This piece should be played to demonstrate support for the people of Ukraine and Kyiv.
Fantastic poignant and moving
a truly awesome composition of music.
This is beautiful
Wholesome Stalina Komi moment
Based and CentristPilled
A genius, pure and simple...
The louder the better for this song 😊💯❤️🇦🇺
Goosebumps. Very few compositions do this to me.
I played the cymbals when the school orchestra played this 50 years ago when I was 14 and I really enjoyed it, especially the end.
THE QUEEN OF SWORDS
*THE* *IRON* *LADY* *OF* *RUSSIA*
When my high school music Director died just before Graduation. My Principal asked me to take the Baton conduct the school orchestra for the Graduation ceremony. I wasn't scheduled to graduate until the next year. But I mixed this Musica piece with Pomp and Circumstancewith The French March Militar for the Graduation Entrance March. It became a regional high school hit. Because I had a little freshman kid named Jack on the Symbols going overboard and the kettle drums shocking the audience.
RIP Mrs. Lottie Tobin of L.I.C. High School Music Department.
I’m playing this for my orchestra comp tomorrow
Just gets more and more epic. I haven't heard this for a while. Played it in my local schools' Orchestra and it gives me goosebumps every time.
The King!!
As a 2nd generation Russian-American, age 76, Mussorgsky's "Great Gate" has always been my True North. The dynamic music demonstrates the Russian paradox of sensitivity, as in the arts and literature.....contrasted with majesty and sheer power, bordering on savagery.
And you have the same name as another great Russian Composer!!!
@@grahamsmith4831 Hi Graham, "Are you related to the famous Czech composer, Bedrich Smetana" ? .....Many people have asked.
Smetana is widely regarded as the father of Czech music. He composed "The Fatherland," "The Bartered Bride," and many other beautiful works. Our only similarity with him is our name. His name is pronounced phonetically: "SMEH-tuh-nah". We pronounce our name, phonetically, as: smeh-TAH-nuh." He was Czech, highly educated, lived in Prague, and was a Roman Catholic. My ancestors were Russian ("Rusnak"), poor, uneducated, & Russian Orthodox Christians (as am I). My ancestors lived in a rural region called Galicia in the Carpathian Mountains, an area which today is at the intersection of western Ukraine, the Slovak Republic, and southern Poland. My grandfathers' tools weren't pianos & manuscripts, but picks, shovels,& strong backs. They worked in the coal mines & rubber mills in the USA after migrating from "The Old Country" to America in the early 1900s seeking a better life.
@@garysmetana7040 Hi Gary!! Thanks a lot for getting back to me - appreciated. Wow! That is SO interesting (your family background and history). I have long had a fondness for (most) things Russian (except vodka!!! lol!!!). And especially the composers. Never mind the name - we are ALL related through beautiful music eh! Enjoy!! God Bless!
From Memphis, Tennessee...
Absolutely Magnificent.
From Memphis Tennessee...Jerry The King Lawler!
I almost died of sheer exposure to music.
R.I.P. Adoring fan from oblivion
BY AZURA BY AZURA BY AZURA
Giulio Roberto Its the grand champion I can't believe it's you standing here next to me
Aw gee
I too played this in orchestra and still remember each up bow and down bow. Each run.
Worth sharing again in 2022
Jerry the King
Long live to the king Jerry Lawler
Jerry THE KINGGGG Lawlerrrr!
“The following contest, is a Table match. The only way to win this match, is to place your opponent through a table. On the way to the ring, from Memphis Tennessee, weighing 245 pounds, Jerry The King Lawler!” - Howard Finkel
"He maybe be a King, but Lawler is a snake in the grass if you think he is going fight fair. And take what I said with a grain of salt, Ladies and Gentlemen." - Jim Ross
"JR...I would agree with you but then we'd both be wrong!!". --Jerry Lawler
I’m playing this piece in orchestra currently and today we started working on this movement of the piece, absolutely fun to play :)
So majestic
I’ll always know this as Jerry the king Lawler
Just to provide a bit of a historical perspective. The great gates of Kyiv was a design /sketch made by Hartmann as part of a contest to built a gate to honor the Russian tzar Alexander II after surviving an assassination attempt. Mussorgsky was a Russian composer and composed the piece after seeing the painting. The great gate of Kyiv doesn't exist, it was never built. The golden gate does exist and was built in the 11th century. This piece of wonderful music has nothing to do with the people of Ukraine and everything with an ode of Mussorgsky to his friend Hartmann.
Correct.
You are absolutely right! Reading other comments, I started to feel sick. I hate it when people mix politics with art. In addition, they are pathological ignoramuses.
Yes, every student taking music appreciation knows about Borodin and Hartman's painting. Afterwards a gate was built in Kiev in honor of Borodin's masterpiece.
@@moriahjacobs6131 You have mixed up, this music was written by Mussorgsky. The real name of this piece of music is "Bogatyr Gate". The Hartman Gate project was never implemented. There are no monuments or gates dedicated to Borodin or Mussorgsky in Kiev. Both composers lived in St. Petersburg and have never been to Kiev.
@@ОльгаГофман-о8у the Golden Gates was built after Mussourgsky' s death. There is also a graffiti door in the city that is called the great gate in commemoration. I was traveling to Ukraine this year, but that's on hold...
This song was used not just by wwe but also by Michael Jackson during his history world tour
Was the reason, the song History got changed after the first pressing of the Album
One composition we played in concert band in HS. Always sticks in my head when I hear something related to it.
In the ring from Memphis, Tennessee weighing in at 243 lbs, Jerry "The King" Lawler!!
@tailspin37 John, I'm very glad you enjoy the channel and the music.
Magnificent!!!
Masterpiece
I’m the type of guy who walks around the house naked when no ones home and says ‘Alexa , play the great gates of Kiev!”....
I still remember this from music appreciation in college. Those giant wooden wheels turning. Unforgettable.
Doing so now!!! Lmaof
@@jasonpaul82 Great minds
Wish I was there..... 😀
1:34 I like it on how you can hear the main melody in the background while the strings have there own section.
I honor my brothers and sisters in Kiev/Kyiv tonight (2/6/22). Fighting tyranny. You are a in my hopes and prayers.
its interesting that different conductors can present this piece in such different ways.
Very relevant right now, as Russian troops are getting closer to Kyiv....
The World is watching, hoping their gates will stand this ruthless attack.
if and when they win against Russia, they should blare this in triumph
@@drizzlysquid1732 it could happen.
So. What's up? @@spmoran4703
I'll have this played when I'm being crowned emperor of the world.
My college wind ensemble performed this for our annual outdoor concert, and they got the brass section from the 2nd band to act as an antiphonal chorus. Needless to say, we went balls to the wall on this one.
This was my childhood song thanks to Animusic and I last night. Finally got to play it for 2nd Cornet. And it’s just as amazing.
Wonderful. Moving
I finally found the song that's part of Michael Jackson's "History" song.
And of course I found it during these times. :(
I was introduced to this piece in Music Appreciation class and it brings me to tears! Still love it to this day!
I always wanted to make a video of the 1980 USA Hockey team winning the gold medal against USSR to this song! Not as a slight but just because it “seemed to fit” the accomplishment musically! A triumph of music and sport. What a WONDERFUL piece of music!
hope you've stopped crying bro
Can’t stop thinking of this, much support for Ukraine
Ты тоже неонацист, как украинские террористы???
By Azura! By Azura! It's the Grand Champion! I can't believe it's you, standing here next to me!
I knew this from the classical music stations my mother listened to
Emerson, Lake and Palmer
And finally playing it at school n
4:28 NANI KORE?
xRAFAEL JOKERx OMG I’m surprised that Nani Kore is known by people overseas 4:32
NAAAAAANNNNNIIIIIIII KOOOOORRRREEEEE
oh god that is in fact nani kore..... gosh darn it.... this piece is ruined in my mind forever now
Please don’t deny credit to Ravel. Mussorgsky composed it for piano solo only. Ravel wrote the orchestration.
Ravel conposed this twenty after Borodin died. The composer sadly never got to hear this rendition of his piano masterpiece. I like both!
Mussorgsky's created this as a tribute to his late artist friend. Ravel orchestrated the piano piece. I have yet to hear the Rimsky Korsikoff version. I love this rendition so much!
Start at 3:15 and you will recognize the famous part.
My dear friend Roy who used to work for the Pennywise thrift store here in Houston, Texas and I both agreed that we wanted this fantastic piece played at our funerals.
I've got a memmory from my childhood that just come back to me i was one of wise men in a activiry play at my school when i was 10 and knowing how much of a Wrestling fan i was to here this song play as i came out with my two other friends Jamie And Peter