Man, if there's one thing I gathered from this it's that those of us outside of Australia are often exposed to only a VERY limited range of what the didgeridoo can actually sound like. Sounds awesome!!
My mate is absolutely a prodigy at didgeridoo, he does this amazing thing where it sounds like the sound is running up and down the didgeridoo, and it astounds me every time just how varied and expressive didgeridoos can be, and how they crafted particular sounds over generations for just about every plant animal and phenomenon
I love didgeridoo. it's like force or voice of nature. BTW. I was born in Poland. I live in the US. I admire Aboriginal arts and many other type of native arts. Unfortunately many Aboriginal Australians are just drunks. I've see that with my own eyes. Very sad.
No. That would be very very bad. People have thought about it. Tried it. It’s no good. Actually this performance shows also that didgeridoo and western instruments are too different to sound good together, which is why they don’t really play at once but take turns to play.
I lived in Australia as a kid, and my family acquired a didgeridoo while we were there. Nearly 60 years later, I finally got to see how it is actually supposed to be played. Thank you.
@@brknvods well that’d be using a musical instrument to make artistic/pleasant sounds, aka using it right with a different technique then. i’m pretty sure no one believed the first bass slapped either but look where we are now.
Each note, nuance sound or phrasing from a didge represents an animal/item in Aboriginal culture, the sounds they make draws me in an makes my imagination wander to deserts, dingo's, roo's, snakes and all sorts. Beautiful sound from a beautiful culture!
If you take time to learn about things you too can know stuff about all sorts of cultures and peoples, invariably it comes in handy during general knowledge quizzes.
@@skarpbalt_2797 I am not nice to people who praise something greatly inferior just to be politically correct. People like that praise cave finger painting, but never praise say, The School of Athens which actually has deep meaning. Such clowns should be shamed!
Depends on which area it's from and the setting it's played in. In SE Australia, it's men only and only Aboriginal men, and only in formal ceremonies. The further north and west you go, the less it is traditionally restricted. However, those restrictions are becoming more common even up north, as a way of discouraging the sound and style being ripped off for new age music.
@@prestonang8216 I disagree. This should be accessible to everyone, as to preserve its legacy and pass it on to future generations to learn and be interested in.
I saw this guy, Will Barton, play the didge completely improvised with an Australian Irish folk band (Blackwater) at a pub in the Rocks in Sydney and it was honestly the most amazing thing I've ever heard. That thing can make an entire bar vibrate. He's a nice guy too.
The didge is that special sauce that takes a dish to the next level. Don't know why this hasn't been done before. Perfect for a haunting orchestral piece.
I just wish people would remember the rule. This is a males only instrument. In our culture there is very very strict ways of women's business and men's business. It is extremely offensive to our ancestors when hippie women attempt to play.
I would really love to know who in that distant time figured out that if i was to cut down this termite infested young tree or branch and knock all the remains from the centre and put wax around one end and then blow in it in a particular way then learn to breath in while still forcing vibrating air down this thing i think i would get a really cool sound . Makes you admire the sheer imaginative genius of it.
No, it would sound like utter shite. The reason why this performance is incredible is because the orchestra and the didgeridoo player obviously rehearsed and practiced together many times in order to prepare for such an epic collabo!
@@jonathanshirer2395 its an awesome instrument. thats why. i play it myself a bit. and and it can produce extraoridnary sounds. id rather ask why someone plays a bagpipe, that sounds horrible...
Amazing technique. Ive heard stories of aboriginals playing all day for celebrations. Pretty amazing when u think of all the benefits of meditation that come from focusing on your breathing that much. If u wanna try circular breathing get a straw and a cup with some water. Try to keep the bubbles going. U store some air in ur cheeks so u can push it out while u inhale through your nose... I promise you its easier said than done lol
@@TONGA09 Noice. Time to upgrade your instrument, maybe. If didgeridoo is for you, you'll wanna practice a "buzz" technique like a brass player would. Someone made me a cheap DIY didgeridoo out of some PVC pipe, but the mouthpiece end is too wide.. prolly only needs to be about an inch wide.
Oh come on u lot it was just some fun observation it is mad how one of the oldest instruments of all time is only rivalled by the Roland 303 its like your guarding the heritage of the didge or is that naughty to say too apart from my rant. Wow that was beautiful check out a band called tribal drift didgeridoo dance act championed by cyrung the man that got me playing as a teenager priority shift x
The digeridoo has so much potential in all facets of music. Ive heard it used brilliantly in electronic and rock as well. It just adds so much atmosphere to whichever piece it is used in.
@@aterack833 The didgeridoo is the musical equivalent of people farting in a special needs classroom. People who admire the didgeridoo have been deceived into racial false flattery.
Was in Western Australia Christmas of 2004 and was lucky enough to catch a saxophone and digeridoo duet on the radio. Made me truly feel like I was in Australia, and not just anywhere else, with all the generic northern hemisphere Christmas carols. Still a fond memory.
Conductor: "William, we really need some more of the "Buuurrrbööörrk Buuurr Brrrtz". Page 6, 3rd bar. Let's try again." Really wonder how sheet music for this piece looks like :D
No, William. That was too... “byuuuuuurrrrrr beeeebeeee nooooooor chi chichi” I need it to really “gooooooorrñ byiiiiiiitititititîïí kÿii at the crescendo.”
@@bengan-k4b Si, como que fueron a una selva y entraron a una ciudad prohibida y como siempre las autoridades llegaron y destruyeron su cultura o civilización entonces esta música entra precisamente cuando están pasando las escenas de la destrucción o de los ejércitos que están destruyendo esos patrimonios de la humanidad o patrimonios de esa civilización.
@@hwinangkoso ...yes, I know they're australian. Why is that a factor with my comment? I'm getting confused. i was just using "where's waldo" as a reference for the sort of thing the twoset fandom is doing; it's not like anyone's actually officially declared it to be "where's waldo/wally" So... I don't get why I'm being corrected on this?... lol I'm American- I'm just using the American terminology. So... I'm not sure what you're trying to tell me here? *shrug*
Me: I really have to go to bed now.... TH-cam: don't you wanna know what will happen when didgeridoo meets ochestra? Me: do i really have to know that...?? TH-cam: YOU SHOULD
WoW!!!! The intensity and beauty of the sound of the didgeridoo ALWAYS brings me to tears!! I had the opportunity long ago to try it...….and it takes A LOT of breath work and strengthening of the lungs. I remember almost passing out! Those who can play are AMAZING people with an amazing gift!!! Love the Australian aboriginal sounds!!!!!
William Barton is an incredible player - seeing him live gives me goosebumps! And even a in a 2013 youtube video he has the same effect! The didgeridoo is also an amazing, expressive and wonderfully versatile instrument
What I find really cool about this is that one guy with a didgeridoo can make nearly as complex a sound as the however-many-piece orchestra he's playing with. That is totally badass.
@@Idontcommentonvideos exactly, they are completely different instruments made for different forms of music too, put a Didgeridoo in the Tubist's hands and they can make it sound, but they couldn't straight away play it as a didge is traditionally played.
Although it may be unintentional, there is a really deep story playing out here. A culture of peoples who lived in a land for thousands of years all of a sudden are met with Europeans and forced to conform. The musical instruments are a symbol of Europe and its culture, yet the Didgeridoo is also a symbol of the Pacific Islands and its culture.
Pacific islanders are distinct from Australian aboriginals. You're probably more closely related to most pacific islanders than they are to Aboriginals. Also pacific islanders were highly successful explorers of the ocean while aboriginals couldn't even build simpke rafts.
@@MrCmon113 Aboriginies indeed made canoes, as for rafts why did they even need to waste effort and time perfecting a craft for sea faring? Australia is a massive island they had no need to migrate
@@dreamdiction we didn't need no help we never had sickness or disease or drink or drugs.Go do some research and history an remember White Australia has a black History an Always Was an Always Will Be AbORIGINAL Land honey
I was about to write the same, until I read your comment. This is truly awesome. Goosebumps all the way! I play in a funk band, and was thinking about including a didgeridoo
"You keep making those crazy sounds with your bong and you'll always have a spot in my orchestra." "It's a didgeridoo sir..." "I get it. You're high. Call it whatever you want. You're in..."
😂🤣😆💯TOO FUNNY I ALMOST DROPPED MY BONG JUST NOW LAUGHING SO HARD STAY SAFE AND HEALTHY AND GODS BLESSINGS ON YOUR HOUSEHOLD AND HEAVENS PANTRY SET YOUR TABLE ALWAYS HAVE A BLESSED WONDERFUL DAY 💯💜✌️✌️💜💯🙂
@@anari234 Not exactly, though Aboriginals definitely have African ancestors from long ago (65,000 BC). Here is the difference. When the Africans left Africa and went to Arabia and the Middle East, they there absorbed a numerous Neanderthal people and became genetically different from the Africans who stayed behind. Australoids are the descendants of the very first Out of Africa people, and all non-Africans have genetic Neanderthal heritage that is not found in Africans. Although Australoids look very similar to Africans, their hair is wavier and sometimes colored. Native Australians also have among the highest levels of Denisovan heritage on earth. Since both the Asian and European races come from the Australoid race, the Australoids can be said to be closer to the Africans. But the separation took place in 65,000 BC. And since they did absorb other forms of mankind that the Africans did not, the Australoids can be said to be a different race from the Africans. But I understand what he's feeling. I travelled to south Africa and I felt at home. (I'm Australian) we are like long lost cousins
There is no reason for this to make me tear up, except for the fact that it is beautifully primal. Things hit you weird in the midst of anxiety attacks.
I have a friend who used to play didgeridoo for the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Good to see other orchestras making use of Australian musical instruments.
+Nuno Baptista The guttural tones it makes are like the sounds of a waking beast. I really like instruments like this because their sound is of the real world, nature, European instruments make abstract, precise sounds, that are no doubt pretty but sound artificial do not reflect nature as truthfully.
+Nuno Baptista Agreed. It's probably in part due to your brain being trained to associate that sound through all the documentaries and tv you've seen throughout your life. :) Also...I find it really cool how certain musical sounds have stayed the same for thousands of years. My favorite sound the didgeridoo makes is that high pitched treble-y "growl" you hear at 3:20. What's really strange/cool is how similar it sounds to the acid squelch synth tones in electronic house music. You hear it a lot in dubstep as well. It sounds both ancient AND futuristic....
absotutley posilivly agreed. I'm a drummer and totally groove with the cowbells. Try this, Play Pink Floyd's "Welcome to the Machine" at its start and simultaneously play this Didgeridoo from 5:08 thru 5:48
Amazing.... just Wooow! I was in an other world. That, it is called real music, real artistic creation. You hear this and you have a huge sens of respect for those Australian Aborigines for this "organic" instrument that brings another level of spirituality. Big thanks to the composer and all musicians.
***** is it so? i would be interested to know what you consider special... and of course...when they wear costumes...they look like they are not...they are not ment to be...!
I've heard that the most accepted and polite term is "indigenous Australians", and when one is being a bit more sophisticated in speech or respectful another term is "traditional custodians".
I rarely get impressed but well here is one of those moments: Australian Aborigine Didgeridoo player in concert with Symphonic Orchestra. It says to me...Get inspired! One day you will be in the spotlight too!
+Sciddly Boogly I think it's because Jarutat mentions respect but then also mentions words like "wisemen" "knowledge" "meditation" and "soul" when all the guy's doing is playing the didgeridoo. There's a stereotype about indigenous people being "enlightened" and very spiritual and one with nature. Maybe in the past their cultures were closer to nature, but today not every indigenous person is automatically spiritual. Just my guess....
Testy Tang it was more about how spirituality is just about the opposite of wise, and that this didgeridoo guy may not be either spiritual or wise. So the original comment was both inconsistent with itself and it's environment lol.
Not really, if you practise a little. As a didge player, I say that there's quite few to learn to just play- like this dude there. But if you want to become a master, that's mission impossible :D There are no masters. There are so many different ways to play didge. Noone can't learn everything. You can always learn something new. We, didgeridoo players, are all students until death, there are no masters :D
The didgeridoo is pretty hard to learn. Most people who are good at playing the didgeridoo have a talent called circular breathing and not everyone can do it. Try breathing in through your nose as you breath out from your mouth.
13:04 MY BOY. My beautiful boy. Anyways, the didgeridoo is haunting and honestly got me entranced the whole time. Was it meant to be terrifying? Like it just sounds so cool with the orchestra added making it more dramatic. Also felt like it was a creature going through a troublesome journey and it's a neverending pain ' _' .. . .
Totally the didgeridoo is terrifying I think Australians initially impressed people with this instrument. It has sounds that remind me of the Mandalorian series. We interpret it as we want it is also what I liked in this orchestra. But indeed it sounds like the sound of a ferocious Annimal
It's not terrifying!!!!,its the sounds of the outback,,that the MAORI,,have listened to for thousands of years,,,,,,its played the best, by Maori bushman,,,,for religious, and meditative purposes,,,,a great digi player ,,,like this one,,,,mimics the sounds of the outback,,,the birds, and mammals,the buzzing of a cicada,monkeys,,jungle sounds,,,,and each has SPIRIT,and meaning,and even holiness,,,,as well as the BREATHE of the jungle,,,,not to mention,DREAMTIME,,,,its very spiritual to MAORI,,,and it's the sounds they've heard for thousands of years in the outback, bush,,,,interpreted THROUGH,,,the digi,,,,a good MAORI master will leave you speechless,,,and all you can envision, while hearing it is the sounds of the jungle,,,,and MAORI man,,,,,freakin awesome!!!!😎
Oh my, look at all these pretentious people thinking too much of themselves at their tastes. Get down from your high horses and let people enjoy whatever they like.
Absolutely exquisite sounds that touch the soul!!!! Mr. Barton is an amazing musician. I hear the earth sounds in that piece! The orchestra is so talented. I'm so grateful to have happened upon this amazing music!
the didgeridoo is awesome. the orchestra is awesome, but I agree, they just don't mesh together here. Maybe they would, but not here. this is still lovely though.
I love Orchestra and grew up in them....I just want them to be silent and hear this great artists rendition of music, sound, soul, feel, wild, with that wonderful didgeridoo. It's primal - It just somehow absolutely 'GRABS' at the soul. Amazing.
It does make me feel like in the middle of a tropical forest, looking around myself, stuck by its stunning and dangerously attractive beauty... it could be in the Avatar's soundtrack! Fantastic...
Imagine if the orchestra and audience wasn’t told about this dude showing up.
Underrated comment
I picture Will Ferrel playing jazz flute.
LOL
The long pauses in rehearsals would make more sense.
@Francis Rodrigo Ceblano that's just dumb
I like to imagine he was just late, and he improvised that intro
Omg yesss 😂
Haha you made my day. :D
Imagine XD
I appreciate this comment. :)
I suspect that it was well rehearsed.
All I can think about is how bad it must hurt to flick the didgeridoo that many times
After over a decade of training it just becomes muscle memory..
@@polackwizerd Memory? 🤔
@@TheBas008 do you even know what muscle memory is?
No I guess I'm dumb
☝️ Lol
Man, if there's one thing I gathered from this it's that those of us outside of Australia are often exposed to only a VERY limited range of what the didgeridoo can actually sound like. Sounds awesome!!
Right??
My mate is absolutely a prodigy at didgeridoo, he does this amazing thing where it sounds like the sound is running up and down the didgeridoo, and it astounds me every time just how varied and expressive didgeridoos can be, and how they crafted particular sounds over generations for just about every plant animal and phenomenon
I think it's because the world just isn't ready to have it's mind blown like this - I know I wasn't ready!
@@LilBlueOnk too true.. tend to listen to didgeridoo in the dark ..let the didg and your mind go walkabout..
I love didgeridoo. it's like force or voice of nature. BTW. I was born in Poland. I live in the US. I admire Aboriginal arts and many other type of native arts. Unfortunately many Aboriginal Australians are just drunks. I've see that with my own eyes. Very sad.
This is what an Australian James Bond intro would sound like.
I thought the didgeridoo was African...?
@@MichaelaJungheim no it is not.
1969 On her Majesty's Secret Service George Lazenby was an Australian James Bond
You mean "puoq sǝɯɐſ", of course.
I mean a lot of people just refer to him as crocodile dun dee
Just imagine hearing this while wandering thru a forest
would just see my heels headed the other way.
Hmmm..... I think I'd walk towards it and have the experience of a lifetime!!!! Yolo (you only live once)
If i heard a full blown orchestra id have to imagine I'm in an area I'm not supposed to be.....
I would take that as a warning.
Am I in a video game if so I run cause this ain't goon music its boss music.
This is the boss music you hear in australia
Incorrect. In Australia, there is no boss music. You just put your boots on without checking them first one day and then suddenly you're dead.
@@lordhank77 oop
Mmmmm more like a classic destiny sound track for the taken king
@@lordhank77 oof
Bold of you to assume we get any indication of something about to happen
The breath control on this guy. Absolutely amazing.
Circular breathing
@@PTEC I'm a string musician, comrade. You may as type "wizard magic" because it's the same to me. Haha.
There is actually a method to it he doesn’t have unlimited breath 😂
@@ComaToast1 ....I know. But it's a technical skill, and one I don't have. So I find it very impressive.
@@paracetamolgirl7820I didn't learn it as a brass instrumentalist, but met a dude who did.
1500 years ago some aboriginal person was like "Yo lets make some dubstep," and the didgeridoo was born
Only 1500 years ago... seems a bit recent for a people and culture going back 60,000 years.
@@robertsonkira69 it’s a joke calm down
@@robertsonkira69 Was gonna say that
@@robertsonkira69 You got burned by Lloyd Jones. Read his commitment. Facts don't care about your SJW feelings.
You think this sounds like dubstep, wait until you hear a Bullroarer.
I wanna see an orchestra with instruments from all around the world
Yes! That would be Amazing!
That would be incredible!
There is a band from all around the world look for playing for change
Do you guys ever heard "Angklung" Orchest from Indonesia ?
No. That would be very very bad. People have thought about it. Tried it. It’s no good. Actually this performance shows also that didgeridoo and western instruments are too different to sound good together, which is why they don’t really play at once but take turns to play.
When he said "buurrburrburrbiibbiissmknfburrbur" I felt that
Kalatiola Tai 💀💀💀
Or how he said rakadadoo rakidakidooo
红红火火
5:16 best
Oh and how the drums went “Boom” and the trumpets went “toot” I felt that too
Imagine how scary and/or cool it would be to hear this in the Outback.
Man I love traditional instruments
It's totally amazing/mind blowing, in it's traditional setting.
didgeridoo scared the English when they came ...so the story goes.
I lived in Australia as a kid, and my family acquired a didgeridoo while we were there. Nearly 60 years later, I finally got to see how it is actually supposed to be played. Thank you.
Lmao
You probably slapped the hole huh
@@franziez 🤭
Imagine if he was actually just playing it wrong, but just got REALLY good at making it sound good that way 😂
@@brknvods well that’d be using a musical instrument to make artistic/pleasant sounds, aka using it right with a different technique then. i’m pretty sure no one believed the first bass slapped either but look where we are now.
Imagine you're walking down a dark alley and this dude comes doot-dootin' out from the shadows man I would fuckin' die
I can see a man clubbing a dude to death with a digiridoo though, like... its probably a pretty effective bat lol
The use of the verb doot-dootin’ made me fuckin’ die. 😂😂😂😂
"Doot-dootin'" 🤣
I read this as "come a doot-dootin'..."😂😂😂
All you hear is the digering of the doo and a boomerang just comes flying out of the darkness
Tibetan throat singers, digeradoos, and Estas Tonne doing Sacred Russian Chorale music would be my idea of a mind blowing symphony.
+Steray Snyder get someone to do a remix of it...?
don't forget Basso Profundo singers.
Oktavist singers
And maybe a bit of Hurdy Gurdy for good measure .. :O)
Why does Hurdy Gurdy keep coming up?? WOW omg I gotta look into this. hahaha
Each note, nuance sound or phrasing from a didge represents an animal/item in Aboriginal culture, the sounds they make draws me in an makes my imagination wander to deserts, dingo's, roo's, snakes and all sorts. Beautiful sound from a beautiful culture!
Is there any sort of guide to that for foreigners?
What do you mean "each note" . . . there is only one note.
If you take time to learn about things you too can know stuff about all sorts of cultures and peoples, invariably it comes in handy during general knowledge quizzes.
Proof?
Gavin yes absolutely 💯 thankyou
The didgeridoo makes it sounds so much better and gives the whole orchestra a intense and most mysterious passion.
Learn English you clown!
Irishandtired That was a bit uncalled for to be honest..
I absolutely agree with you Jill
@@Irishandtired learn to be nice how bout it?
@@skarpbalt_2797 I am not nice to people who praise something greatly inferior just to be politically correct. People like that praise cave finger painting, but never praise say, The School of Athens which actually has deep meaning. Such clowns should be shamed!
I could legitimately see the didgeridoo joining the percussion section. It has some really neat throat effects
It could also be a wind instrument tho
@@owdy3973 yeah, but nah
Only indigenous australian people are supposed to play the digeridoo, and only indigenous males i think
Depends on which area it's from and the setting it's played in. In SE Australia, it's men only and only Aboriginal men, and only in formal ceremonies. The further north and west you go, the less it is traditionally restricted. However, those restrictions are becoming more common even up north, as a way of discouraging the sound and style being ripped off for new age music.
@@prestonang8216 I disagree. This should be accessible to everyone, as to preserve its legacy and pass it on to future generations to learn and be interested in.
I saw this guy, Will Barton, play the didge completely improvised with an Australian Irish folk band (Blackwater) at a pub in the Rocks in Sydney and it was honestly the most amazing thing I've ever heard. That thing can make an entire bar vibrate. He's a nice guy too.
Nice...
Oy!
The didge is that special sauce that takes a dish to the next level. Don't know why this hasn't been done before. Perfect for a haunting orchestral piece.
Who could play like this?
I just wish people would remember the rule. This is a males only instrument. In our culture there is very very strict ways of women's business and men's business. It is extremely offensive to our ancestors when hippie women attempt to play.
@@Blueyandcandy Sounds like a big case of you being a pretentious little bitch.
I would really love to know who in that distant time figured out that if i was to cut down this termite infested young tree or branch and knock all the remains from the centre and put wax around one end and then blow in it in a particular way then learn to breath in while still forcing vibrating air down this thing i think i would get a really cool sound . Makes you admire the sheer imaginative genius of it.
same with any instrument really
Kinda like the guy who first discovered milk
Aliens
@@gnaussie9245 is milk something you really discover? You kind of have to drink it as a baby to survive
@@danialzaman1438 human milk is an instinct thing but what about cow milk?
This conductor is an escaped supervillain and you can't convince me otherwise. He looks like he's about about tell me I've fallen right into his trap.
I'll do it for him
You've fallen into my trap!!
They pretty much all look like that
@@namedrop721 who are you referring to?
@@noongarqueenbusselton conductors, i believe
Just don't look him in the eye!
Didgeridoo+Carnyx+throatsiging+bagpiping would = one amazing, badass performance. Throw in some steel drum and ukulele just to confuse people.
And kulning and Tibetan throat singing. And biwa!
Throw in a lute too for good measure
Then the shreddy guitar and gospel choir come in
Maybe some tende music from the touaregs of Niger
And then, someone enters tapdancing on the music
This piece sent chills though my soul. Everything from the Didgeridoo to the ensemble. This piece was haunting yet brilliantly written.
It feels like a battle between man and nature..Man gets gradually louder, nature struggles to have its voice heard.
Ever since I read this comment that's what I hear
They use the didgerydo to mimic nature so I can definitely see what you mean
Excellent interpretation!
LUL
Beautifully said.
The intro...actually the entire performance makes me feel like I’m listening to a very long chase scene of a predator chasing its prey😁
Indeed
That just gave me chills.
Well the didgeridoo replicates sounds of animals. Like dingos, kangaroos, kookaburras and heaps of others.
It represents humans VS nature. You know how it ends.
With Sir David Attenborough narrating the action...
imagine if the didgeridoo guy was completely uninvited, but the suit convinced the conductor and everyone else that he was supposed to be there
I imagined it. It didn’t do much for me.
No, it would sound like utter shite. The reason why this performance is incredible is because the orchestra and the didgeridoo player obviously rehearsed and practiced together many times in order to prepare for such an epic collabo!
You bring Jesus a bad name
Damn bruh 2 years and i can't catch a break
@@William_Asston get down on your knees, pray hard my friend
Honestly had no idea the didgeridoo could make all those different sounds! Talented player!
This is sheer skill, you cannot talent your way into playing like this
TH-cam algorithm strikes again
Marlon brew gonna buy a digeridoo
🤣🤣🤣
Maybe because you have heard of TwoSetViolin??
Some worker at TH-cam LOVES THE INSTRUMENT AND is forcing the world to like it too.
And again
To someone who has never tried to play the didgeridoo you have no idea how hard this is
Or why one would try.
@@jonathanshirer2395 its an awesome instrument. thats why. i play it myself a bit. and and it can produce extraoridnary sounds. id rather ask why someone plays a bagpipe, that sounds horrible...
@@hanswurst-ej3qj A Scotsman once told me the bagpipe is a hunting device, which brings down birds in flight from the sheer sound of it.
@@jonathanshirer2395 hehe that actually explains it :D
@@hanswurst-ej3qj It's not an instrument, it's a one note fart pipe, like a child's toy, exactly what you would expert from a 55/100 culture.
Well damn! Didn't know the didgeridoo was capable of marking all those noises. Talk about versatile.
Isheian, listen to more didgeridoo music and you'll hear far more diversity. It can sound completely familiar, or completely otherwordly...
oh yea if you know what your doing you can make it scream... its amazing
The Didgeridoo is like the Sword of musical instruments. Simple, yet versatile.
It just our body
Tongue, mouth and breath ...
And don't forget this, if you do it sounds maybe thirty minutes, then your spirit will want meditate
And it can also be used to break someone's kneecaps
This is one of the most awesome performances I've ever experienced. Thank you to all the musicians, composer and conductor!
I agree! And it's about 10 years since this video was posted!
The Didgeridoo requires massive lungs, and a strong circle breathing technique.
👍
Amazing.
Amazing technique. Ive heard stories of aboriginals playing all day for celebrations. Pretty amazing when u think of all the benefits of meditation that come from focusing on your breathing that much.
If u wanna try circular breathing get a straw and a cup with some water. Try to keep the bubbles going.
U store some air in ur cheeks so u can push it out while u inhale through your nose...
I promise you its easier said than done lol
Thanks for the tip I’m gonna try it
@@ericbachmann8613 i did that in 5 minutes...
@@TONGA09 Noice. Time to upgrade your instrument, maybe. If didgeridoo is for you, you'll wanna practice a "buzz" technique like a brass player would.
Someone made me a cheap DIY didgeridoo out of some PVC pipe, but the mouthpiece end is too wide.. prolly only needs to be about an inch wide.
@@TONGA09 th-cam.com/video/L7w_GB3Zggk/w-d-xo.html
3:04 IS THAT BRETT YANG ON THE LEFT :OOOOOOOOO XDDDD
I think it is yeah haha. If not, bloody lookis like him haha
Why hasn’t this been thumbed up more???
TypicalFlutist he appeared in 00:17
Probably because he lives in Australia
17:11 Seems like it
Ive never seen a didgeridoo in an orchestra before. This is super cool
Using ancient instruments in orchestral scores or film scores isn't that uncommon. It is practically unheard of for classical though.
Just imagine, I heard this very piece this evening in concert with Mr. Barton himself. It was a magical experience.
Ok, nobody searched for this but we all loved it.
I searched for it tho
I searched for it
I Searched
I searched too lol
I was looking at the list of instruments and was like “wtf is this, let’s search it up”
Seriously, the didgeridoo should be renamed the Dubstep Blunt
Kenny Gates made my day😂
Kenny Gates No
why? the word Didgeridoo was made long before "Dubstep".
its more than simply dubstep
Oh come on u lot it was just some fun observation it is mad how one of the oldest instruments of all time is only rivalled by the Roland 303 its like your guarding the heritage of the didge or is that naughty to say too apart from my rant. Wow that was beautiful check out a band called tribal drift didgeridoo dance act championed by cyrung the man that got me playing as a teenager priority shift x
The digeridoo has so much potential in all facets of music. Ive heard it used brilliantly in electronic and rock as well. It just adds so much atmosphere to whichever piece it is used in.
It has no potential because it only plays one note.
@@dreamdiction Next you'll claim that the bagpipe isn't a musical instrument? o_O
@@Pfromm007 The bagpipe plays all the musical notes over three octaves so your reply makes no sense.
I wonder if it can be used in a fashion similar to playing headphones in front of guitar pickups
@@aterack833 The didgeridoo is the musical equivalent of people farting in a special needs classroom. People who admire the didgeridoo have been deceived into racial false flattery.
This is really beautiful. It's impressive how versatile this instrument can be in the right hands!
that guys lungs must be tired af and his fingernail sore. mad props
Circular breathing baffles me. I get how it works but can't even come close to replicating it.
@@lordhank77 Honestly I think its just one of those things where some people can do it and some people just can't
@@microfighterz Na you can learn it, but it’s really difficult and takes months of practice.
It Covid19 test
this guy is built different
Ancient beatboxing
Steven Bills that is only beatbox.. not an instrument. very dissapointing.
2017......... B.C.
lmao. this thread is something else.
Steven Bills and like beat boxing this was made by blacks :)
Steven Bills hahaha
Pro tip: Always check that your orchestra has found their seats and has had time to set up before starting the performance.
I see what you did there O_O
804USAR yea, I see it too now!
PROTIP
DON'T CRY CRAFT
SOFT & NEAT
YOU CAN'T ESCAPE THE PHANDOM
You just made me cry :´D
you forgot Pepe Danza ;)
Was in Western Australia Christmas of 2004 and was lucky enough to catch a saxophone and digeridoo duet on the radio. Made me truly feel like I was in Australia, and not just anywhere else, with all the generic northern hemisphere Christmas carols. Still a fond memory.
This literally sounds like an Australian stealth mission
Haha yeah
stealth mission impossible
Republic Commando kashyyk infiltration..
Conductor: "William, we really need some more of the "Buuurrrbööörrk Buuurr Brrrtz". Page 6, 3rd bar. Let's try again."
Really wonder how sheet music for this piece looks like :D
No, William. That was too... “byuuuuuurrrrrr beeeebeeee nooooooor chi chichi”
I need it to really “gooooooorrñ byiiiiiiitititititîïí kÿii at the crescendo.”
The orchestra will have sheet music. Didg player doesn't need it. He just does his thing.
@@flowerpower8722 The didg can only play one note.
@@dreamdiction but cant you change the pitch just like a trumpet
@@thenamescow5466 Yes but no?
I kind of picture this as a soundtrack to the next Predator movie.
Fernando Mendoza or adventure/exploration movie like indiana jones or something like that :P
it would be more interesting with a movie to go with it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
John Meda I was envisioning more of an Avatar sequel.
Or.. A scene which warriors prepare gears
@@bengan-k4b Si, como que fueron a una selva y entraron a una ciudad prohibida y como siempre las autoridades llegaron y destruyeron su cultura o civilización entonces esta música entra precisamente cuando están pasando las escenas de la destrucción o de los ejércitos que están destruyendo esos patrimonios de la humanidad o patrimonios de esa civilización.
I see Brett from TwoSetViolin. Must've been awesome playing alongside such a natured-filled instrument. Amazing composition.
I personally love the opening. It's like a natural world that quickly becomes confronted by the ominous metallic world aka the rest of the orchestra.
Silly Siji Totally agree. I thought that too.
I was blown away. I totally agree.
The way he played that instrument it was like he was telling a story.
+Silly Siji My impression was similar, but more along the lines of "primordial and ancient vs sophisticated and modern."
Jeez you guys are big thinkers I dig it
I agree with that. i imagined the animal sound not sure either big snake or certain animal and some primitive people running and talking
I love how the twoset community has this "where's waldo" thing going on with finding brett in different videos.
Wally*
@@georgerussell2947 Depends on where you're from. In America, it's Waldo.
E G they’re australian
@@hwinangkoso ...yes, I know they're australian. Why is that a factor with my comment? I'm getting confused.
i was just using "where's waldo" as a reference for the sort of thing the twoset fandom is doing; it's not like anyone's actually officially declared it to be "where's waldo/wally"
So... I don't get why I'm being corrected on this?... lol
I'm American- I'm just using the American terminology. So... I'm not sure what you're trying to tell me here? *shrug*
E G I believe the implication is that Twoset are austrialian, so you should use the Australian terminology instead of the American one
Me: I really have to go to bed now....
TH-cam: don't you wanna know what will happen when didgeridoo meets ochestra?
Me: do i really have to know that...??
TH-cam: YOU SHOULD
lol, so true
정경자 lmao that’s me right now
I want to know this and I’m listening right now.
didgeridoo turns an orchestra into nothing; to didgeridoo orchestra is not required
02:00 am... confirmed!!!
WoW!!!! The intensity and beauty of the sound of the didgeridoo ALWAYS brings me to tears!! I had the opportunity long ago to try it...….and it takes A LOT of breath work and strengthening of the lungs. I remember almost passing out! Those who can play are AMAZING people with an amazing gift!!! Love the Australian aboriginal sounds!!!!!
*_This is actual footage of me playing with the cardboard roll after I use the last paper towel._*
Me after I'm done wrapping Christmas presents.
@@vin3084 I have often done that and I would like to become the first cardboard roll soprano digeridoo player under the name Little Kenny.
Yesssss! Lol
lol
me when I use my cardboard tube inator
William Barton is an incredible player - seeing him live gives me goosebumps! And even a in a 2013 youtube video he has the same effect! The didgeridoo is also an amazing, expressive and wonderfully versatile instrument
Hello
Thanks for sharing that!
What I find really cool about this is that one guy with a didgeridoo can make nearly as complex a sound as the however-many-piece orchestra he's playing with. That is totally badass.
@Blake839 Put the didge in the lead violinist's hand and see what happens.
@@Idontcommentonvideos exactly, they are completely different instruments made for different forms of music too, put a Didgeridoo in the Tubist's hands and they can make it sound, but they couldn't straight away play it as a didge is traditionally played.
Astounding !!! An orquestra almost entirely of young people, playing difficult contemporary music.
Congrats. Greetings from Brasil
I read that as basil- the spice- and i had a double take
@@localsatanistwhat kinda spice is named basil
@@Alsry1 look it up lmao
@@localsatanist i know of the herb basil, not the spice basil. Can’t find a spice named basil
@@Alsry1 oh legot dodnt know there was a diff lmao. I dont cook often so
the dude playing the doo...his breathing is fucking immaculate. legitimately envious.
DJ Deckard Cain yeah. He is awesome at circular breathing. Takes a lot of practice to do that
Although it may be unintentional, there is a really deep story playing out here. A culture of peoples who lived in a land for thousands of years all of a sudden are met with Europeans and forced to conform. The musical instruments are a symbol of Europe and its culture, yet the Didgeridoo is also a symbol of the Pacific Islands and its culture.
Pacific islanders are distinct from Australian aboriginals.
You're probably more closely related to most pacific islanders than they are to Aboriginals.
Also pacific islanders were highly successful explorers of the ocean while aboriginals couldn't even build simpke rafts.
@@MrCmon113 Aboriginies indeed made canoes, as for rafts why did they even need to waste effort and time perfecting a craft for sea faring? Australia is a massive island they had no need to migrate
Yes, the tune expresses aboriginal gratitude for colonialism lifting them out of the stone age.
@@dreamdiction we didn't need no help we never had sickness or disease or drink or drugs.Go do some research and history an remember White Australia has a black History an Always Was an Always Will Be AbORIGINAL Land honey
@@MrCmon113 Go do some research and history an remember White Australia has a black History an Always Was an Always Will Be AbORIGINAL Land honey
didgeridoo is a hell of an instrument, it always brings goosebumps on skin
I was about to write the same, until I read your comment. This is truly awesome. Goosebumps all the way! I play in a funk band, and was thinking about including a didgeridoo
Absolutely. It hits a spot deep in my soul. Can't explain it. something primeval I think :-)
It is amazing good...
It's because it plays at 432hz.
Alyssa.... :O :O :O
Imagine being the key piece in an entire orchestra, amazing an well done.
That moment when you find Brett in the second row of violins:
OH MY GOD YES
15:45
Nooooooo way
Oop
Well well well, what a pleasant surprise!
Oh my. I never noticed this is a youth orchestra. I am in love with this piece. Makes it more enigmatic. Well done.
"You keep making those crazy sounds with your bong and you'll always have a spot in my orchestra."
"It's a didgeridoo sir..."
"I get it. You're high. Call it whatever you want. You're in..."
😂🤣😆💯TOO FUNNY I ALMOST DROPPED MY BONG JUST NOW LAUGHING SO HARD STAY SAFE AND HEALTHY AND GODS BLESSINGS ON YOUR HOUSEHOLD AND HEAVENS PANTRY SET YOUR TABLE ALWAYS HAVE A BLESSED WONDERFUL DAY 💯💜✌️✌️💜💯🙂
@@veneraberens4653 what the hell...
@@ljessante4997 HEAVEN MY GOOD PERSON HEAVEN
STAY SAFE AND HEALTHY 💯✌️💚💚✌️🙂
@@veneraberens4653 what?
@@parallelrealities19 WHAT (ALMOST COMPLETELY BLIND)
I've always admired Didgeridoos they have such a haunting and unqiue sound
Just didgeridoo it.
ASHERUISE Sounds like something Ned Flanders would say
ASHERUISE robot chicken.
australia's nike slogan
Didgeri didn't do it.
dj rid dew it!
I’m imagining a movie where “whiplash” instead used a didgeridoo as the main instrument focus.
That would be fantastic. I would watch that in a heartbeat.
OMG yes
“Not my Bowoeiiworuu buirrrrwabada!”
Special guest Miss Whiplash of Kurdistan dressed in leather.
There is something that makes me feel at home about the sound of the didge and yet I’m all the way in South Africa.
Thats kinda interesting, cause thats an australian instrument used in an eurocentrian orchestra.
Aborigines came from Africa thousands of years ago, so it's not surprising you might feel a cultural connection.
@@anari234
Not exactly, though Aboriginals definitely have African ancestors from long ago (65,000 BC). Here is the difference. When the Africans left Africa and went to Arabia and the Middle East, they there absorbed a numerous Neanderthal people and became genetically different from the Africans who stayed behind. Australoids are the descendants of the very first Out of Africa people, and all non-Africans have genetic Neanderthal heritage that is not found in Africans. Although Australoids look very similar to Africans, their hair is wavier and sometimes colored. Native Australians also have among the highest levels of Denisovan heritage on earth.
Since both the Asian and European races come from the Australoid race, the Australoids can be said to be closer to the Africans. But the separation took place in 65,000 BC. And since they did absorb other forms of mankind that the Africans did not, the Australoids can be said to be a different race from the Africans.
But I understand what he's feeling. I travelled to south Africa and I felt at home. (I'm Australian) we are like long lost cousins
It's your vuvuzela playing up again mate...
Reindart Buhr he is south african and is brilliant he includes it in his looking boss r.c sets
There is no reason for this to make me tear up, except for the fact that it is beautifully primal. Things hit you weird in the midst of anxiety attacks.
The magic of music, the wonderous that is being human
I have a friend who used to play didgeridoo for the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Good to see other orchestras making use of Australian musical instruments.
it's funny.i always associate the didgeridoo sound to the dawn of humanity,dunno why.
Because it is so primitive it seems like a caveman must be playing it.
+Nuno Baptista The guttural tones it makes are like the sounds of a waking beast. I really like instruments like this because their sound is of the real world, nature, European instruments make abstract, precise sounds, that are no doubt pretty but sound artificial do not reflect nature as truthfully.
+wheelzwheela i always hear wild tropical animals making their calls
+Nuno Baptista Agreed. It's probably in part due to your brain being trained to associate that sound through all the documentaries and tv you've seen throughout your life. :) Also...I find it really cool how certain musical sounds have stayed the same for thousands of years. My favorite sound the didgeridoo makes is that high pitched treble-y "growl" you hear at 3:20. What's really strange/cool is how similar it sounds to the acid squelch synth tones in electronic house music. You hear it a lot in dubstep as well. It sounds both ancient AND futuristic....
You calling them primitive? o_0
How can primal and modern exist in sound. These sounds are so pleasing to the ear. Wow - Australia
so you would pay to hear this?
@@Andybaby yeah, you wouldn’t pay to hear an ancient instrument that very well could’ve been lost to time?
That instrument sounds prehistoric. Fashinating.I loved the whole porformance and the orchestra was wonderful.
As the oldest living culture on the planet, are you surprised? 😅
older than you tube....and not as full of rubbish.
the didgeridoo is such a noble instrument it has such a beautiful and incredible sound its hard to even comprehend it
Bucky Goforth the last word I would use to describe the didgeridoo is “noble” lmao
I would say the didgeridoo taps into a very primal part of the human psyche
Which makes it very unique compared to the sophistication of the orchestra
@@EraLily Lol, yeah :DD "nObLe"
@@1999NIRUPAM on a mushroom trip maybe
@@EraLily Your username says everything I need to know, lol.
needs more cowbell
absotutley posilivly agreed. I'm a drummer and totally groove with the cowbells. Try this, Play Pink Floyd's "Welcome to the Machine" at its start and simultaneously play this Didgeridoo from 5:08 thru 5:48
+Levon Rustle you musical genius
Dundee Headkick d.w atleast 1 other person got your joke #snl
I say triangle
Funny! Everything needs more cowbell! To be serious for a sec I do like this and the didgeridoo is a special touch to symphony which I already enjoy.
That was incredible. The digeridoo was like an animal in the forest, man. That was like some primal jazz orchestra, dude!
Wow, what a performance! This absolutely blew my mind. Beautiful playing and both a subtle and impactful use of the didgeridoo
Amazing.... just Wooow! I was in an other world. That, it is called real music, real artistic creation. You hear this and you have a huge sens of respect for those Australian Aborigines for this "organic" instrument that brings another level of spirituality. Big thanks to the composer and all musicians.
***** is it so? i would be interested to know what you consider special... and of course...when they wear costumes...they look like they are not...they are not ment to be...!
Actually its disrespectful to refet to them as "Aboriginies", the accepted term is Aboriginal people or Aboriginals
"Ab-originals"?!
I've heard that the most accepted and polite term is "indigenous Australians", and when one is being a bit more sophisticated in speech or respectful another term is "traditional custodians".
Nosferatu Zodd lol
I rarely get impressed but well here is one of those moments:
Australian Aborigine Didgeridoo player in concert with Symphonic Orchestra.
It says to me...Get inspired! One day you will be in the spotlight too!
Hopefully not, I'm trying to keep a low profile, lol
@@KumaBean lmaooo
Brings tears to my eyes to see the respect these true wisemen really deserve. An art of meditation and reflection that brings wisdom to their soul.
Jarutat Snidwongse the irony in that comment is astounding
Jaden CM how so?
+Sciddly Boogly I think it's because Jarutat mentions respect but then also mentions words like "wisemen" "knowledge" "meditation" and "soul" when all the guy's doing is playing the didgeridoo. There's a stereotype about indigenous people being "enlightened" and very spiritual and one with nature. Maybe in the past their cultures were closer to nature, but today not every indigenous person is automatically spiritual. Just my guess....
+Testy Tang "wisdom" sorry, misquoted!
Testy Tang it was more about how spirituality is just about the opposite of wise, and that this didgeridoo guy may not be either spiritual or wise. So the original comment was both inconsistent with itself and it's environment lol.
This describes a wildfire and the strugle of animals, fighting thru it. Then the survivors roaming the destroyed homeland. Deep.
In my opinion it's more so describing the effect that humanity is having on nature and how the earth is crying out because of it
To me it felt like a very long chase through the woods
@@krystilize1573 you are wayyy off there mate
@@suicidalcheese1979 it's all up to interpretation, what do you think the piece symbolises?
@@krystilize1573 same man same, we're all uninvited guests exploiting Earth's resources, and there's no solution to it now
Didgeridoo instrument sound like an Alien Invasion movie :O
Global Critic symphonic orchestra sounds like the white men invasion reality. and that didgeridoo is the black president on screen.
burak yy what the fuck... none of these white people have invaded places.
Sciddly Boogly someone is clearly triggered and that somebody also don't grammar good.
burak yy You made no sense at all...
That just shows how racist our media and culture is. Everything that's not part of the white culture seems scary and dangerous.
Dude looks like hes about to restore the heart of Te Fiti
I'm weak😂
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAA TRUE
Do tell how tf you found Indigenous Australians in Moana
@@jan_Masewin do you expect any geographical knowledge from US Americans?
Not quite...
Didgeridoo, the sound that connects your soul to the earth at a very base level.....
Il corpo di noi umani è terra , come quello di tutti i viventi. No ?
@@lidiafumagalli4888, Si 🙂
Those are hard as fuck to play. Props to the guy playing the didgeridoo an great performance from the entire orchastra.
Vulgar Display of Truth they're easy to play, the hardest part is learning how to continuously breathe while playing
kevin Rudd I got that down & Ive tried to play one once. How long have you played one?
Vulgar Display of Truth not long, probably about 45 seconds before I need a breath haha
Not really, if you practise a little. As a didge player, I say that there's quite few to learn to just play- like this dude there. But if you want to become a master, that's mission impossible :D There are no masters. There are so many different ways to play didge. Noone can't learn everything. You can always learn something new. We, didgeridoo players, are all students until death, there are no masters :D
The didgeridoo is pretty hard to learn. Most people who are good at playing the didgeridoo have a talent called circular breathing and not everyone can do it. Try breathing in through your nose as you breath out from your mouth.
Refrigeration repair guy: what kind of noise is your fridge making ?
Me: 2:53
lol
Best comment
Repair guy: Ah shit! * sigh * let me go get my bagpipe.
This made me laugh so hard 😂😂
13:04 MY BOY. My beautiful boy.
Anyways, the didgeridoo is haunting and honestly got me entranced the whole time. Was it meant to be terrifying? Like it just sounds so cool with the orchestra added making it more dramatic. Also felt like it was a creature going through a troublesome journey and it's a neverending pain ' _' .. . .
Brett??
@@cococoffee2305 yeah
If I had a Micropeen, I would be in never ending pain too.
Totally the didgeridoo is terrifying
I think Australians initially impressed people with this instrument. It has sounds that remind me of the Mandalorian series. We interpret it as we want it is also what I liked in this orchestra. But indeed it sounds like the sound of a ferocious Annimal
It's not terrifying!!!!,its the sounds of the outback,,that the MAORI,,have listened to for thousands of years,,,,,,its played the best, by Maori bushman,,,,for religious, and meditative purposes,,,,a great digi player ,,,like this one,,,,mimics the sounds of the outback,,,the birds, and mammals,the buzzing of a cicada,monkeys,,jungle sounds,,,,and each has SPIRIT,and meaning,and even holiness,,,,as well as the BREATHE of the jungle,,,,not to mention,DREAMTIME,,,,its very spiritual to MAORI,,,and it's the sounds they've heard for thousands of years in the outback, bush,,,,interpreted THROUGH,,,the digi,,,,a good MAORI master will leave you speechless,,,and all you can envision, while hearing it is the sounds of the jungle,,,,and MAORI man,,,,,freakin awesome!!!!😎
The Didgeridoo is an amazing instrument! I love the different sounds that players tease from it.
I figured they'd have a group of didgeridoo. They always sound better when you have 2-3 players moving between sections.
Now close your eyes and listen again.
Like an utopistic movie's soundtrack.
Isn't it?
Original Aboriginal Dubstep
peter comeau Don't compare orchesta music and aboriginal sounds to that trash
why not? he's using modulated formants in halftime, thats the bulk of dubstep composition in a nutshell
And orchestra of diggeridoos sound better than that crap
Oh my, look at all these pretentious people thinking too much of themselves at their tastes. Get down from your high horses and let people enjoy whatever they like.
Abstract music....ha
This was one of the best sensory experiences I’ve ever had hands down. 😮❤😂
I agree 💯 absolutely thankyou
your senses are fine tuned for music
❤
Wait, hold up. is that brett?
TGFxPL4T1NUM _ so many people seeing Brett yet we have not gotten him to comment yet. Please help
Amazing, strong, visceral sound well complimented by the orchestra's excellent performance as well. whoever put this together is awesome
The sound of the didgeridoo was awesome, the player was outstanding; The accoutrements were nugatory.
Absolutely exquisite sounds that touch the soul!!!! Mr. Barton is an amazing musician. I hear the earth sounds in that piece! The orchestra is so talented. I'm so grateful to have happened upon this amazing music!
14:50 and 15:00 gave me CHILLLSSSS
the didgeridoo is awesome. the orchestra is awesome, but I agree, they just don't mesh together here. Maybe they would, but not here. this is still lovely though.
Sounds like it would be the ambiance to the song if it were played in a movie.
Maybe I don’t know what I’m talking about, but I don’t think they were supposed to mesh.
I love Orchestra and grew up in them....I just want them to be silent and hear this great artists rendition of music, sound, soul, feel, wild, with that wonderful didgeridoo. It's primal - It just somehow absolutely 'GRABS' at the soul. Amazing.
The person playing the didgeridoo has some serious skills! So awesome.
It does make me feel like in the middle of a tropical forest, looking around myself, stuck by its stunning and dangerously attractive beauty... it could be in the Avatar's soundtrack! Fantastic...