I was in band/marching band all through school, starting in 4th grade and going all the way through high school. Listening to these marches still gives me goosebumps. Sousa's marches are perfection, and in my mind I'm still playing along.
En México a mediados de los años sesentas en la escuela particular a la que asistí, solían poner el disco de Sousa que yo siempre relacioné con las actividades deportivas; pero la banda de guerra en la primaria, formada por los propios alumnos y el maestro Perdomo al frente, no solían tocar las marchas de Sousa.
I wished our school band would play Sousa marches instead of those awful rock n roll songs like "Aquarius". Boiling Springs High School had all the good parade music like this, while Carlisle High School got all the awards playing garbage.
Only a true PATRIOT can compose such lovely & everlasting marches & hearing such marches raise spirits of not only soldiers but also the people which is the ESSENCE of these marches.❤.
I loved these tunes played for marching. I was in the Cadets in high school, and then in the Army, and alway enjoyed marching cause I would hear these tunes played…great memories!…and it kept us in step! This goes back to the 50’s and 60’s! God bless America…especially in these days!
Yes, when you’ve been standing there at parade rest or attention for what seems like forever while some long-winded general speaks, the command to “pass in review” is always welcome. Both for the music and to wake up your feet LOL
Same here. Cadets in high school. Then into the Air Force. These tunes stay with you forever. Brings back lots of memories. Pass in review. Eyes Right!
My daughter's godfather was with 173rd "herd" Brigade in Vietnam and he said they "practically blasted our ears off with the herd roundup song in Boot Camp, and we had the biggest a-hole for drill Sgt. who ever lived." He's funny. They were allowed to hit wrong-doers then and this guy "never wasted any chance he got to do it."
Soy militar, Ejercito, Ecuador, y en un campamento conjunto en la ciudad de Guayaquil, alrededor de las 11 de la mañana, un campamento de fuerzas especiales contiguo al nuestro, solían colocar a través de los parlantes de su campamento este tipo de marchas; con el volumen encendido se escuchaba en nuestro campamento, esto lo hacían casi a diario solo que fue por un tiempo. Especialmente los viernes en las mañana era muy inspirador escuchar estas marchas militares. Quizás fuese por el motivo que lo hiciesen, daba un nuevo concepto de las tareas de ese día, creo que por el tiempo que lo hicieron, hicieron una buena labor en las almas de los muchos que lo escuchaban. A veces escucho en casa este tipo de marchas militares, y siento nuevamente muy inspirador las notas y su significado en el alma, creo que los militares de cualquier lugar lo podemos sentir un poquito mas a fondo. Ya hace casi 12 años que me retiré de la Milicia, y que a parte del bono económico de retiro, los recuerdos y el sentimiento me une a esta noble rama de la defensa y honor patrio, un gran respeto y consideración mutua. Saludos a todos aquellos que están con honor, dignidad y gallardía sirviendo o han servido en la defensa de su patria, y aquellos que quieran y deseen y logren ingresar, les deseo que valoren lo que les va a ser entregado y no vendan su honor y dignidad bajo ningún costo. Un saludo, de frente, march...
I can't ever hear "The Liberty Bell" without getting a mental image of a huge cartoon foot descending from the sky and squashing everything beneath it. Thank you Monty Python.
John Philip Sousa marches are SIMPLY OUTSTANDING & that is why they are still surviving/famous even today & adopted by many nations the world over.Hats off to him & his Portuguese origin.
I am not American, but Canadian through and through. I love these marching bands from John Sousa, Arthur Fiedler, and John Williams who all conduccted the Boston Pops Orchestra on July 4th. I wish our capital, Ottawa, Ontario will be come more patrioticsome day. I came from Montreal, Quebec and am living in Toronto since 1969 until present.
Welcome aboard! Canada! We’d’ve never made WWII without your brilliant soldiers, sailors, airman and marines. Besides that, I’ve had so many fine visits to Abbotsford, B.C., Canada. There used to be a very quaint High School Band Contest there. I took my own students’ wind ensemble and nearly won our division. Wonderful days, those. These bring back so many memories. I played euphonium through into professional life. The melodies the “March Kings” wrote for my instrument were truly inspiring. Being a performer and conductor highlighted my musical and life experiences.
I am blessed and happy to have been born in this most beautiful country! This year I celebrate my 50th brithday and I pray for our Lord's continued blessings on our Nation. God blees America! John Philips Sousa was a genius! I love that music.
I am a retired professional musician who spends most of his time with Bach and Beethoven and in doing 20 seasons with the Boston Pops I must have heard "Stars" a few hundred times --- but I still love it --- it is well made and so wears well. I think my favorite is "Semper Fidelis" (it doesn't hurt that one of my best friends was a Marine.) The middle section trio is a solo for the bugle and is made entirely out of 4 notes of an F-major chord, which takes a really fine composer to bring off. A touch of real genius in that passage is the busy tuba line, which shows that "good counterpoint" is never out pf [lace!
As a trumpet player in a community band we played the Washington Post March in a public outdoor venue. It was exilerating! Sousa is a treasure America can be proud of. As a member of the Cdn. Military I had marched to some of Sousa's great marches while on parade. Wonderful music.
And John Phillip Sousa was a Long Island resident- Sands Point/Manhasset,and there is an elementary school carrying his name! He was not forgotten!! Nice part,Teddy Roosevelt lived in Oyster Bay,so they probably saw each other on occasion 😀 😄! Thank you 😇!
Played this song first with high school marching band in the early 1960s. The tune has never gone out of my head in all these years, but I had to search for it because I couldn't recall its name. Found it on the second try after Legionnaires on Parade proved wrong. I played the clarinet.
Souza is my favorite composer. Whether I was standing at parade rest either at USERAL at 40 below or in the Mojave at 130 plus above listening to some long winded general for 3 hours, my favorite part was "pass in review" and Souza march music. I only wish I could regain my military posture and march with an M1Garand at right shoulder arms.
Actually, I should know better. Text editor on the message app is squirrelly as is the spell checker. Will use text editor on a notebook app, then cut and paste to either the message app or the comment section on these videos.
John Philip Sousa was a great director and he still remmenber us that he wrote a famous song that belong to the Marine Corps in the United States of America🇵🇦
Yes, you are absolutely.correct. The band has been in Europe and the bandleader at the time was looking for musicians when he was told about Sousa's father. His father then joined the band and came to America where his sons (John Philip) learned his instrument well enough to play with the band in rehearsals and later as a full musician. He quickly became the bands leader at a very young age. But it was his composing that made him so popular. Then after 12 years as its leader he quit and started his own band and toured the country on train and the world on ship.
O pai nasceu em Sevilha, filho de pai português e de mãe espanhola, Josefina Blanco, também de Sevilha. Juan Antonio Sousa Blanco, uma vez nacionalizado norteamericano é que mudou o nome por John Antonio Sousa.
One added comment,Arthur Fiedler,the Boston Pops,most famous conductor(50 years at the podium),was always playing Sousa,especially around July 4th,and Memorial Day! Had an album of Matches,and still plays on!! Thanks again! Great music,and I love the High School Cadets,as I attended a military high! 🪖 Again 😊 thanks!!
Recuerdo mucho estas marchas, en Perú había una emisora Radio Victoria que pasaban las marchas a una hora determinada, y nos indicaba que teníamos que ir al colegio. Eran los 70s.
I was in a concert van for many years. I played lead snare drum field snare drum set and toys. I love playing to all of these Sam marches and sometimes when the percussion part wasn’t enough, I would always just add a little bit extra extra just to give it some flare This Fourth of July the day before the day of and the day after three days I celebrate it and listen to Susan marches. I absolutely love it.
Reminds me of Texas A&M when I started back in 1966. All we ever heard was "Harch!" instead of "march." I play these in the morning to get off to a productive launch of the day's work. Have a happy day!
Souza é um fenômeno em criatividade musical e harmonia entre os diferentes naipes de instrumentos que constituem uma perfeita banda e mesmo orquestras.
He also wrote a song I'm a bit disappointed is not here- he wrote The Salvation Army March in tribute to the SA and its tradition of banding itself- I've played it several times in the SA band I'm a member of.
You're obviously the most knowledgeable science fiction youtuber on the net, keep on roaring my friend. Read also a lot of classics too, A. Merritt a big fan of his purple prose and Tobias Smollett the grouchy writer that influenced Dickens, wrote my only two bio on Goodreads of their sadly only 15 books.
I’d have to say my favorite Sousa marches are “The Stars and Stripes Forever” and “The El Capitan March”, but unfortunately he didn’t write either the ones tied for my favorite - “Under The Double Eagle” and “National Emblem.”
Yes, those are great. BUT, there are many more that are even better. Like The White Rose, The Beau Ideal, The Kansas Wildcats, The Wolverines and Black Horse Troop just to name a few.
John P. Sousa without any doubt "The KING of Marches!". A genius.
I was in band/marching band all through school, starting in 4th grade and going all the way through high school. Listening to these marches still gives me goosebumps. Sousa's marches are perfection, and in my mind I'm still playing along.
Same with me forever. Such a feeling
En México a mediados de los años sesentas en la escuela particular a la que asistí, solían poner el disco de Sousa que yo siempre relacioné con las actividades deportivas; pero la banda de guerra en la primaria, formada por los propios alumnos y el maestro Perdomo al frente, no solían tocar las marchas de Sousa.
And marching in football halftime shows!
I wished our school band would play Sousa marches instead of those awful rock n roll songs like "Aquarius". Boiling Springs High School had all the good parade music like this, while Carlisle High School got all the awards playing garbage.
Only a true PATRIOT can compose such lovely & everlasting marches & hearing such marches raise spirits of not only soldiers but also the people which is the ESSENCE of these marches.❤.
I loved these tunes played for marching. I was in the Cadets in high school, and then in the Army, and alway enjoyed marching cause I would hear these tunes played…great memories!…and it kept us in step! This goes back to the 50’s and 60’s! God bless America…especially in these days!
Yes, when you’ve been standing there at parade rest or attention for what seems like forever while some long-winded general speaks, the command to “pass in review” is always welcome. Both for the music and to wake up your feet LOL
Yes, God bless America, especially in these days!
Same here. Cadets in high school. Then into the Air Force. These tunes stay with you forever. Brings back lots of memories. Pass in review. Eyes Right!
@@philsmith2444 : Those were the days. You're right about pass in review.
Sousa is undoubtedly one of the greatest military musicians of all time. His songs still sound around our ears everywhere.
Amen & amen!!! GOD Bless his memory.
Pp
Pp
Pppp
My daughter's godfather was with 173rd "herd" Brigade in Vietnam and he said they "practically blasted our ears off with the herd roundup song in Boot Camp, and we had the biggest a-hole for drill Sgt. who ever lived." He's funny.
They were allowed to hit wrong-doers then and this guy "never wasted any chance he got to do it."
Soy militar, Ejercito, Ecuador, y en un campamento conjunto en la ciudad de Guayaquil, alrededor de las 11 de la mañana, un campamento de fuerzas especiales contiguo al nuestro, solían colocar a través de los parlantes de su campamento este tipo de marchas; con el volumen encendido se escuchaba en nuestro campamento, esto lo hacían casi a diario solo que fue por un tiempo. Especialmente los viernes en las mañana era muy inspirador escuchar estas marchas militares. Quizás fuese por el motivo que lo hiciesen, daba un nuevo concepto de las tareas de ese día, creo que por el tiempo que lo hicieron, hicieron una buena labor en las almas de los muchos que lo escuchaban.
A veces escucho en casa este tipo de marchas militares, y siento nuevamente muy inspirador las notas y su significado en el alma, creo que los militares de cualquier lugar lo podemos sentir un poquito mas a fondo.
Ya hace casi 12 años que me retiré de la Milicia, y que a parte del bono económico de retiro, los recuerdos y el sentimiento me une a esta noble rama de la defensa y honor patrio, un gran respeto y consideración mutua. Saludos a todos aquellos que están con honor, dignidad y gallardía sirviendo o han servido en la defensa de su patria, y aquellos que quieran y deseen y logren ingresar, les deseo que valoren lo que les va a ser entregado y no vendan su honor y dignidad bajo ningún costo.
Un saludo, de frente, march...
@@charlesdebaise77087😅
I am an American Citizen and am looking forward to July 4th, Independence Day, to listen to these Marches again. God Bless The USA ! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
I am British and I still listen to the beautiful marches of Sousa!!! Esp Semper Fedilis!
I am a classically trained musician, but I love Sousa’s marches as much as any of my favorite classical pieces.
I can't ever hear "The Liberty Bell" without getting a mental image of a huge cartoon foot descending from the sky and squashing everything beneath it. Thank you Monty Python.
And now for something completely different, IT'S...
(Liberty Bell March starts playing)
MonTY Python's Flying CirCUSSSSSSSSSSSSS
John Philip Sousa marches are SIMPLY OUTSTANDING & that is why they are still surviving/famous even today & adopted by many nations the world over.Hats off to him & his Portuguese origin.
❤❤😢❤❤😢❤❤❤❤😮😅❤❤❤❤❤❤😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
Whenever I'm depressed or a bit down, I play these, and the salutary effect is really amazing.
So much memories of my elementary days when we march going to our room this music played.
I played a sousaphone in the Purdue Marching in the early 1960s. We occasionally played a Sousa march.
I am not American, but Canadian through and through. I love these marching bands from John Sousa, Arthur Fiedler, and John Williams who all conduccted the Boston Pops Orchestra on July 4th. I wish our capital, Ottawa, Ontario will be come more patrioticsome day. I came from Montreal, Quebec and am living in Toronto since 1969 until present.
You guys are great neighbors. I remember when, in 1980 the Canadian embassy helped Americans escape from Iran by giving them Canadian Passports.
....y yo soy colombiano y desde niño me gusta las marchas de JP.Sousa .
@@DennisSullivan-om3oo 8
Get rid of Trudope.
Welcome aboard! Canada! We’d’ve never made WWII without your brilliant soldiers, sailors, airman and marines. Besides that, I’ve had so many fine visits to Abbotsford, B.C., Canada. There used to be a very quaint High School Band Contest there. I took my own students’ wind ensemble and nearly won our division. Wonderful days, those. These bring back so many memories. I played euphonium through into professional life. The melodies the “March Kings” wrote for my instrument were truly inspiring. Being a performer and conductor highlighted my musical and life experiences.
im a Filipino citizen like this marching band from sir john philip souza i wish to join in military service when im hear this band
Love them
In my DLC corps we have a few sousa songs namely stars and stripes forever, el capitan, and washington post
I am blessed and happy to have been born in this most beautiful country! This year I celebrate my 50th brithday and I pray for our Lord's continued blessings on our Nation. God blees America! John Philips Sousa was a genius! I love that music.
Sue, the same I do say... I am from 🇲🇽 México 😂
I am a retired professional musician who spends most of his time with Bach and Beethoven and in doing 20 seasons with the Boston Pops I must have heard "Stars" a few hundred times --- but I still love it --- it is well made and so wears well. I think my favorite is "Semper Fidelis" (it doesn't hurt that one of my best friends was a Marine.) The middle section trio is a solo for the bugle and is made entirely out of 4 notes of an F-major chord, which takes a really fine composer to bring off. A touch of real genius in that passage is the busy tuba line, which shows that "good counterpoint" is never out pf [lace!
Director/writer JP Sousa is a maestro of marches! I repeatedly listen to these marches, it boosts the spirit.
BRAVO Thank you for posting and sharing The MARCH KINGS Music.
RIP Mr Sousa your music stirs millions of people even in the 21st centure
As a trumpet player in a community band we played the Washington Post March in a public outdoor venue. It was exilerating! Sousa is a treasure America can be proud of. As a member of the Cdn. Military I had marched to some of Sousa's great marches while on parade. Wonderful music.
Universal.
@@gemmalee3032 drp
🇺🇸🤍🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🕊️🤗🥰✝️
And John Phillip Sousa was a Long Island resident- Sands Point/Manhasset,and there is an elementary school carrying his name! He was not forgotten!! Nice part,Teddy Roosevelt lived in Oyster Bay,so they probably saw each other on occasion 😀 😄! Thank you 😇!
I played my flute and marched in parades from 6th through 12 th grades in school!!! Loved every minute of it!!!
I did the same thing with my clarinet. Played in the high school band for 10 years because our school was so small.
The best John Phillip Sousa I like hearing very much.
Played this song first with high school marching band in the early 1960s. The tune has never gone out of my head in all these years, but I had to search for it because I couldn't recall its name. Found it on the second try after Legionnaires on Parade proved wrong. I played the clarinet.
Souza is my favorite composer. Whether I was standing at parade rest either at USERAL at 40 below or in the Mojave at 130 plus above listening to some long winded general for 3 hours, my favorite part was "pass in review" and Souza march music. I only wish I could regain my military posture and march with an M1Garand at right shoulder arms.
Misspelled USARAL. My bad. Need to improve my proofreading skills.
Actually, I should know better. Text editor on the message app is squirrelly as is the spell checker. Will use text editor on a notebook app, then cut and paste to either the message app or the comment section on these videos.
John Philip Sousa era descendente de Portugueses. Saudações de Aveiro-Portugal.
Sousa haunts my dreams but for good reasons as we're forced to study him in band and it's always fun
John Philip Sousa was a great director and he still remmenber us that he wrote a famous song that belong to the Marine Corps in the United States of America🇵🇦
Compositor das mais famosas marchas, este grande músico e maestro é para nós Portugueses um orgulho, descendente de pai português dos Açores.
Yes, you are absolutely.correct. The band has been in Europe and the bandleader at the time was looking for musicians when he was told about Sousa's father. His father then joined the band and came to America where his sons (John Philip) learned his instrument well enough to play with the band in rehearsals and later as a full musician. He quickly became the bands leader at a very young age. But it was his composing that made him so popular. Then after 12 years as its leader he quit and started his own band and toured the country on train and the world on ship.
O pai nasceu em Sevilha, filho de pai português e de mãe espanhola, Josefina Blanco, também de Sevilha. Juan Antonio Sousa Blanco, uma vez nacionalizado norteamericano é que mudou o nome por John Antonio Sousa.
Absolutly incorrect. Please, read my answer above.
One added comment,Arthur Fiedler,the Boston Pops,most famous conductor(50 years at the podium),was always playing Sousa,especially around July 4th,and Memorial Day! Had an album of Matches,and still plays on!! Thanks again! Great music,and I love the High School Cadets,as I attended a military high! 🪖 Again 😊 thanks!!
Boston Pops?? Music butchers! To each his own I guess...
As a member of the Army's Honor Guard, I marched many missions to the Sousa soundtracks, which inevitably gave me chills in my soul
What a talent. Gotta love this music.🎉
Recuerdo mucho estas marchas, en Perú había una emisora Radio Victoria que pasaban las marchas a una hora determinada, y nos indicaba que teníamos que ir al colegio. Eran los 70s.
Use to march to these for parade n review. 77 - 83
I was in a concert van for many years. I played lead snare drum field snare drum set and toys. I love playing to all of these Sam marches and sometimes when the percussion part wasn’t enough, I would always just add a little bit extra extra just to give it some flare This Fourth of July the day before the day of and the day after three days I celebrate it and listen to Susan marches. I absolutely love it.
My grandchildren and I march around the living room after we say, "Alexa, play the Washington Post march."
Reminds me of Texas A&M when I started back in 1966. All we ever heard was "Harch!" instead of "march." I play these in the morning to get off to a productive launch of the day's work. Have a happy day!
Semper fidels is my all time favorite! .....from Fresno, CA
Souza é um fenômeno em criatividade musical e harmonia entre os diferentes naipes de instrumentos que constituem uma perfeita banda e mesmo orquestras.
Sousa was a genius
Many, many thanks for posting this outstanding music....from Fresno, CA
Thank you for telling the names and years of these songs! I love them all but hardly know any of their names.
Very lovely marches. Hope you can let us have more, thank you.
See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_marches_by_John_Philip_Sousa . Listen and enjoy!
A splendid compilation, thank you!
Great Powerful Country, with a Great Conductor, and Impressive Marches.
All of his marches featured the tuba in some sort of way 😊😊😊 love his humor and artistic genius ❤❤❤❤❤
I love John Phillips Souse's marches. Wonderful music it lifts the spirit...
Estas marchas me recuerdan mis años de estudiante, los desfiles dónde participamos, la escuela Politécnica Belén, la Normal. Gratos recuerdos
Genio De Souza, un homenaje donde estés💫
The best of john philip sousa ❤️
The best military band marches of all time.
I hear this and goosebumps all over reminds me of my days in the corps and being part of the honor guard URAHHH GET SOME MSGT J BALDRIDGE USMC RETIRED
Love it all ,the best of all
Love these! Thank you!
Stirring and beautiful.
I love that music , marching band...❤
I'm a member allso a marching band.. ❤🎉
I'm a member of 3id band Phil army.. camp Peralta Jamindan capiz ..so I love that music ...
Muchas gracias hermosa banda con los acordes de todos esos elementos humanos e instrumentos musicales un deleite al oído
UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUULTIMO MOMENTO
Toquei muito esta bela Marcha. Saudades do meu tempo de Banda.
He also wrote a song I'm a bit disappointed is not here- he wrote The Salvation Army March in tribute to the SA and its tradition of banding itself- I've played it several times in the SA band I'm a member of.
*it* 👍
You're obviously the most knowledgeable science fiction youtuber on the net, keep on roaring my friend. Read also a lot of classics too, A. Merritt a big fan of his purple prose and Tobias Smollett the grouchy writer that influenced Dickens, wrote my only two bio on Goodreads of their sadly only 15 books.
I'm not American but I do love marching music and Souza's works are among my favourites.
I remember these marches playing (on a 78) on my grandfather's Victrola . Souza's March was his fav.
10:35 and now for something completely different
It,assess Monty python flying circus
I too am a military trained person,
I can still relate to Marching bands.
BUENA MUSICA
Recordando mi niñez y mis años en la PRIMARIA
GRACIAS POR COMPATIRLA
Thanks for posts and informations.❤
As marchas mais lindas,compostas por esse gênio. Parabéns pela escolha.👏👏👏👏👏
I like marches❤❤❤❤❤❤
I like Aprils.
I used to watch them practice on the parade field at Ft. Myer, VA, from my bedroom window when I was 6 and 7 years old.
Liberty bell is my favorite march of all time! So glad I got to march to it my freshman year!
Did you aspire to be lumberjacks who cut down larch trees, wear high heels, and eat buttered scones for tea?
@@RichardAugustMatthew19Man No, I always visioned us as an army marching into battle and the march was our battle anthem!
You forgot to mention something completely different, or even spacex maybe?
여기서 수자의 곡외에 추가할 행진곡은
요제프 바그너가 작곡한 "쌍두의 독수리깃발 아래서"
It reminds me of my high school days. They used to play that music while we were
preparing for our flag ceremony.
Hearing these marches makes me proud to be an American.
Las marchas de Sousa me elevan el ánimo y marcho con ellas ❤❤❤❤
Very very good Sousa is unico
The Stars and Stripe Forever is my favourite on which I njoyd the picolos hop our local bands in Phil's can play this marches of John Philip Sousa.
Música para gente especial con sensibilidad
That is talent and knowledge of Music and to me is like the National Hymn .
Good music, regardless of origin, connects people everywhere.
Heard the Washington Post March many times at Camp Nimitz.
Nice to hear this songs
10:35 "And now for something completely different."
10:35 And now for something COMPLETELY DIFFERENT: The Ministry of Silly Walks disguised as marches!
How nice this march is❤❤❤❤
Sin duda, un legado para todas las naciones. Mis respetos para el señor John Philip Sousa, que de Dios goce.
They are great musicians.
Happy 4th of July 2023
i always remember olden Days i like listening every😍 time and never get Bored
I can't wait to see action.
So, go pick a fight with your boyfriend.
sousa greattest march composer .
Sousa 작곡에 큰 공헌을 했읍니다 공적에 감사 할뿐입니다
Ok!
Where’s my piccolo???
Excelentes marchas los felicito. Atentamente r.p.m. 😂
I wish Americans were more patriotic than we are these days.
Me too.
I absolutely Agree! Country FIRST before Party affiliation.
Americans are - not all "American Citizens" though.
Count me among you.
Indeed. Country first.
George Washington warned of “the bane of spirit of party” in his Second Inaugural Address.
Tremendous!
The liberty bell is popular because of monty python and spacex fyi.
10:35 mind immediately leapt to Monty Python
Semper fi… My favorite Sousa march
I remember marching to these at West Point.
I’d have to say my favorite Sousa marches are “The Stars and Stripes Forever” and “The El Capitan March”, but unfortunately he didn’t write either the ones tied for my favorite - “Under The Double Eagle” and “National Emblem.”
Yes, those are great. BUT, there are many more that are even better. Like The White Rose, The Beau Ideal, The Kansas Wildcats, The Wolverines and Black Horse Troop just to name a few.
When ever I hear "The Thunderer", I think of the Ron Ely movie "Doc Savage, Man of Bronze" and it's theme tune.
10:35 IT'S