@@turkishultranationalist "nono,he has a point"....I MEAN FOR REAL even if he sounds aggressive the ones who always say "pff,underrated" (on comments which don't deserve this), it's pretty much annoying.
@@spetsnatzlegion3366 At least we could count on the fact the Internet is slowly knowing about it, recovering knowledge in songs sung by a country with a rich history not many people talk about
So, we got a Mongolian dude, dressed in a full Mongolian traditional attire, having a traditional Mongolian haircut, Mongolian throat singing a traditional Mongolian song in Mongolian about Genghis Khan while playing a traditional Mongolian instrument in the steppe. That’s literally the most Mongol video on the Internet.
@Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicolvocanoconiosis korea fell and japan got screwd but not fallen india and the middle east didn't because there's less plains wich sucks for horses
As a pure blooded American with not a single iota of Mongolian, or overall Asian DNA running through my bloodstream, this makes me proud to be a Mongolian. 🇲🇳 🐎
@@dylanrodriguez-rb3udY'all will claim anything.😂Most of you are peasant stock but cosplaying "we were kangz." 🤡I bet you're a direct grandson of Vasco de Gama😂 and proud to have a grandmother graped by a dirty, syphilis carrying Spaniard. Stockholm Syndrome = Mentally ill.
For those of you who dont know who Chinggis Khaanii was, he was a wholesome rich person who gave every poor person food clothes and golden coins. It was said that at some point he was the richest person on this world.
@@NovaProspekt19You know they have to make up a lie since Mansa Musa is irrefutable. They were digging up gold while wrestling grizzly bears. 😂🤦🏽♀️Can't just be proud with silk and spices.
I read that the two strongs are from a male and a female horse's tail, so the width of the filaments are really different. One string has a huge frequence spectrum, so there is a lot more type of sounds in it than it appears.
@Eros Matthew Montallana If you kill the singer without completing the quest, he will drop his music instrument which can produce shockwaves and stun enemies with the throat singing
@Eros Matthew Montallana After you beat Genghis Khan, you have two choice ~ either become the next leader of Mongolia and restore it's previous glories or marry 23 women😳
@@onhhn The results support the general view that the ancestry of the American Indian is predominantly Mongoloid. Using 30,000 years as the separation time between the American Indian and Mongoloid, the divergence time between the three major races of man was estimated to be 33,000-92,000 years.
@@onhhn Inuits are of Mongolian descent because they share similar linguistic and cultural aspects with the Mongolians. On the other hand, the culture of the Inuits and Mongolians was similar because both practices hunting and gathering.
Editing videos with subtitles in 3 languages for Mongolic and Turkic music on my main channel. You are also invited. :) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-JanNdqAKcys.html
I feel like he’s some ancient Mongolian giant forgotten to history that has decided to arise from his grave in the mountains just to play some absolutely glorious tunes.
Editing videos with subtitles in 3 languages for Mongolic and Turkic music on my main channel. You are also invited. :) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-JanNdqAKcys.html
RU-vid is a masterpiece in its ability to find the right video at the right time. When I opened the app, I didn't know what I would be watching in a couple of minutes, but the service found exactly what my soul wanted the most.
@@Madara-Uchiha People imagine the rocks he's sitting on are mountain tops. Compared to that and the backdrop, with him being so close to the camera, he seems disproportionately large. But ofc that's just an illusion.
It is scientifically proven that Batzorig is actually a God that lived for more than 1,000 years, and was worshipped not only by Genghis Khan, but other Turkic and Tengrist nations before Islam and Buddhism reached the Mongol Empire. It is said that Batzorig plays such a powerful tune that the world shakes whenever he plays his based throat singing instrument. "Why use military tactics when you have throat singing?" - Sun Tzu meeting Batzorig secretly in the Gobi Desert. Batzorig is no longer worshipped, but his legacy remains because of his legendary Mongolian throat singing videos. This is why Batzorig is appreciated and based. Hope this was helpful!
@Maestro Nokk - I fucking LOVE Batzorig! That being said, I'm not so sure I'd necessarily call this song factual... Chinggis Khan isn't really deserving of praise if you bring facts into account :D
Higgins2001 he built the largest empire in the entire history. Why is it not to be praised? I know the slaughters and massacres he did, but all the conquerers did it before.
@@eaststorm1282 because usually string instruments that can create many different notes have multiple strings of different thicknesses but his instrument only has two and the different notes are created by him putting pressure on different parts of them and i know that can be done on other string instruments but it's just impressive
Maby like in Samorost from Amanita Design, that would fit amazingly and i assure you that Amanita Design wants this music because they're trademark is soundtrack :)
Well I am not sure if my non existent legacy is known and wide spread enough for such men to provide me and my events with their art such as throat singing
Depends on where you live. Some friends from the netherlands noticed thinner air on the mountains i live at (800-1000m) while people living in the andes constantly live at 4000m and breathe just fine
Fun Fact: Batzorig is one of the Mongolians singing around the campsite in the last episode in the first season of Marco Polo. He pops up about halfway through the episode as the Khans army prepares for war and the prince walks among the soldiers. The song he’s singing by the campfire during that scene is called “The Beautiful Steppe”.
@@stefanmilosevic8899 hello, I am a person who was born in 764 AD, I am at most 1257, and like you, I experienced the Mongol empire, and I met this guy, he was born in 1200, surely you don't know because you were focused on the conquest of the song
@@jameswikman3664 it's overtone singing. Basically every "tuned" sound you make has a series of frequencies over it at specific intervals and he basically isolates some overtones while singing.