The world is not perfect , far from it but I’m so glad we live in an age where at the click of a button we can discover any song ever created. My music taste has evolved so much over the past few years and I’ve realised every genre has it’s great songs. Thank you for uploading.
🌞 💜 🌞 💜 💜 💜 💜 💜 I choose to see only beauty I refuse to see the night I choose to see only Love my friend In your Heart which shines so bright I choose to smell the roses Within the sublimeness of their dew I choose to see the kingdom Which dwells inside of you I choose to be a lover I choose to be a friend I choose to be a flower Whose petals never end I choose to be your brother My Sistar in the light I choose to shine upon thee As you reflect back the light 🌞 💜 🌞 💜 💜 💜 💜 💜
@@ANiMALFRiENDS_GOLDMAN you refuse to see the night? You are missing out quite a bit there. New Age fluffy spirituality poems like yours leaves out a lot of the mysteries of life and the universe.
Nah, people had more fun going out and buying an album. Nowadays it's just as you say - a touch of a little button. Yes very very convenient, and yet we've lost something in the process and along the way.
The Renaissance was, in many ways, the beginning of global culture. While it would take the Industrial Revolution of the 1800s and later the Digital Revolution of the late 1900s-2000s to cement the true modern culture, the Renaissance was a huge step towards this. Prior to this, Europe was little more than a collection of minor warring states, each trying (and failing) to reclaim the glory of the Roman Empire. In the years since the collapse of the Western Empire and the Renaissance, Europe had fallen into cultural stagnation. The Renaissance (lit. 'rebirth') didn't just break that cycle of stagnation; it pissed on the pieces and buried them under a crossroad at midnight. Everything that went into it is SUPER complicated and I don't have enough expertise to try to explain it all anyway, but in basic terms: The Renaissance came about as a result of the establishing of major trade/travel networks between Europe and the Middle East (Which had spent the last century or so undergoing a major cultural/scientific revolution of it's own; there's a reason we call them 'Arabic' numerals after all) thus allowing not merely goods, but more importantly IDEAS to freely pass between these cultures (Also it's entirely because of the Mongols, but that's a rabbit hole for another time). This melting pot of trade, travel, inquiry and experimentation is what produced the age we live in now. THIS is why history is important. You can't know where we are if you don't understand where we came from and how we got here. You, YOU, right now, are reading these words on a piece of technology produced by scientific breakthroughs which were founded on mathematics that were developed in the Middle East and imported to Europe during the Renaissance. And the reason why understanding that is important is because it gives us clear instruction on how to proceed in our own lives and the policies of our nations. "What should we be doing right now?" "Well, what worked before? We should probably do some more of that." If the free exchange of ideas, be they Scientific or Cultural, led to this massive explosion of development and progress, then maybe we should keep on doing that. And maybe isolating ourselves from ideas leads to stagnation and decay. And maybe we should learn what worked so we know what to do, and also learn what didn't work so we know what not to do. Wow, this comment kinda grew faster than I expected it to. Uhh, thanks for coming to my TED talk?
@@ToozdaysChild TL;DR, the same tired anti-white tropes/chanards we've heard over and over again. All this is nothing but an elaborate trick to avoid granting Europeans any credit for their unparalleled contributions to Humanity's development. However, we all know that while we can't assign positive qualities to whites collectively we can certainly assign them collective guilt.
I was looking for songs to put as a background for a World History project and I think I just found a new obsession. I'm glad this type of music is still here.
Beautiful tune! It was incorporated into a Christmas song with English lyrics. We sang it in a choir that I was a member of for a Christmas concert. Thanks for posting!
Oh meu Deus, que saudades desta musica! Fartava-me de dançar ao som disto com um grupo estilo andanças ás segundas-feiras e ás sextas, depois do jantar em praça pública. Era tão divertido! No fim ficávamos zonzos e convivíamos uns com os outros, de vez em quando alguém levava um bolo ou licor para provar. Assim que ouvi esta música, comecei logo a dançar como se estivesse em roda. Oxalá possa voltar a estes tempos quando o covid acabar!!
desculpa a pergunta, mas qual estado brasileiro mantêm essa tradição centenária???? tourdion é uma musica muuuito antiga cultural francesa, me surpreende ter essa tradição no brasil
Brilliant! Your interpretations in renditions are by far the best out there when it comes to the what I find so interesting about late medieval and the early Renaissance traditions, especially what was popular and sung on the streets.
Great,melodious.The best rendering of this piece of medieval,difficult to reproduce, European music.Hail on you!!!Everyone ,who knows anything about it must follow.
This is my favorite kind of music! It’s so relaxing and takes me back in time! I’ve been listening to your music since I was 17 years old, and now I am currently 19 years old (turning 20 this month). I am so thankful to have discovered your music, it is amazing! I’ve always been somewhat of an old soul and never really felt like I connected as well with my peers, and I have always felt mentally older than my real age. This music really helps me to connect with my true self. ❤️
+zsupersaiyan Yeah wow. They were humans. Maybe stronger and more intelligent ones too since there was still somekind of natural selection going on and they weren't completely stupidified by media and commercials.
I managed to find the back vocal part. Here's what I've come up with. Help me correct it if something's off. Quand je bois du vin clairet Ami tout tourne, tourne, tourne, tourne Aussi désormais je bois Anjou ou Arbois 2x (Buvons bien, la buvons donc À ce flacon faisons la guerre Buvons bien, la buvons donc Ami, trinquons, gaiement chantons) Chantons et buvons À ce flacon faisons la guerre Chantons et buvons Mes amis, buvons donc 2x (En mangeant ce gras jambon À ce flacon faisons la guerre En mangeant ce gras jambon À ce flacon faisons la guerre)
French : Quand je bois du vin clairet, Amis, tout tourne, Aussi désormais je bois Anjou ou Arbois. Chantons et buvons, à ce flacon faisons la guerre, chantons et buvons, mes amis, buvons donc. Le bon vin nous a rendus gais, chantons, oublions nos peines, chantons. En mangeant d'un gras jambon, à ce flacon faisons la guerre. English translation : When I drink a Claret Wine, friends, my head turns, but that is true now also when I drink Anjou or Arbois. Let's sing and drink, let's make war on this bottle let's sing and drink, my friends, drink up then. Good wine makes us gay let's sing, forget our troubles, let's sing. While eating a fat ham, let's make war on this bottle. Enjoy :)
TheSergentChaotix Buvons bien, buvons mes amis, Trinquons, buvons, gaiement chantons (2X). En mangeant ce gras jambon, A ce flacon faisons la guerre (2X).
Molto bene!! I love this music! I don't even remember the first time i found your channel on here, it seems like i have always been able to listen to this!! keep up the great work!!
I know this melody! I wondered where I heard it and I recalled we have one song with this melody here in the Czech Republic :-) Batalion - Věra Martinová