@@chazanclaudiogoldman3792 please send it! My choir director told me there's been no record of it ever since the national museum of Brazil burnt down! If I could get him to have the Grand Rapids Symphony Youth Chorus to do the song again while knowing what they're saying that would be incredible!!!😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃
♫ TRÊS CANTO DOS ÍNDIOS KRAHÔS♫ *De ke ke ke korirare He Djarambutum korirare he Haaamm... The heron flies over the pond. The heron is hungry. She sees a fish passing by in the pond, and when an alligator hurls open its mouth to eat it And the heron does --- Aham! (escapes) *Padzo parareha djozire Iwére na kapo há djozire The macaw is on the stick, Is she laughing or crying? *Tamahera kidery kema kideri kema kideri kema Yrody'le moware te te Ahã chiiii, Ahã chiiii, Ahã chiiii Calling his girlfriend to get honey in the bush (dating)
I agree! My high school did this when I was there and it was slower in some areas, faster in others, playful where it needed to be and there were a variety of dynamics not just F and p. However, I do think this group did do a good job just not the best.
Stellar Onion Hey, it isn't dead! Kraó indians still alive and speaking Jê in the North of the country. Search about it, they have an important history. :)
If memory serves, the wildfires in Brazil a couple of years ago did not reach the protected areas in the north of the country where the Krao live. That said, there were other indigenous tribes living in Brazil at that point which still had little or no contact with Western technology and there is reason to assume that at least one or two of them did not survive the fires.