Gwenno performs Tir Ha Mor on Later… with Jools Holland on BBC Two (15 May 2018). For more performances and interviews from the show, subscribe now: bit.ly/2fKbxWg. Watch the whole episode here: www.bbc.co.uk/l....
Супер! Давно я не слышал ничего стоящего! Обожаю завораживающее кельтское пение! Сегодня ехали в машине, наслаждались чудным голосом Долорес О' Риордан, но на кельтском языке я слышу впервые! Все-же кельские напевы ни с чем не спутать! С любовью из матушки Руси!
I found Cocteau Twins and Enya and even a bit of Don Henley in there, weird but even weirder I didn't realise it was Gwenno of the Pipettes as she looked so different
@@pulchralutetia ; Welsh/Cornish. Born in Cardiff, mother Welsh, father Cornish, sings in Welsh and Cornish, 100% indigenous Brythonic. This song is in Cornish.
Well worth listening to the whole album. You don't have to speak the celtic tongue to enjoy it. Tir Ha Mor is all in Cornish but Gwenna Saunders speaks Cornish, Welsh and English. See ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xUTHX1rdIGs.html
Marghek an Gwyns ow tonsya War an howldrevel Tir ha mor, tir ha mor Marghek an Gwyns ow nija War an howlsedhes efan Tir ha mor, tir ha mor Marghek an Gwyns ow tonsya Dres an dowr efan Tir ha mor, tir ha mor это корнский - в гугл-переводчике такого нет Всадник ветров танцует Через солнца восход Над землёй и водой Всадник ветров несётся Через огромный закат Над землёй и водой Всадник Ветров танцует Над морской глубиной Над землёй и водой
@@dennis12dec Think it was going on a bit before her. Her father was a revivalist and she is a native speaker. The Cornish revival started over a century ago...
How many people in Cornwall do you think want separation from England/Britain? Probably about 100, that is a small number when you consider the population of Cornwall is something like 500,000 or 600,000.
@@jeffoliver2298 Way more than 100, I'd venture 75%+ of indigenous folk in Cornwall would vote to leave rotten England. Add in the Welsh, who ALL want autonomy, and Dumnonia is still Celtic, blood and land, never forgotten.
@@2Malachi There was support for a south-west assembly - which is all the counties in the south west - but specifically Cornish independence, I don't think it's that high. It's interesting how Cornwall keeps returning just Conservative MP's to Westminster, if independence was that popular you'd think one of those parties would win seats there. We hear occasionally about a militant independence organisation in Cornwall, I think they firebombed a restaurant owned by a celebrity chef and allegedly put broken glass on beaches - that is a very low thing to do. My understanding of why a small number of people in Cornwall, a very small number, want separation is because it is the only county in England bordered by just one other - all others are bordered by two or more - so theoretically it could be zoned off and be it's only little country. I can't see any other reason for wanting to break away. Most districts of England became part of England through invasions occurring over the years, Cornwall is no different.
@@jeffoliver2298 The fact you can't see it doesn't make it any less real. Democracy doesn't lend itself to smaller nations, ask the Catalonians, also Celtic btw. Large states are Satan's set up, Yah appointed the nations, they were small. Having said that, Alfred the Great knew the way, using Yehovah God's laws to set up England, thus ending the invasions and ushering in strength and eventually the Empire, promised blessings. Now, we reap the curses of Yah. Deuteronomy 28, Leviticus 26. I'm His messenger, Dumnonia Watchman blog.
@@2Malachi If there was an independence referendum in Cornwall this month what percentage of the county would vote to leave do you think? If it did leave it would struggle financially too, it makes a lot of money out of tourism but that wouldn't be enough to keep it afloat. It would be a poor place.
Cornwall was part of wale once Until the English stole it like so many parts of the world they had to give a lot of it back after the second world war we in wale are still waiting
Do you think wale, as you describe it, could stand on it's own two feet if it was made it's own country? I doubt it. Also, the people of north Wales dislike the people of south Wales as much as they dislike the English - perhaps it would be a good thing if Wales became two countries.
@@xxydsd4263 Brythonic not Celt, Celt originates from the Greek word of Keltii which means savages, the Brythonic folk amalgamated some parts of the European so called Celtic culture and beliefs into theirs, the oldest and purest language (without any additions from other languages) is the Basque language... Just thought I'd mention that little known fact
@@davythfear1582 ; Hi Davyth, what I wanted to say was that Brythonic was not Celtic, though the Brythonic people adapted parts of the Celtic culture into their own culture, the Celtic language didn't, Celts who came to Britain eventually lost their language to the more dominant Brythonic language, The only surviving Brythonic language is Welsh, the Cornish and Breton languages are, Breton is a patois of Gaul and Brythonic (Welsh), Cornish is a patois of Brythonic (Welsh) and Breton. In Europe there is no pure language, and I just added at the end that in all of Europe that the Basque language is pure and untainted from other languages as a piece of little known language knowledge, In Britain and Ireland the Welsh and Gaelic languages are nearly untainted, I hope I've made my original comment more clear, I know the Basque language has nothing to do with the Celts, they are unique in their language. Happy New Year to you Davyth and all close to you...
@@johngrindley169 The word patois implies a contemporary variety of a language. Cornish has a history of more than a thousand years and a separate grammar and vocabulary (though similar of course to Welsh and Breton). Otherwise you might just as well say that English is a patois of German. Gaulish was a language more distantly related to the Brithonic (or Brittonic) languages which died out in the 6th century, therefore could not have influenced Breton, as the migration from Britain occurred afterwards. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brittonic_languages