The song is Turkish. Some parts have been taken from the "Huma Kuşu - Devrim KAYA" In this soundtrack; She says At 0:19 = "Ah Layık mıdır?" means "Ah! Does worthy? At 0:45 = "Islanır" means "It gets wet" (mentioned eyelash because of crying) At 1:25 = "Bu da bunun kuludur" means "this is her slave"
How it feels to be marching for 4 months through the dry lands of Anatolia in the year 1097. And when you finaly get to Antioch, you still have to endure a 8 months siege with barely any food or water. Crusaders went through hell
@@hxcvocalist oh lord! that whole series they did...masterpiece!!! love that channel so much! their drawings are so funny and the humour they put into the videos is so good!
@@Logan-hu9co No. But one needs to consider the fact that climate change (throughout Europe and Asia) worsened the crusaders' march through Anatolia. The world weather was dramatically changing by the end of the 11th century; it had caused a drought in Europe during the 1090s and throwed the Near East into famine and economic disorder. This "medieval warm period" even messed with nomadic patterns. So it is highly possible that Anatolia was hard hit by this warm and dry season. Besides, the seljuks (and later the fatimids) surrounded the crusaders' access to many water sources. And even to enter Syria, the crusaders had to take the longer route through the north (since the Syrian Gates' Passage in the mountains would most likely be guarded by the seljuks, thus impossible to access); and during this detour, many horses died in the summer heat. And later, during the siege of Antioch, there was severe starvation, forcing the crusaders to look for food miles away from Antioch.
The soundtrack of a movie a game a show is of such an importance. Quarantine, bored as fuck. Don't know what game to play. Very stressed day at work. Open Total war try crusade expansion that i never played before. This starts to play. It's been a month now haha.
It is Turkısh song Devrim kaya 'huma kuşu' and here meanings of full song, it is cry song about a women and son who are waiting father but never came back You don't cry your eyelashes (charcoal eyes) get wet (son) I cry so that maybe the heart will calm down (ah) I cry so I smile Have fun have fun have fun maybe the heart will get better (puppies) You become a vineyard so that I can be a rose in your garden (son) Is it worthy? (puppies) You sir, let me be a servant at your door (son) Let them say put, this is a servant of it. (ah) Let them say put it, my rose Have fun have fun have fun this is the servant of it
So it’s about the secondary sufferings of war then. It’s a beautiful song but a terrible subject. As in, the suffering of ordinary people for their leaders’s ambitions… is terrible
They did the same with "Dream of Albion" the title music for the Britannia campaign. The lyrics are Scottish Gaelic, from the folk song Ailein Duinn, which is about a woman mourning her drowned Fiancé
Beautiful old sounding music, really gets you to feel like you are in the middle east. My channel actually deals a lot with the middle east,and its history, so this is very close to my heart.
@@Vekhh it is a bit complicated issue since the melody is atleast 500 years old but sega used the melody which is legal. Problem is that sega used her voice without permissin also corrupted the words (reversed of turkish words)
@@TwoShotsOfLive I think it is actually a plucked instrument now. I've had some luck pitching down a harp and adding heaps of effects. Can't get it to sound quite right though.
Mood The suffering is already so great and this might just be the start. Unless it is forced to end. But even that would probably not come without suffering
Huma Kuşu (Huma Bird). from Erzerum / Turkiye source : Anonymous probably 11th-17th centuries Public Memories yavri yavri huma kuşu yükseklerden seslenir ahh.. yar koynunda bir çift suna beslenir, beslenir.. yavri yavri sen ağlama kirpiklerin ıslanır ben ağlim ki, belki gönül uslanır yavri yavri sen bağ ol ki, ben bahçende gül olim ben aşkından yanıp yanıp kül olim sen efendim, ben kapında kul olim koy desinler bu da bunun kuludur, kuludur..
Zendrû Bracks Actually turkish is my mother tongue and i can't hear anything turkish in this song.But you're indeed right about Huma Kusu, which is a turkish song.I guess Huma kusu was re-recorded without a language just to give the feeling.No words but just the sound of mourning.
I’m so into oriental music... as Greek of course... I prefer Turks by my side than Western Europeans... cause you lest us abandoned in 1453 when the biggest city of the world fell.. I don’t forget 1204
I like the Greek people, but let us not be naive. You had the massacre of the Latins in 1182 in Constantinople where tens of thousands of Italians were murdered by mobs. You don’t think that Venice and other Italian republics would seek to obtain retribution for that? Hence one reason Venice swayed Crusaders to attack the city of Constantinople. By the way, that crusading Army was actually excommunicated by the Pope before attacking the Byzantine Empire, so besides Italian support, it was pretty much on its own.
It's ludicrous to hate on looting when that's how the Byzantines got important enough to get that kind of stuff in the first place. Every empire was built on looting in those days. Not to mention Constantinople was hardly destroyed.
@@revanofkorriban1505 It was sacked to the core, this is the truth, yet i would prefer italians 1000times before turks, plus they fought and die to save Constantinople, last defenders were Greeks and Italians along with some other tribes (serbs etc)
The song is Turkish. Some parts have been taken from the "Huma Kuşu - Devrim KAYA"
In this soundtrack;
She says At 0:19 = "Ah Layık mıdır?" means "Ah! Does worthy?
At 0:45 = "Islanır" means "It gets wet" (mentioned eyelash because of crying)
At 1:25 = "Bu da bunun kuludur" means "this is her slave"
0:45
I always hear in this fragment long "hosanna" which is calling used in christian and jewish liturgy.
yeah this is probably turkish probably jeff van dyck and his wife found this and made a song about it
filthy roach song huh? oh well brittania was better expansion anyway
@@samg8939 lol cope loser
@@samg8939 So you wanted r*pist european song huh?
How it feels to be marching for 4 months through the dry lands of Anatolia in the year 1097. And when you finaly get to Antioch, you still have to endure a 8 months siege with barely any food or water. Crusaders went through hell
If you never watched the first crusade from extras history, do it! It's pretty funny. The first part of the first crusade was such a mess.
@@hxcvocalist oh lord! that whole series they did...masterpiece!!! love that channel so much! their drawings are so funny and the humour they put into the videos is so good!
You realt think anatolian lands are dry? Lol
@@Logan-hu9co No. But one needs to consider the fact that climate change (throughout Europe and Asia) worsened the crusaders' march through Anatolia. The world weather was dramatically changing by the end of the 11th century; it had caused a drought in Europe during the 1090s and throwed the Near East into famine and economic disorder. This "medieval warm period" even messed with nomadic patterns. So it is highly possible that Anatolia was hard hit by this warm and dry season.
Besides, the seljuks (and later the fatimids) surrounded the crusaders' access to many water sources. And even to enter Syria, the crusaders had to take the longer route through the north (since the Syrian Gates' Passage in the mountains would most likely be guarded by the seljuks, thus impossible to access); and during this detour, many horses died in the summer heat. And later, during the siege of Antioch, there was severe starvation, forcing the crusaders to look for food miles away from Antioch.
Don't feel bad for them. The crusaders were certainly not the ones who suffered the most, during the Crusades.
You're welcome dude
The songs name is Hüma Kuşu from Devrim Kaya. It is in Turkish language and a lamentation. For anyone interested in source.
You're the best
Dont mention it ^^
+PokemonFanatic1337
LOL
ruclips.net/video/ovPDUE5V18w/видео.html
Original music
The soundtrack of a movie a game a show is of such an importance. Quarantine, bored as fuck. Don't know what game to play. Very stressed day at work. Open Total war try crusade expansion that i never played before. This starts to play. It's been a month now haha.
I'm jealous you got to experience it for the first time lol
Searching my soul, deep within my toils; my predicament; upon this I came to find. Praise be to God.
It is Turkısh song Devrim kaya 'huma kuşu' and here meanings of full song, it is cry song about a women and son who are waiting father but never came back
You don't cry your eyelashes (charcoal eyes) get wet
(son) I cry so that maybe the heart will calm down
(ah) I cry so I smile
Have fun have fun have fun maybe the heart will get better
(puppies)
You become a vineyard so that I can be a rose in your garden
(son) Is it worthy?
(puppies)
You sir, let me be a servant at your door
(son) Let them say put, this is a servant of it.
(ah) Let them say put it, my rose
Have fun have fun have fun this is the servant of it
So it’s about the secondary sufferings of war then. It’s a beautiful song but a terrible subject. As in, the suffering of ordinary people for their leaders’s ambitions… is terrible
@@StillGamingTM there is no "secondary" suffering in war. only suffering
They did the same with "Dream of Albion" the title music for the Britannia campaign. The lyrics are Scottish Gaelic, from the folk song Ailein Duinn, which is about a woman mourning her drowned Fiancé
Beautiful old sounding music, really gets you to feel like you are in the middle east. My channel actually deals a lot with the middle east,and its history, so this is very close to my heart.
Music goes hard af
Dry Well is a Turkish Folk Song
Devrim Kaya:Huma Kuşu
its beautiful
The background music while crusaders and Saracens cross the desert and they prepare to meet for battle.
Marvelous. Well done, I was hoping I could get an extended version of this.
There is original version named huma kuşu-devrim kaya... She is actually a bit angry to sega due to copyrigght issue and corrupting his song.
@@turkmagidoo2732 really they didn't asked? And how "corrupted"? Is it changed comparing to original?
@@turkmagidoo2732 Ohhh I listened to original, so I know that. So tell me - they must've asked her for permission?
@@Vekhh it is a bit complicated issue since the melody is atleast 500 years old but sega used the melody which is legal. Problem is that sega used her voice without permissin also corrupted the words (reversed of turkish words)
So haunting
Sweet, thanks man
I kind of wish all the unique, or at least some of them, were in vanilla Medieval II
this is great! thanks mate!
The perfect song for my upcoming darksun campaign, to be played when the party inevitably runs out of water.
Great work
Thanks Man wery beautiful music...
Song name : huma kuşu devrim kaya
Ciddi?
I love the vibes.
Can anyone PLEASE tell me how I can find a sample of the bell in this piece or at least recreate it in a synth?
I don't think it's a bell. Maybe a Sitar.
yeah it sounds like a big snare instrument. But hers a bell that sounds kindof like it??
ruclips.net/video/yEP2YrD-dyY/видео.html
@@TwoShotsOfLive I think it is actually a plucked instrument now. I've had some luck pitching down a harp and adding heaps of effects. Can't get it to sound quite right though.
Мощно. Душевно
too short. 10 hours? anyone?
overkill
Make it 2 centuries.
10 years
8 centuries
“ f u c k “
“What is it”
“They have fire throwers again…”
“We brought archers though right..?”
“…,”
“ R I G H T?”
“Shiza…..”
Amo esta pista, lo escucho cada vez que voy al trabajo o tengo que caminar bajo el sol
Le sabes prro, voy a subir el soundtrack de todo medieval 2.
Mood
The suffering is already so great and this might just be the start. Unless it is forced to end. But even that would probably not come without suffering
Perfection.
Deus vult
Huma Kuşu (Huma Bird). from Erzerum / Turkiye source : Anonymous probably 11th-17th centuries Public Memories
yavri yavri huma kuşu yükseklerden seslenir
ahh.. yar koynunda bir çift suna beslenir, beslenir..
yavri yavri sen ağlama kirpiklerin ıslanır
ben ağlim ki, belki gönül uslanır
yavri yavri sen bağ ol ki, ben bahçende gül olim
ben aşkından yanıp yanıp kül olim
sen efendim, ben kapında kul olim
koy desinler bu da bunun kuludur, kuludur..
*thirsts in non discernable Islamic wailing
I went back to israel during the war and listened to this on the plan over.
This words its a Turkish
Someone hears chants in the background sometimes?
which language is this? is it armenian or greek?
Turkish. The artist id called Devrim Kaya. The actual song is Huma Kusu
Zendrû Bracks Actually turkish is my mother tongue and i can't hear anything turkish in this song.But you're indeed right about Huma Kusu, which is a turkish song.I guess Huma kusu was re-recorded without a language just to give the feeling.No words but just the sound of mourning.
bende okadar dinledim total warda hiç bi bok anlamadım bu hangi dil acep kürtçemi diyodum :D
I could be wrong about this, but I heard that this song was sung in Kurdish.
@@Gobbygiblet NOPE. This song was sung şn Turkish, go check.
❤✋✊love en licht7777
I’m so into oriental music... as Greek of course... I prefer Turks by my side than Western Europeans... cause you lest us abandoned in 1453 when the biggest city of the world fell.. I don’t forget 1204
I like the Greek people, but let us not be naive. You had the massacre of the Latins in 1182 in Constantinople where tens of thousands of Italians were murdered by mobs. You don’t think that Venice and other Italian republics would seek to obtain retribution for that? Hence one reason Venice swayed Crusaders to attack the city of Constantinople.
By the way, that crusading Army was actually excommunicated by the Pope before attacking the Byzantine Empire, so besides Italian support, it was pretty much on its own.
I don’t care my friend!!! West destroyed the city and took many things like the horses in saint Marc church
It's ludicrous to hate on looting when that's how the Byzantines got important enough to get that kind of stuff in the first place. Every empire was built on looting in those days.
Not to mention Constantinople was hardly destroyed.
@@revanofkorriban1505 It was sacked to the core, this is the truth, yet i would prefer italians 1000times before turks, plus they fought and die to save Constantinople, last defenders were Greeks and Italians along with some other tribes (serbs etc)
Bruh
Not the best "song"
Great work