So concisely explained, yet so present in the moment in which the music is played, reverence for every note played, as a portal to a time lost long ago...
The origin of the word "guitar" is even more apparent when you realize that the ancient pronunciation of 'th' was actually an aspirated 't', so it sounded kinda like "kit-hara."
Greetings from 🏛️ Athens - Hellas🇬🇷 My friend you have the ancient Hellinic spirit in you. You have the golden ratio in your soul. Thank you. I enjoy so mutch this sound your kindness your talent of your voice and performing with the ancient Hellinic κιθάρα. May the Olympians be with you. ΧΑΙΡΕ
Greetings from Italy 🇮🇹 I love Greece, and our Roman Empire learned so much from all of ancient greeks, and they were probably envious too that's why they stole a lot of traditions, but I mean, your culture was so fascinating.
@@lvsoad22 Yes, correct, in fact we have lots of Greek Ruins in South Italy, especially Calabria and Sicilia, because there were lots of Greek colonies there.
Southern Italy is an Italian-Greek mix. Greeks settled about everywhere south of Rome. My family is from Bari, a south-eastern Capital facing the Adriatic Sea, right across the ocean from Greece. My family has Greek and Italian blood, and so does almost anyone in Italy, especially Southern Italy. So both cultures are a smoothie of influence and genetic history! You probably have Greek ancestry Guido Mista 🔫
I love how you explore instruments from long ago and try to sound as authentic as possible from drawings and other small clues. This kithara sounds incredible and I love your tones. Thank you so much for gifting us all with these educational and lovely videos!
@Johnny Deep Yes that is where things are headed, great power competition, the withdrawal of the US from the global stage. Have you read Evola at all by any chance?
Dude you're amazing I never heard anybody (non greek ) know that much stuff about ancient greek music,as a greek myself I bet there are many greek people who don't know as much stuff as you do
I so love your work. The beauty of your voice and skill at the ancient string instruments to me is like time travel, and joy. Thank you so very much from my soul.
this is amazing in so many ways! The portamento, the harmonics, so many wonderful sounds! And your singing with it is just extraordinary, and it touches the soul ... and really enjoyed hearing you talk about the kithara ... your appreciation of it is very contagious. also, beautiful Greek girl was very foolish indeed not to show up!
That piece of music at the end cured my headache...I could feel myself walking the streets of an Ancient Greek city, the bustling agora, the smells and sounds of a grand open market and its colourful wares.
Thank you very much for this! Can't wait to hear Iliad or Odyssey in your rendition. I wonder why these portamento and vibrato columns, discs and springs are made symmetrical. I don't think the reason was simply the aesthetics side of it. Probably they meant it for both left and right-handed musicians, or one musician could swap hands to equalise the job of both hands - for health's sake, you know.
+Dmitry Sofronov An interesting theory, Dmitry, but the system of springs behaves differently on one side than it does on the other, in spite of the fact that they mirror one another. The springs do not affect the middle string at all (or very little). You can displace a treble or bass string without disturbing the middle string(s), so you can play an interval and shift only one note either up or down, while the other remains stable. This is also possible by shifting tension on a modern pedal steel.
+Peter Pringle I've just gotten into your videos and I have to say that I am not only hooked for life but so impressed!!! Your singing voice is absolutely wonderful as well and it's good to see an artist bring these beauties to life in an age that is so hard-pressed by the noises of today. Not saying modern rock is all bad but there truly is such a great amount of crassness involved that simply wasn't the case with the slender, unique lovelies that you've given us. Thank you so much, Mr. Pringle!!
What a wonderfully haunting sound... I’m just in the middle of reading Mary Renault’s The Praise Singer - whose instrument would have been exactly this... Living history!
Peter Pringle... I have always loved you and with this video... I love you more. You are a genuine and true artist. Thank you so much. Your historical knowledge is amazing and your legenday beauty has never faded...
It's incredible... magical music... It's like you're immersed in your own past, in a time when you understood music and the language of nature... Ancient Ellada... I'd like to hear this song, music and voice, longer... To make it longer... If there's a full version, where can you listen to it? And what is it called? You're just an incredible musician... The ancient music, sacred, woven together in the land of nature...
Grandiose! I´m a teacher at grammar school and am preparing lessons about fundamental knowledge about music. I call it "gallop through the epochs". I have just closed the early advanced civilisations and am now getting to ancient times. This is so interesting! That is really great work!
I need to meet you, you are a big inspiration, all your passion for ancient music is incredible and makes me hope in a better future! Thanks for all That!
The portamento you demonstrated made it sound fascinatingly similar to an Indian sitar. I wonder if the instruments had the same origin. Even the names sound quite similar, especially considering that Greek and Sanskrit are both members of the Proto-Indo-European language family. Greek was part of the centum languages and Sanskrit was part of the satem in which the k sound became an s.
Ragd0ll greek kithara is from older canaanite origin, it’s the instrument of the Kothar god, which is the canaanite version of Ea. The instrument however did make its way to india after alexander’s conquest. It was known as citra in india.
I read about this instrument in my ancient Greek class, a long time ago, so it's very cool to see it in action! My textbook had an article dedicated to this instrument, but I don't remember very well. I go to Greece often, so it was really cool to learn something about the ancient Greeks!
I studied the ancient civilizations and I love classical music. I found the most amazing thing I had ever seen about music, which brings me to other world. Thanks Peter!!!!
Yes! So glad you are back. Love all the information as well as the playing. Fantasies is my favorite album ever! Keep it coming my good man. Everywhere I go I spread the word about Pringle. Amazing voice, amazing talent, amazing. Pringle is the real deal.
Simply BEAUTIFUL and somehow, it awakens certain feelings from someplace down deep in my sould, just as if I am hearing this same ancient music for the first time.........AGAIN!!!!!!!! Very weird feelings. I do not know why but it seriously creates a feeling of longing to return to some place, some where. a long time ago? I can't quite understand it myself so I get it how it would be hard for someone else to understand my reasoning.
Wow! I never thought that it would sound like a cross between a lute or mandolin and a classical guitar. I always imagine it sounding like a harp. It's cool. And ancient Greek music would sound a bit Middle Eastern and a bit Indian. Music really is universal and integrated.
Un MILLON de GRACIAS... ...Las musicas y MELODIAS que salen de las LIRAS, obran un efecto RELAJANTE y CELESTIAL... por decirlo de alguna manera. Tambien son como 'MAQUINAS del TIEMPO'... Que MARAVILLOSO poder reconstruir los instrumentos que los musicos antiguos construian e interpretaban. Yo, al menos ya tengo mi primera lira (de 7 cuerdas) y cuando la hago sonar siento como si casi estuviese levitando -no materialmente claro esta- pero si espiritualmente.
Εξαιρετική παρουσίαση με σεβασμο γνώση. Και αποδείξεις στην πράξη Τόσο σωστές πληροφορίες σε τόσο απλη γλωσσα και κατανοητή για οποιοδήποτε. Ευχαριστώ πολύ για ολες αυτές τις πληροφορίες και που τις μοιράζεστε απλόχερα Να είσαστε καλά
I am so glad I found this guy. I absolutely love history and I'm a big music lover and so the fact that he is bringing us ancient music from history is wonderful.
Beautiful. You should add "pre-bent" notes too. Rather than "bending" up from one note to another and then back down, try already applying tension then playing and releasing down to a note. Cool, emotional effect. Makes me want to get one. Wanted to find out the history of the names of the modes. Then heard that Plato mentioned the use of different modes, and recommended everyone to play a Kithara. This is a great rabbit hole.
That was awesome, thank you! New subscriber, I'm going to recommend this channel to everyone I know. YOU NEED TO RECORD A PERFORMANCE OF THE ILIAD!!!!!!! And some PSALMS!!!!! It's important.
I agree 100% It actually would be good for the WORLD to once again RETURN to this era of ancient music. I am quite certain that to the ancients, their music was most definitely more that JUST words. I think there was so much more to the reasons for their music than we could ever HOPE to understand today.
I stumbled on Ali Farahani Younan on apple music last week and I just couldn't get it off my head. I just needed to find the original sound... And here it is! I'm so happy
Thank you for an informative presentation of this amazing instrument along with your beautiful voice at the end. The ancient civilizations were not primitive but advanced - more advanced than given credit for too long. Your expertise and talent are important to education and to a world that is losing sight of the past and its significance. Keep on doing what you are.
As a greek electric guitar player I seriously can't thank you enough for this information!
So concisely explained, yet so present in the moment in which the music is played, reverence for every note played, as a portal to a time lost long ago...
Very strange place to see you, very true comment tho, it's really awesome that we have all of this knowledge about stuff that's so old
i didnt think i'd find you here
AI ANGEL OMG
I can't imagine anyone not liking this. I mean how could anyone be antikythera.
I know! Why the dislikes? It's weird.
Whoosh...
or leykada?
Only the cog-noscenti will understand the perfection of that finely machined joke.
this is actually an ingenious yet subtle comment
This channel is a gift to all those who seek to learn something new. Thank you.
The origin of the word "guitar" is even more apparent when you realize that the ancient pronunciation of 'th' was actually an aspirated 't', so it sounded kinda like "kit-hara."
In Finnish it is nearly the same spelling as well, since guitar is "kitara" in Finnish.
modern italian has "chitarra"
Gitara in Serbo Croat
Guitarra in portuguese :)
malaka in greek
I think
I can remember this song making the Top 10 in Athens back in 484 BC.
hahaha yeah me too bro
Me too, and I remeber Uriah Heap when they were just a pile
Back then we had *real* music
Actually, you're wrong...It was Freebird.
a shame fame and the lifestyle took its toll
Honestly it sounds like the Kithara could handle acoustic versions of metal songs, without the electricity. The Greeks were awesome.
Djent maybe haha
Ancient Greek Metal.. 🤘🏻
Imagine a metal song about the Peloponnesian War played on those
they sure were
@@randomcultist398 Someone needs to contact Sabaton. 😁
Greetings from 🏛️ Athens - Hellas🇬🇷 My friend you have the ancient Hellinic spirit in you. You have the golden ratio in your soul. Thank you. I enjoy so mutch this sound your kindness your talent of your voice and performing with the ancient Hellinic κιθάρα. May the Olympians be with you.
ΧΑΙΡΕ
This is so cool!
Greetings from Italy 🇮🇹 I love Greece, and our Roman Empire learned so much from all of ancient greeks, and they were probably envious too that's why they stole a lot of traditions, but I mean, your culture was so fascinating.
@@Pizza_Man_ remember it was not just all stolen, you also had common ancestors
@@lvsoad22 Yes, correct, in fact we have lots of Greek Ruins in South Italy, especially Calabria and Sicilia, because there were lots of Greek colonies there.
Southern Italy is an Italian-Greek mix. Greeks settled about everywhere south of Rome. My family is from Bari, a south-eastern Capital facing the Adriatic Sea, right across the ocean from Greece. My family has Greek and Italian blood, and so does almost anyone in Italy, especially Southern Italy. So both cultures are a smoothie of influence and genetic history! You probably have Greek ancestry Guido Mista 🔫
I was not aware of all this amazing information. Vibratos and harmonics? Amazing! Thank you very much. Ευχαριστώ πολύ
I love how you explore instruments from long ago and try to sound as authentic as possible from drawings and other small clues. This kithara sounds incredible and I love your tones. Thank you so much for gifting us all with these educational and lovely videos!
This is so hauntingly beautiful - It gives me joy to know there are artists of this calibre.
Im greek and i wish we were as clever as the ancient Greek...
They are
When I lived in Athens in 1990 my host family said "we lit the lamp of civilization for the rest of the world and blew it out for ourselves."
Οι κοινοι άνθρωποι δε νομίζω να διεφεραν από εμένα και εσένα. Ίσα ίσα που δεν είχαν όλοι την ίδια παιδεία
@Johnny Deep Yes that is where things are headed, great power competition, the withdrawal of the US from the global stage. Have you read Evola at all by any chance?
@Misha Hahaha this is a thracian instrument
My mind was travelling to some magnificent ancient places while I was listening to you singing and playing this beautiful instrument, thank you!
I really love your videos. These old instruments are sending me on a journey when i close my eyes.
Past life memories.
The kithara has a whammy bar wow lol
Whammy stick
My ancestors are from Thessaloniki, and I love seeing and learning about this.
Thank you kindly for educating all of us.
Amazing instrument, amazing performance!
You should teach in schools
Or, children should do this and not be in schools.
@@chrish1657 i agree
My music teacher gave us some of his videos to watch, including this one
Peter Pringle - we are so lucky that you have explained this instrument to us, will you do more? Are you available to tutor?
Dude you're amazing I never heard anybody (non greek ) know that much stuff about ancient greek music,as a greek myself I bet there are many greek people who don't know as much stuff as you do
The vocal part on your song is so well done! I wish there were more videos with that style.
I so love your work. The beauty of your voice and skill at the ancient string instruments to me is like time travel, and joy. Thank you so very much from my soul.
The piece towards the end is some of the most hauntingly beautiful music I have ever heard.
The 8:05 part is just outstanding. What a voice.
I was looking for this comment. And man, when he gets into falsetto!!❤️
8:03 dont mind me just making a timestamp so i can replay n practice,,here if anyone needs it too
An absolutely stunning performance
Aaaaaaaaa apaan aaa aaaaaa aaaaaa aaaaaaa aaaaaa aaaaa aaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa a a a a a a a a aaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaa
People back then were really into high quality arts!
Sending cheers from Russia to you, master, thanks for the video!
this is amazing in so many ways! The portamento, the harmonics, so many wonderful sounds! And your singing with it is just extraordinary, and it touches the soul ... and really enjoyed hearing you talk about the kithara ... your appreciation of it is very contagious. also, beautiful Greek girl was very foolish indeed not to show up!
That piece of music at the end cured my headache...I could feel myself walking the streets of an Ancient Greek city, the bustling agora, the smells and sounds of a grand open market and its colourful wares.
Thank you very much for this! Can't wait to hear Iliad or Odyssey in your rendition.
I wonder why these portamento and vibrato columns, discs and springs are made symmetrical. I don't think the reason was simply the aesthetics side of it. Probably they meant it for both left and right-handed musicians, or one musician could swap hands to equalise the job of both hands - for health's sake, you know.
+Dmitry Sofronov An interesting theory, Dmitry, but the system of springs behaves differently on one side than it does on the other, in spite of the fact that they mirror one another. The springs do not affect the middle string at all (or very little). You can displace a treble or bass string without disturbing the middle string(s), so you can play an interval and shift only one note either up or down, while the other remains stable. This is also possible by shifting tension on a modern pedal steel.
+Peter Pringle Thanks for clarification. Now I can stop wondering.
"You can displace a treble or bass string without disturbing the middle string(s)"
Wow, this is of kind of ancient B-bender then ! Great work man ! :p
wow! the song at the end is epic!
+Peter Pringle I've just gotten into your videos and I have to say that I am not only hooked for life but so impressed!!! Your singing voice is absolutely wonderful as well and it's good to see an artist bring these beauties to life in an age that is so hard-pressed by the noises of today. Not saying modern rock is all bad but there truly is such a great amount of crassness involved that simply wasn't the case with the slender, unique lovelies that you've given us. Thank you so much, Mr. Pringle!!
Would love to hear more of this beautiful music! Thank you!
I never get tired of watching this video. Thank you very much!
please record/upload some more songs on this thing. that tune at the end was amazing. what a fascinating instrument. sounds like a profound revelation
It amazes me how effortless you sing as well. Just wonderful!
What a wonderfully haunting sound... I’m just in the middle of reading Mary Renault’s The Praise Singer - whose instrument would have been exactly this... Living history!
Peter Pringle... I have always loved you and with this video... I love you more. You are a genuine and true artist. Thank you so much. Your historical knowledge is amazing and your legenday beauty has never faded...
That music near the end of the video: So beautiful. So timeless. Amazing.
I love this channel.
Danke für die ausführliche Erklärung! Das Lied ist wunderschön!!! 💝
Herzliche Grüße aus Belgien! 🇧🇪
Fantastic! Just by listening to you speak I can tell you love these instruments and have an abundance of knowledge about them. Keep up the great work!
That music as the end is SO nice, I hope there's more Greek songs like this on your channel. * 3*
Thank you for those enlightening lessons of musical history...you really made my day my good man :) !!!
It's incredible... magical music... It's like you're immersed in your own past, in a time when you understood music and the language of nature... Ancient Ellada... I'd like to hear this song, music and voice, longer... To make it longer... If there's a full version, where can you listen to it? And what is it called? You're just an incredible musician... The ancient music, sacred, woven together in the land of nature...
Fantastic organ and a very beautiful song
Grandiose! I´m a teacher at grammar school and am preparing lessons about fundamental knowledge about music. I call it "gallop through the epochs". I have just closed the early advanced civilisations and am now getting to ancient times. This is so interesting! That is really great work!
DAMN!!!👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾🔥🔥🔥that transported me to a place will be replaying this a few times
I'm so happy I stumbled upon this channel :)
Ευχαριστώ Πολύ! Η παρουσίαση είναι πολύ εντυπωσιακή! Thank you for your video! It is so amazing!
ti grafeis ellinika re, nomizeis tha se katalavei o xenos?
Ουάι αρ ιού τάιπινγ ιν Λέτιν κέρεκτερς;;
@@sabhotep5153 χαχαχχαχαχα
Thank you showing how extraordinary this instrument was and still is!
Sounds beautiful. No wonder these instruments were so popular.
I just got the shivers listening to you play, just wonderful
This was fascinating. Thank you for helping to keep the knowledge and interest in these instruments alive.
I need to meet you, you are a big inspiration, all your passion for ancient music is incredible and makes me hope in a better future! Thanks for all That!
6:24 for music.
Daniel Springer. Marie Cachet came here for the music, as I also did. So please stop acting the Troll.
Hey thanks, it's not like anyone here would want to actually _learn_ something; that's just time consuming. After all this _is_ YT.
my dick is in my hand, thank you.
SEEEEEEHHHHHHREEE ET.
The portamento you demonstrated made it sound fascinatingly similar to an Indian sitar. I wonder if the instruments had the same origin.
Even the names sound quite similar, especially considering that Greek and Sanskrit are both members of the Proto-Indo-European language family. Greek was part of the centum languages and Sanskrit was part of the satem in which the k sound became an s.
Ragd0ll greek kithara is from older canaanite origin, it’s the instrument of the Kothar god, which is the canaanite version of Ea. The instrument however did make its way to india after alexander’s conquest. It was known as citra in india.
idiot
I was thinking this same thing.
I read about this instrument in my ancient Greek class, a long time ago, so it's very cool to see it in action! My textbook had an article dedicated to this instrument, but I don't remember very well. I go to Greece often, so it was really cool to learn something about the ancient Greeks!
The chord playing is really impressive! I did not expect that!
these kinds of videos of where you show off these ancient instruments make me really happy. i love it man :)
Thank you SO MUCH for uploading this!! Beautiful, indeed. I love this channel!
Greetings from Argentina.
I studied the ancient civilizations and I love classical music. I found the most amazing thing I had ever seen about music, which brings me to other world. Thanks Peter!!!!
Impressive & interesting presentation of a beautiful instrument!
Yes! So glad you are back. Love all the information as well as the playing. Fantasies is my favorite album ever! Keep it coming my good man. Everywhere I go I spread the word about Pringle. Amazing voice, amazing talent, amazing.
Pringle is the real deal.
Fascinating. Greetings from Nea Makri, Attiki, Greece.
Very BEAUTIFUL instrument and music which it plays also the vocals!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Simply BEAUTIFUL and somehow, it awakens certain feelings from someplace down deep in my sould, just as if I am hearing this same ancient music for the first time.........AGAIN!!!!!!!! Very weird feelings. I do not know why but it seriously creates a feeling of longing to return to some place, some where. a long time ago? I can't quite understand it myself so I get it how it would be hard for someone else to understand my reasoning.
I get it.
Thank you. That is beautiful and informative. So interesting!
Wow! I never thought that it would sound like a cross between a lute or mandolin and a classical guitar. I always imagine it sounding like a harp. It's cool. And ancient Greek music would sound a bit Middle Eastern and a bit Indian. Music really is universal and integrated.
Great demo, wonderful instrument and perfect Teacher! Thank you
Un MILLON de GRACIAS...
...Las musicas y MELODIAS que salen de las LIRAS, obran un efecto RELAJANTE y CELESTIAL... por decirlo de alguna manera. Tambien son como 'MAQUINAS del TIEMPO'...
Que MARAVILLOSO poder reconstruir los instrumentos que los musicos antiguos construian e interpretaban.
Yo, al menos ya tengo mi primera lira (de 7 cuerdas) y cuando la hago sonar siento como si casi estuviese levitando -no materialmente claro esta- pero si espiritualmente.
Nice Times, Lovely Times....never come back! Great MUSIC ...! Fantazy!
Peter, you are a great inspiration to many, you have perrsonally inspired me a lot, thank you.
much respect for all the amazing things you do
Εξαιρετική παρουσίαση με σεβασμο γνώση. Και αποδείξεις στην πράξη
Τόσο σωστές πληροφορίες σε τόσο απλη γλωσσα και κατανοητή για οποιοδήποτε.
Ευχαριστώ πολύ για ολες αυτές τις πληροφορίες και που τις μοιράζεστε απλόχερα
Να είσαστε καλά
I am so glad I found this guy. I absolutely love history and I'm a big music lover and so the fact that he is bringing us ancient music from history is wonderful.
Brilliant and fascinating.
Peter, thanks a lot for educating mankind all over the world!
That vibrato and pitch bends on that thing are amazing
Your voice is sublime.
dude i need a longer version of the song at the end its too good
That last part, we need more! :)
Beautiful. You should add "pre-bent" notes too. Rather than "bending" up from one note to another and then back down, try already applying tension then playing and releasing down to a note. Cool, emotional effect.
Makes me want to get one. Wanted to find out the history of the names of the modes. Then heard that Plato mentioned the use of different modes, and recommended everyone to play a Kithara. This is a great rabbit hole.
That was awesome, thank you! New subscriber, I'm going to recommend this channel to everyone I know. YOU NEED TO RECORD A PERFORMANCE OF THE ILIAD!!!!!!! And some PSALMS!!!!! It's important.
that's a very good idea ...
39Thorns rtitititekd tj8rjrurt3 r33gy1j vr2g5thtty3rrgcy6totueu1urufi
The Iliad is long as fuck. Also the music is unknown.
Right!!!
I agree 100% It actually would be good for the WORLD to once again RETURN to this era of ancient music. I am quite certain that to the ancients, their music was most definitely more that JUST words. I think there was so much more to the reasons for their music than we could ever HOPE to understand today.
That's so awesome. I didn't know much this instrumental. Very pleasant sound.
Thank you Peter. It's people like you that we have to thank for giving us a view of what the ancient's lives were like.
I stumbled on Ali Farahani Younan on apple music last week and I just couldn't get it off my head. I just needed to find the original sound... And here it is! I'm so happy
Really love it!!!Beautiful piece Peter!
I need more of this.
Peter, what you bring to us in this marvellous time machine is a connection of the human's behind history. It is like a musical family album.
That wuz luvly Peter !
Literally the first question that pops up in my head, gets answered after a couple of seconds into the video
Thank you for an informative presentation of this amazing instrument along with your beautiful voice at the end. The ancient civilizations were not primitive but advanced - more advanced than given credit for too long. Your expertise and talent are important to education and to a world that is losing sight of the past and its significance. Keep on doing what you are.
neat to hear about the technical side of these instruments and then hear them.
6:27 Absolutely love!!!❤️❤️❤️ Adoro Orfeus...Incredibilmente bello!!! Peccato non c'è versione intera della canzone..
Fantastic! Thanx for making this clip.
Fascinating and informative, thanks for sharing. Interesting and revealing to know that vibrato in instrument playing was already in use back then.
Fantastic! Amazing this sound.
Congratulations! Amazing instrument!!
OH my ...Thank you very much for this!!! You really need to record a performance of the Iliad!!! It would be wonderful!! :)
I can't imagine a way this could have been more cool.
Suddenly, listening to an epic sounds much more enjoyable.