As a Bulgarian i just want to express my gratitude for the amount of positivism and recognition in this comment section. Thank you. You should be proud. People on the internet usually choose otherwise. I appreciate you.
There's something here so genuine and beautiful, and humbling, that it's hard to put into words, but it's almost as if I've been transported to a place above the clouds, where time stopped long ago, and all our worldly cares slip away as if they never existed. And their modest but joyful dresses and headgear... I want a girl like these to marry. Love and tears from the USA.
I'm Irish. We have quarter tones and subdivisions of those intervals in our music. I also play Flamenco, same subdivisions of the tempered scale. These people are off the scale. No pun intended.
コストフさん、カラジョバさんご夫妻は亡くなられたとネットで知りました。大変残念です。ご冥福をお祈りいたします。ヨルダノフさん、ミミちゃん、お元気ですか。28年前コンサートに連れて行っていただいた日本人です。一生の思い出をありがとうございました。 От интернет научих, че са починали г-н Костов и г-жа Караджова. Това е много жалко. Молим се за душите. Йорданов-сан, Мими-чан, как сте? Това е един японец, който ме заведе на концерт преди 28 години. Благодаря ти за спомените за цял живот.
This music has so many dissonance intervals you'd never hear in a western choir. This is the best example of where dissonance sounds beautiful. After listening to each song, I cant tell you why, but my natural reaction was to cry. Especially after listening to mehmetyo.
I actually cry even more when I listen to the songs when they are not arranged for a choir. Nadka Karadjova, Stefka Sabotinova, Yanka Rupkina and many more. When they sing without the choir it makes me weep and even sob, always. I just came from "Lele Yano tunka Yano" and I am still sniffing 😁. I am also NOT a fan of this choir since the current conductor took it over.
As an experienced chorister I can assure listeners that this is the most difficult choral music ever performed/written. Nothing compares. These women are skilled beyond comprehension. Mere talent cannot produce this sound.
As an Ethiopian, I have no idea of what they are saying. However, I heard some stories, a painful past, troubled times and all their ancestors endured. May no one endure the same emotions. What a beautiful performance and art. Heart felt admiration and gratitude. Peace and love to our world
I am Bosnian and I sang Ergen Deda in choir (in school). It is still one of my favourite songs. I am now caregiver for patients with demetia. I sing this to them and they like it ❤
@@aysheto3260 Maybe. But if you read Olivier Messiaen's traité of rhythm and you compare the rhythms of Greek meters and these bulgarian songs, they are very similar (7,11, etc) which happen to have the same principle (long and short values: 3 and 2, counting)
We Bulgarians are here to sing to you dear listener sounds from your deep past. The mystery is why regardless of where you come from you can feel in your chest if you listen with your heart that this music is a call from ancestors you never knew you had. Calling you back to your senses and give you a connection to mother Earth.
None of this is traditional to Bulgaria. The original singers in the two national choirs were assigned to bring in songs from their villages, and arrangers trained in Western classical music and jazz made these fantastical concoctions. Those of us who work with Bulgarian traditional music intensely dislike these arrangements, as do many of the singers themselves. Traditional Bulgaria music is very beautiful - much more beautiful than the choral music. Some it it is similar to music you will find in Θράκη or in Μακεδονία.
I m from Morocco, I am really amazed by these songs I do not know the meaning of the words but it goes straight to the heart, I will look for the meaning, and thank you for these ladies thanks to them I will visit Bulgaria to learn more about this culture, these people and their culture
Most texts on these songs are about everyday life, bad omens, good omens and weddings. This is generalisation for bulgarian folklore overall but there is always some depth to it.
I am married to a Bulgarian and used to play this for my daughters to find them crying full of emotion. Bulgaria is a very interesting country with wonderful people and history, with difficult times. People in EU should visit!
you are quite wright , but i want to ashore you, what we've been before 1000yrs and bit more , we will be again. Them boat stuck in the hurricane more than 1000 yrs. Thumbs up. ;)
I attended the concert in Seattle I think it was the evening of this radio spot. I had known them since 1990 or so…. I was in tears, literally for the duration of the two plus hours of their performance. A beyond once in a lifetime treat and honor to see them. They tour rarely … if you get a chance definitely go far as needed out of your way to experience them live. 💗☮️🙏🏼
I have Werner Herzog to thank for introducing me to this magnificent music. I hear the songs of the mountains and tales of strife, life, death and love. I love it so much!
Indeed. I wanted to watch the movie Genesis - Creation and the Flood and got caught by a piece of this music that is in the beginning of this movie. As I was taking a shower first it was repeating and repeating and the singing went so deep. It made me realise how this world is distress and it will become worse, much worse. I am a Christian and believe these are the Last Days. With this in mind this choir sounds like a cry out to our Creator. It goes so deep it brings me to tears.
This was the first concert I ever saw as a child. 3 yrs old I saw them perform in 1989 in Vancouver Canada. I demanded to sit on my mothers lap so I wouldn’t miss a thing. This inspired me into 12 plus years of choral singing🇨🇦
This is awesome! I know how much a child's attention would be captured by this mesmerizing performance! I loved going to my mother's side of the family mountainous village during celebrations and festivals and hearing this folklore music echoing through the pastures and hills around!
I've had every CD this choir produced since the 90s, and I am so, so happy to be able to *watch* them perform. I was educated in the western European classical tradition, and discovering music from east of the Rhine has enriched my life so much. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
I can’t explain what I feel when I hear this music, it’s like a deep religious love for humanity, all of our past and all of our future. There is hardly anything that makes me cry, even if things make me feel sad, but this singing always brings me to tears within a minute of listening. Massive respect to these amazing vocalists and for Bulgarian culture from an American 🙏
I heard them 1st in Geneva then live in a Greek Church in Toronto Canada and was sitting improbably right behind Bette Midler. Imagine my confusion. It was a sublime experience and I walked out alone with lots to think about. my father was born in Serbia in 1908 and fought in the resistance in WW11: he bequeathed me his father's compass from WW1, so I think I as a Canadian can imagine your feelings, but with the profound respect and affection I had for my gallant parents who came to a new world (Tempest why not?) I love this music which melds the old and new. loved your comment.
Me too! I thought I would be criticized for stating so in the comments but I commented anyway and then I read your comment. It's very cool to know it is not only just me.
Because of this concert I just made a two week trip to Bulgaria and I loved it ❤️ also met the conductor of this choir, she is a very nice and intelligent person. Right now working on a documentary idea about Bulgarian choir music. These melodies and the art of singing inspire me a lot.
I was born in Sofia and adopted so I never leaved and thrived in my bulgarian roots. Listening to this make me feel the most connected to my culture and the fact that as a non bulgarian cultured related you are touched also by this makes my heart full. I’m also working on a documentary about bulgarian heritage to allow me to know more my country and culture and help promote it. So thank you very much for all
@Simon Baingo What a cool story and comment! I'm usually content to leave a like like a pussy when I dig something, i.e. this choir. You, however, "went to Bulgaria and met the conductor."
Fun Fact: Dionysus - the god of wine, was believed to be born in Thrace (Today Bulgaria). Thracians may also be among the first people to make wine, implied by the fact they drank it undiluted with water, as opposed to Greeks and other ancient peoples.
@@pakoti96 Anceint greeks really loved their belief of power of mind etc. so they feared falling from that state to one disorderly while frinking alcohol so they watered it. This is more of a combining to your comment. We I learned of it I thought it as interesting.
I'm also slavic and I've been to Bulgaria yet had never an idea of how deeply was your culture preserved. It brings me back to my ancestors many many centuries ago. Unfortunetly there is no chance to see my culture in such brightness and richness. That is something every Bulgarian can be proud of today. It's really beautiful.
It took 35 years! I have a snippet of a song recorded on cassette from the radio. Could enver make out what the presenter said it was. Now and then these "mysteries" solve themselves. Happy listening!
I love that. Happened to me when I came across the album Handful of Earth, never knew what it was but I had a song from it on a cassette tape for 30 years!
Thanks, Adam Neely for reminding me that this exists! My first encounter with this music was when I watched the original 1995 Anime "Ghost In The Shell" a few years back. I was so impressed by the choirs used by composer Kenji Kawai that I looked up what this was, thinking it was some kind of traditional Japanese choir or so. Turns out he was heavily influenced by Bulgarian choral music and even used some traditional songs for this soundtrack. If I remember correctly, the choir in the intro theme "Making of Cyborg" is from a Bulgarian wedding song with the lyrics rewritten in Japanese. I love this choral music as it has a very miraculous and divine feel to it. Truly amazing!
In September 1967 I made my first vacation by plan. I went to Varna in Bulgaria and I spent three fantastic weeks on Golden Sands, on the Black Sea. It was then that I heard these voices for the first time and brought two records with me to Germany. For the next three years I was back in Bulgaria every year. Also in Burgos and the Sunny beach. I went around by train with a Bulgarian tour guide. Was in Shumen visiting his family and got very special inside views. Still have friends to the day from that time. And I never forget the very special Bulgarian voices. So great to hear it right now again. Thanks for uploading! Greetings from - now - Canada.
13:14: Αυτό ακριβώς είναι τα Βαλκάνια. Όλοι τραγουδάνε το ίδιο τραγούδι αλλά ο καθένας αρχίζει ξεχωριστά. Όμως με κάποιο μυστηριώδη τρόπο, από την οχλαγωγία και το χάος προκύπτει αρμονία και μουσική ιδιαίτερη και μοναδική σε όλον τον κόσμο. Εύγε Βουλγαρία!
This is the most beautiful music on the planet. Thank you for your older and your younger voices. We are so very grateful for your music, thank you from the USA.
The soloist lady that sang sama li si den 3:03 literally made me cry because my mum sings something like that. I am Assyrian and for us this has always been a tradition as well and we call it lilyanah singing for women. It was sung during weddings or when big festivals were happening and the ladies from the villages met over someone’s house and made food preparation for the festivities. I believe we have a lot more in common than people actually know. Love the Bulgarian singing❤❤❤
Holy…. This rips through my whole being… I am very grateful at 49 years old to discover this mindblowing beautiful powerful music. I am not religious, but it sounds like music from the gods, or goddesses to me. Again, very very grateful ❤❤❤
The song is a dialogue between Ivan (man) and Petrunka (female). The song starts by Ivan asking her : Did you harvest all day by yourself. To which Petrunka responded : All day all by myself. And then Ivan said : If I knew, I would have come to make shadow for you with a branch from a tree. The significance is that harvest time were hard times in Bulgaria. The summer days a long. I remember when I was young and having to pick hay all day long in July… and imagine that at times the ottoman bashi-bozuk would come and all you had harvested would be taken or burned.
These songs are a source of pride for us Bulgarians. They tell our history, traditions and culture. Some songs make you sad and some make you happy. I am sincerely warmed by the positive comments of people of other nationalities. Thank you! ❤️🇧🇬
They are beautiful songs, using the only real instrument we have. Beautiful harmonies, even people who don't understand the language can't help but understand the hearts and souls.
Bulgarian folklore is most rich folklore on this planet. In national library is keeped more of 240000 folklore songs. Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA. IRFAN. Bulgara. ORATNITZA. COSMIC VOICES FROM Bulgaria. KAYNO yesno solnce
It was a French music producer who made this group popular, he discovered their music on a trip to Bulgaria in the 1980’s and remastered an album by them and sold it on to first a french label and then 4AD in England. They appeared on TV shows in the UK in the 80’s. He produced subsequent albums by them, don’t have his name or further details but Google’s your friend. They of course of have a different line up now, but the music is as beautiful as ever.
As a french, i had the chance to see this band in the late 80s thanks to a school program. It blew my young mind back then. A game changer in my musical approach.
In 1977 I was at a music festival in Vienna. The Bulgarian radio choir was performing. I remember being fascinated having never heard anything similar before. I am glad to find this on here now. It reminds me of music from Georgia in some respects. I love that too.
And thanks to Italians as well - you also have gems to share with the world - such as Tenores do Bitti: ruclips.net/video/WsB9P5ziaCM/видео.html&ab_channel=mialinumialinu
TIMESTAMPS Moma Houbava 0:25 Full choir. Rhythmic part counts 7 beats Sama Li Si Den Zhanala 2:49 One woman with choir. Horo 6:29 Full choir. Shopski Napevi 8:50 Two men. Izlel E Delyo Haidutin 11:01 Solo woman. Mehmetyo 13:14 Full choir. Extra chaotic. Dai Mi Bozhe 17:48 Two women, Two men. Yova 20:24 Four women. Five beats per measure. Vito Horo 23:28 Two women with choir. My favorite. Douda E Bolna 26:29 One man with choir. Dilmano Dilbero 30:00 Full choir. Ergen Deda 32:29 Full choir. Rhythmic part counts 7 beats. Interview with Dora Hristova 35:41
Thanks a lot! If you want to know, my favorite is Ergen Deda (for some reason it was "Diado" in the original recording). And it seems to be the favorite of the singers and listeners alike, as it closes their presentation. Dum takatakata Dum. Fabulous!
When their first album came out way back in the 90’s? I was in Tower Records Store NYC. A two block two story behemoth of a record shop, and they played the album, and the whole place became utterly silent, people, me included just staring into space and listening. Of course I bought the album (Tape?) and have treasured it since. LOVE this music! 😍
Wow, that must be a cool memory. Imagine meeting someone who was there at the time - you'd instantly feel connected with them for sharing this experience.
A tribute to the strength and resilience of a people dominated by the Ottoman Empire for over five centuries ; mesmerizing , the timeless heart of a people ......
My daughter was trained in western choral music. When I first played Le Mystere des Voix Bulgares for her, she said, "They do everything wrong, and it sounds wonderful!" It was wonderful for me to have introduced her to a different fine musical tradition.
@@veselgana It's only "wrong" by western choral music standards, that's what he means. Bulgarian folk music preserved an older style of singing. It goes against what his daughter was taught as a western choir singer.
this music is extremely fascinating to me. i am a person who has sung a lot of the "western" choir canon, both ancient and modern (what is in it and not is very nebulous, so i dont think western is a very good word for it, but still) and i do not think i could sing this, at least not even a smidge close to as good as they do it. the approach to harmony and tone and the human voicebox is so different from a traditional "western" system that the sharpness of the notes would probably be impossible for me to replicate, the rythmic structure is hard for me to even conceptualize. i think this type of music being broadcast on a channel such as kexp is very refreshing, especially with a music world that is so adamant on lifting western classical composition systems up as the correct way to compose and play music
I cried a few times through this wonderful performance. I was deeply touched, when I heard "Le Mystère des Voix Bulgares" for the first time around 1985 and had the privilege to listen to one of their incarnations live around 1990. Now I understand more about how music works, but this profound, elementary effect on my soul remains a mystery to me.
I'm a french native living in Varna, even if I can't understand a word, your chants tell the story of humanity's heritage since creation, you are the divine givers🙏 which are beyond rewritten books of human history...YOU ARE THE LIVE VOICES THAT SPEAK THE TRUTH ABOUT HUMAN HISTORY
as a croatian with rich and diverse history of ethnic and choral music without instruments...this bulgarian one is my favorite one. pure perfection of harsh emotional sincerity with beautiful harmonies and highly technical !!!! I couldn't praise it enough
I loved Croatia! Me and my wife visited in 2015 - great people, wonderful nature and sea! We did a Contiki sail on the coast and the yacht crew was Croatian - they were great and were kidding - watch out they can understand us ;) We had a storm one day and i could hear from the captain's deck a lot of words and especially something having to do with a mother everybody was worried but i giggled like crazy:) ..... would love to come again! Croatia is a gem!
I dont understand how 16:57 is possible. That chord they're singing sounds microtonal in itself, but it also sounds like it has a microtonal relationship to the upper voices. How do they find that pitch? How do they maintain those microtonal pitch relationships? Not to mention the beautiful decrescendo from the upper voices. All of this is mindblowing. Help.
Saw a performance many years ago at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. I was captivated then and continued to be so since vis cd and YT videos. Thank you ladies.
So happy, Le Mystère Des Voix Bulgares has always been extremely beautiful to my ears. These voices are so tough/strong, so beautiful, definitely in love with them 🎉
Thank you RUclips random algorithm, this is just superb. The most haunting, serene, beautiful music I've ever heard. It's just so incredible, it sounds like the music you hear when you arrive in Heaven.
Thank you, as a Bulgarian I appreciate all the positive comments. My country has a lot of traditions and beauty, especially in Nature and in its customs; unfortunately I, as having grown abroad, don't know many of them.
Mehmetyo is the best choral music ever written or performed in the history of music!!!!! Please God let me get through this minutes without bursting into tears!!!!!!!! I have to listen to this live once in my life!!!!!!! PLEASE COME TO ARGENTINA!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Here are the lyrics for you. Very dark, but times were dark in Bulgaria at the time: Delyo has become hayduk, the hayduk, the rebel with the Dumbovi and the Karadjovi clans. Delyo gave the following orders to the ayans (local notables) of Zlatograd, to the brazen-faced governors: - There are two aunts of mine in the village. Do not make them Turks (= convert them to Islam), do not besmirch them, because when I come back a lot of mothers will cry, a lot of young brides. Gyulsume told Delyo: - Beware, Delyo, beware, you are being threatened, Delyo the Zlatograd rulers, the brazen-faced governors, they cast a silver bullet for you, Delyo, to kill you. - Gyulsume, my love Gyulsume, not yet is born a man who could kill me.
I can't get enough of these beautiful voices. Leaning thr history too, truly amazing. Thank you for your strength and courage keeping this alive through being ruled by an empire you didn't choose
This music sounds like someone made a stew of 2000 years of history and trans-continental cultures and then turned it into sheet music. It sounds like the search for life's meaning. It's just so out of this world brilliant.
Bulgaria being where it is and with its complex history, youre not that far off. Well said. There are so many colors in there that it's hard not to see so much
It's actually waaaaay out of this world right now... "Izlel e Delyu Haydutin" is travelling on the Voyagers 1 and 2. Deemed worthy space music. Thank you and you're welcome.
As Bulgerian reading all this nice comments of people and people saying they cry makes me so proud. I wish the whole world knew about Bulgeria our traditiona and history because is special. Thank you guys for the nice comments. ❤️🇧🇬
I was watching a Hussein Chalayan runway, and this music was sounding. I found this video litte bit for casualty. I almost cried! I am mexican, and this is absolutely beautiful.
This is the most beautiful music I’ve ever heard, rarely does anything bring me to tears but this music brings me tears of joy and unexplainable hope and love within a minute of listening. I’m so thankful that your culture has kept its traditions because they are beautiful and strong. So much love from an American 🇺🇸❤️🇧🇬
Wow...never heard something like this...voices full of space...the longer you hear the deeper it goes in places of your soul you never wanted to feel...where you are out of control...archaistically...like fire & wind, like the moon & the sun, like a bird in a tree and a bear, his mouth full of sweet honey, drops to the herbs in the wood. Strange & mystical.
This has to be the most incredible and miraculous musical phenomenon in the History of the world. This is folk music of such sophistication and originality, it´s unbelievable.
Man... I find it extremely difficult to express feelings lately but life somehow bought me to this music and I'm sitting just in awe and have tears coming... This is amazing
i lost my hearing on my left ear during my military service, i've always been a musician ever since i was a child, i get goosebumps easily when listening to good music, my musical prowess is even close category to being perfect pitch, i never get the formal education that's why i enlisted in the military to save up enough money to study music later. I never get the chance to study because of my health, now i'm 25, i still have good hearing on my right ear, but God i wish i had my full hearing to fully enjoy this wonderful performance. It made me tear up, it's just so beautiful, almost like it's from somewhere inside my heart.. It's hard to explain.
Sorry for your story. Hope there is a next life that you could to what you wanted but even if there is hope you could still do it. Im not sure if you have to stop yourself.
Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA. COSMIC VOICES FROM Bulgaria
I know nothing from Bulgaria but this was amazing .... 😢❤ i am working on creating a fantasy world with amazing culture and i think ill put some bulgarian inspirations 🥹❤️
THIS is the kind of tradition we as humanity must preserve. Seriously.
Loolwhy ? Cause it sounds cool ? Lol
KAIZO POLYMATH That’s part of it.
Here here! Agreed, my good Sir. Now may you have a pleasant day!
Check out some Georgian folk singing.
Yes
As a Bulgarian i just want to express my gratitude for the amount of positivism and recognition in this comment section. Thank you. You should be proud. People on the internet usually choose otherwise. I appreciate you.
I really love bulgarian music, greetings from germany.
@@MixolydianMode I also love this MASTERPIECE!! And also greeting from germany to germany and bulgaria!! :D haha
There's something here so genuine and beautiful, and humbling, that it's hard to put into words, but it's almost as if I've been transported to a place above the clouds, where time stopped long ago, and all our worldly cares slip away as if they never existed.
And their modest but joyful dresses and headgear...
I want a girl like these to marry.
Love and tears from the USA.
You should be rightfully proud of your country's music. It's one of the most beautiful in the world. Best wishes and take care.
Stunning!!!
Greetings from El Salvador. 👽🔭
I'm Irish. We have quarter tones and subdivisions of those intervals in our music. I also play Flamenco, same subdivisions of the tempered scale. These people are off the scale. No pun intended.
LOL
Who knows what our ancestors were doing and where they traveled thousands of years ago!
コストフさん、カラジョバさんご夫妻は亡くなられたとネットで知りました。大変残念です。ご冥福をお祈りいたします。ヨルダノフさん、ミミちゃん、お元気ですか。28年前コンサートに連れて行っていただいた日本人です。一生の思い出をありがとうございました。
От интернет научих, че са починали г-н Костов и г-жа Караджова. Това е много жалко. Молим се за душите. Йорданов-сан, Мими-чан, как сте? Това е един японец, който ме заведе на концерт преди 28 години. Благодаря ти за спомените за цял живот.
Такива изпълнения трябва да се излъчват по телевизията, за да се зареждаме с хубави емоции...
Ich heul immer dabei. Zu doll... Und immer wieder am Abspielen. ❤ Compositions here
Me too.
This music has so many dissonance intervals you'd never hear in a western choir. This is the best example of where dissonance sounds beautiful. After listening to each song, I cant tell you why, but my natural reaction was to cry. Especially after listening to mehmetyo.
Mehmetyo is very high level, it is very hard to do right.
Malka Moma makes me cry EVERY time
I actually cry even more when I listen to the songs when they are not arranged for a choir. Nadka Karadjova, Stefka Sabotinova, Yanka Rupkina and many more. When they sing without the choir it makes me weep and even sob, always. I just came from "Lele Yano tunka Yano" and I am still sniffing 😁. I am also NOT a fan of this choir since the current conductor took it over.
Makes me cry every time - still not sure why
@@huskytail Interesting. What makes you dislike the current conductor?
As an experienced chorister I can assure listeners that this is the most difficult choral music ever performed/written. Nothing compares. These women are skilled beyond comprehension. Mere talent cannot produce this sound.
In Indonesian archipelago, this singing technique are common, especially in northern Sumatra regions and southern Sulawesi.
wow! really? can you suggest any titles?
It seems they must have absolute pitch-- most if not all.
Ok that's why I find this soooooo wholesome
Thank you for sharing your expert knowlege.
As an Ethiopian, I have no idea of what they are saying. However, I heard some stories, a painful past, troubled times and all their ancestors endured. May no one endure the same emotions. What a beautiful performance and art. Heart felt admiration and gratitude. Peace and love to our world
Ты реально эфиоп... 👎
@@BadWolf8932У вас всё в порядке?
I am Bosnian and I sang Ergen Deda in choir (in school). It is still one of my favourite songs. I am now caregiver for patients with demetia. I sing this to them and they like it ❤
Single Grandpa in English which sounds so weird to westerners my friend asked me why do you sing about single grandpops :D
As caregiver you are a wonderful person. God bless you.
This is a seriously noble and tough thing to do. Best wishes for you and your family!
you are a wonderful gift for these patients ❤
Im from Greece, and I'm grateful for my Bulgarian neighbours and their amazing culture, their music is so universal. Peace and love
What a kind comment. Likewise. Much respect for the Greek culture as well.
Actually some rhythms came from Greece, so, Bulgarian rhythms like 7/8 are the torch of Old Greek rhythms
bulgarians and greeks have many shared origins.one of them is music.
they only have much fatter heads than greeks.
maybe it helps with singing.
@@bernab These rhythms came from the ancient Thracian tribes not from Greece .
@@aysheto3260 Maybe. But if you read Olivier Messiaen's traité of rhythm and you compare the rhythms of Greek meters and these bulgarian songs, they are very similar (7,11, etc) which happen to have the same principle (long and short values: 3 and 2, counting)
We Bulgarians are here to sing to you dear listener sounds from your deep past. The mystery is why regardless of where you come from you can feel in your chest if you listen with your heart that this music is a call from ancestors you never knew you had. Calling you back to your senses and give you a connection to mother Earth.
yes that is the sensation
Yes, very yes.
Thank you for putting it into words.
It is incredibly beautiful. Brings me to tears.
Grazie amico Bulgaro, dall' Italia con amore🇮🇹, thank you bulgarian's friend from Italy
I am from Greece, neighbor of Bulgaria. I am ashamed i didn't know we have such a great musical treasure next to us
❤️
@@mladenmartinov2432 maybe Orpheus have something in common, with the Bulgarian folk music.
Shame on you :)
Kai ego den to ixera.
None of this is traditional to Bulgaria. The original singers in the two national choirs were assigned to bring in songs from their villages, and arrangers trained in Western classical music and jazz made these fantastical concoctions. Those of us who work with Bulgarian traditional music intensely dislike these arrangements, as do many of the singers themselves. Traditional Bulgaria music is very beautiful - much more beautiful than the choral music. Some it it is similar to music you will find in Θράκη or in Μακεδονία.
I m from Morocco, I am really amazed by these songs I do not know the meaning of the words but it goes straight to the heart, I will look for the meaning, and thank you for these ladies thanks to them I will visit Bulgaria to learn more about this culture, these people and their culture
Most texts on these songs are about everyday life, bad omens, good omens and weddings. This is generalisation for bulgarian folklore overall but there is always some depth to it.
I am married to a Bulgarian and used to play this for my daughters to find them crying full of emotion.
Bulgaria is a very interesting country with wonderful people and history, with difficult times.
People in EU should visit!
And food 😂
you are quite wright , but i want to ashore you, what we've been before 1000yrs and bit more , we will be again. Them boat stuck in the hurricane more than 1000 yrs. Thumbs up. ;)
Bulgarian choirs are the best in Balkans. Greets from Romania
❤️
I agree as a croatian
Agree from France ! Fantastic voices.
Not just the Balkans.
respekt Romania
I attended the concert in Seattle I think it was the evening of this radio spot. I had known them since 1990 or so…. I was in tears, literally for the duration of the two plus hours of their performance. A beyond once in a lifetime treat and honor to see them. They tour rarely … if you get a chance definitely go far as needed out of your way to experience them live. 💗☮️🙏🏼
Female Bulgarian choir music is hands down some of the most beautiful music I've herd. It's good for the soul
Males sing too but rarely, it feels like culturally is appreciated when women sing.
@vasil.kamdzhalov I know there's a couple men in this and there part is lovely, but the women's parts are all hauntingly beautiful
Absolutely majestic! Greetings from Greece to our bulgarian neighbours
I have Werner Herzog to thank for introducing me to this magnificent music. I hear the songs of the mountains and tales of strife, life, death and love. I love it so much!
this is probably the most beautiful music i've heard in my life. i mean, here i am, crying in quarantine thinking "oh the humanity"
Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA
Indeed. I wanted to watch the movie Genesis - Creation and the Flood and got caught by a piece of this music that is in the beginning of this movie. As I was taking a shower first it was repeating and repeating and the singing went so deep. It made me realise how this world is distress and it will become worse, much worse. I am a Christian and believe these are the Last Days. With this in mind this choir sounds like a cry out to our Creator. It goes so deep it brings me to tears.
We are here for you. Stay strong this too shall pass.
Totally. I saved this in my "I love Humans" playlist
This was the first concert I ever saw as a child. 3 yrs old I saw them perform in 1989 in Vancouver Canada. I demanded to sit on my mothers lap so I wouldn’t miss a thing. This inspired me into 12 plus years of choral singing🇨🇦
This is awesome! I know how much a child's attention would be captured by this mesmerizing performance! I loved going to my mother's side of the family mountainous village during celebrations and festivals and hearing this folklore music echoing through the pastures and hills around!
I've had every CD this choir produced since the 90s, and I am so, so happy to be able to *watch* them perform. I was educated in the western European classical tradition, and discovering music from east of the Rhine has enriched my life so much. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
These women (and 2 bros of course) navigate this EXTREMELY complex music with more confidence than I have making a bowl of cereal
And I thought playing jazz was the most difficult thing
Well said
New challenge: watch this video and not cry from being overwhelmed by the sheer beauty of the harmonies.
I try several times, i still cant
Cry, one of the few times in life it is tears of joy.
Nobody can beat this challenge
I think I lasted like 1 minute last time. Impossible challenge.
I can’t explain what I feel when I hear this music, it’s like a deep religious love for humanity, all of our past and all of our future. There is hardly anything that makes me cry, even if things make me feel sad, but this singing always brings me to tears within a minute of listening. Massive respect to these amazing vocalists and for Bulgarian culture from an American 🙏
Oh wow, I thought I am going nuts, because I am also crying from it! This is some kind of metaphysical medicine music.
I heard them 1st in Geneva then live in a Greek Church in Toronto Canada and was sitting improbably right behind Bette Midler. Imagine my confusion. It was a sublime experience and I walked out alone with lots to think about. my father was born in Serbia in 1908 and fought in the resistance in WW11: he bequeathed me his father's compass from WW1, so I think I as a Canadian can imagine your feelings, but with the profound respect and affection I had for my gallant parents who came to a new world (Tempest why not?) I love this music which melds the old and new. loved your comment.
Same for me , crying like a baby🙂 this voices just touch somewhere deep...
Me too! I thought I would be criticized for stating so in the comments but I commented anyway and then I read your comment. It's very cool to know it is not only just me.
Same for me brother, this song are magic
Because of this concert I just made a two week trip to Bulgaria and I loved it ❤️ also met the conductor of this choir, she is a very nice and intelligent person. Right now working on a documentary idea about Bulgarian choir music. These melodies and the art of singing inspire me a lot.
it's fantastic experienc
I was born in Sofia and adopted so I never leaved and thrived in my bulgarian roots. Listening to this make me feel the most connected to my culture and the fact that as a non bulgarian cultured related you are touched also by this makes my heart full.
I’m also working on a documentary about bulgarian heritage to allow me to know more my country and culture and help promote it.
So thank you very much for all
Tell us when you have an update on the documentary!
@@alexandrelaplace1897 any news?
@Simon Baingo What a cool story and comment! I'm usually content to leave a like like a pussy when I dig something, i.e. this choir. You, however, "went to Bulgaria and met the conductor."
Bulgaria is one of the most beautiful and varied countries I have visited.
The wine is exceptional too.
The rakia man, the rakia....
bulgaria and ukraine
Fun Fact: Dionysus - the god of wine, was believed to be born in Thrace (Today Bulgaria).
Thracians may also be among the first people to make wine, implied by the fact they drank it undiluted with water, as opposed to Greeks and other ancient peoples.
@@pakoti96 Anceint greeks really loved their belief of power of mind etc. so they feared falling from that state to one disorderly while frinking alcohol so they watered it. This is more of a combining to your comment. We I learned of it I thought it as interesting.
I'm also slavic and I've been to Bulgaria yet had never an idea of how deeply was your culture preserved. It brings me back to my ancestors many many centuries ago. Unfortunetly there is no chance to see my culture in such brightness and richness. That is something every Bulgarian can be proud of today. It's really beautiful.
It took 35 years! I have a snippet of a song recorded on cassette from the radio. Could enver make out what the presenter said it was. Now and then these "mysteries" solve themselves. Happy listening!
I love that. Happened to me when I came across the album Handful of Earth, never knew what it was but I had a song from it on a cassette tape for 30 years!
Для мене,як українця,українці,грузини та болгари-найкращі співаки світу)
Much Love from Romania ,Dear Bulgarian Brothers!
❤❤❤😊
Thanks, Adam Neely for reminding me that this exists! My first encounter with this music was when I watched the original 1995 Anime "Ghost In The Shell" a few years back. I was so impressed by the choirs used by composer Kenji Kawai that I looked up what this was, thinking it was some kind of traditional Japanese choir or so. Turns out he was heavily influenced by Bulgarian choral music and even used some traditional songs for this soundtrack. If I remember correctly, the choir in the intro theme "Making of Cyborg" is from a Bulgarian wedding song with the lyrics rewritten in Japanese. I love this choral music as it has a very miraculous and divine feel to it. Truly amazing!
100%
I'm here because of Adam as well!
@burpie Meeeee too :-)
Yep, the choir used in "Making of cyborg" is from a song called "Kaval Sviri", both wonderful musical pieces :)
This music is far from typical Japanese, but it is absolutely Japanese to adapt culture from all over the world
24:50 I was so moved by the hand holding and bond between all the singers.
Here in 2023 and my ears have never been happier. Absolutely astonishing. Much love from Scotland.
In September 1967 I made my first vacation by plan. I went to Varna in Bulgaria and I spent three fantastic weeks on Golden Sands, on the Black Sea. It was then that I heard these voices for the first time and brought two records with me to Germany. For the next three years I was back in Bulgaria every year. Also in Burgos and the Sunny beach. I went around by train with a Bulgarian tour guide. Was in Shumen visiting his family and got very special inside views. Still have friends to the day from that time. And I never forget the very special Bulgarian voices. So great to hear it right now again. Thanks for uploading! Greetings from - now - Canada.
You will hold this memory in your heart forever.
Mehmetyo absolutely broke my mind as a classical musician
13:14: Αυτό ακριβώς είναι τα Βαλκάνια. Όλοι τραγουδάνε το ίδιο τραγούδι αλλά ο καθένας αρχίζει ξεχωριστά. Όμως με κάποιο μυστηριώδη τρόπο, από την οχλαγωγία και το χάος προκύπτει αρμονία και μουσική ιδιαίτερη και μοναδική σε όλον τον κόσμο. Εύγε Βουλγαρία!
Thats right, true!
Σάς ευχαριστώ πολύ για τα όμορφα λόγια σας ..❤❤
@@temenuzhkamiteva5061 Μια από τις πιο συναρπαστικές χορωδίες που έχω ακούσει. Όμως τέτοιες προσπάθειες έχουν θέση στη σύγχρονη Βουλγαρία;
This is the most beautiful music on the planet. Thank you for your older and your younger voices. We are so very grateful for your music, thank you from the USA.
I just cannot get over the vocal style!! The fiery voice and incredible control over dynamics are just so shockingly pleasing to hear wow
The soloist lady that sang sama li si den 3:03 literally made me cry because my mum sings something like that. I am Assyrian and for us this has always been a tradition as well and we call it lilyanah singing for women. It was sung during weddings or when big festivals were happening and the ladies from the villages met over someone’s house and made food preparation for the festivities. I believe we have a lot more in common than people actually know. Love the Bulgarian singing❤❤❤
recemtly I found some relations with the ancient bulgarians, Assyria and some common history happend in the place of Messopotamia
Holy…. This rips through my whole being… I am very grateful at 49 years old to discover this mindblowing beautiful powerful music. I am not religious, but it sounds like music from the gods, or goddesses to me. Again, very very grateful ❤❤❤
👍👍👍❤️
The song is a dialogue between Ivan (man) and Petrunka (female). The song starts by Ivan asking her : Did you harvest all day by yourself. To which Petrunka responded : All day all by myself. And then Ivan said : If I knew, I would have come to make shadow for you with a branch from a tree. The significance is that harvest time were hard times in Bulgaria. The summer days a long. I remember when I was young and having to pick hay all day long in July… and imagine that at times the ottoman bashi-bozuk would come and all you had harvested would be taken or burned.
These songs are a source of pride for us Bulgarians. They tell our history, traditions and culture. Some songs make you sad and some make you happy. I am sincerely warmed by the positive comments of people of other nationalities. Thank you! ❤️🇧🇬
Magnifique Vibration ❤
They are beautiful songs, using the only real instrument we have. Beautiful harmonies, even people who don't understand the language can't help but understand the hearts and souls.
Damn the Bulgarians invented groove before the rest! The harmony, the chromatics, the dissonance, the rythm!
Милые мои, дай Вам Бог здоровья и многие лета... 😘
I belong to Restoke Choir in Fenton Town Hall in Stoke-on-Trent and we sing in Bulgarian Ukrainian and Georgian.
I love it!We perform locally too!
I don’t know what they are doing but it make me cry like a baby. I’m your Polish sister.
Bulgarian folklore is most rich folklore on this planet. In national library is keeped more of 240000 folklore songs. Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA. IRFAN. Bulgara. ORATNITZA. COSMIC VOICES FROM Bulgaria. KAYNO yesno solnce
This is the first time in 28 years on earth i listen to bulgarian music. So glad i found this. Beauty beyond words. Love from France
Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA. IRFAN. Bulgara. ORATNITZA. COSMIC VOICES FROM Bulgaria. KAYNO yesno solnce. Avigeya. Teodosi Spasov. Ivo papazov. Avigeya. Smallman. AEGONIA
Mieux vaut tard que jamais ✌🏽
God Bless you! Sending love from Bulgaria.
It was a French music producer who made this group popular, he discovered their music on a trip to Bulgaria in the 1980’s and remastered an album by them and sold it on to first a french label and then 4AD in England. They appeared on TV shows in the UK in the 80’s. He produced subsequent albums by them, don’t have his name or further details but Google’s your friend. They of course of have a different line up now, but the music is as beautiful as ever.
As a french, i had the chance to see this band in the late 80s thanks to a school program. It blew my young mind back then. A game changer in my musical approach.
This sound is mystic.... Thanks Bulgaria, for you preserve still the magic of music.
So beautiful! Bulgarians should be very proud of such a wonderful tradition! Sending love from the U.K.🙏💙
In 1977 I was at a music festival in Vienna. The Bulgarian radio choir was performing. I remember being fascinated having never heard anything similar before. I am glad to find this on here now.
It reminds me of music from Georgia in some respects. I love that too.
Oh my... this pretty much justifies the existence of the internet single-handedly. So beautiful.
Marvelous!! I really hope to visit Bulgaria some day. Greetings from Holland!!!
This is the best i ever heard of slavic folk music.Pozdrav iz Hrvatske
Thanks, it means a lot.
❤❤❤
I'm Italian and these voices are sooo fascinating, such powerful faces, eyes, voices. Such powerful women
Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA. IRFAN. Bulgara. ORATNITZA. COSMIC VOICES FROM Bulgaria. KAYNO yesno solnce
@@БориславМарков-ч1э Thanks for the suggestion! Аз съм българка, но и аз не знаех за тези изпълнители!
And thanks to Italians as well - you also have gems to share with the world - such as Tenores do Bitti: ruclips.net/video/WsB9P5ziaCM/видео.html&ab_channel=mialinumialinu
West tried so hard in killing that Spirit which is of God.
Couldn't.
Толкова вярно 👍👍
This culture should never disappear. Hail Bulgaria !
TIMESTAMPS
Moma Houbava 0:25 Full choir. Rhythmic part counts 7 beats
Sama Li Si Den Zhanala 2:49 One woman with choir.
Horo 6:29 Full choir.
Shopski Napevi 8:50 Two men.
Izlel E Delyo Haidutin 11:01 Solo woman.
Mehmetyo 13:14 Full choir. Extra chaotic.
Dai Mi Bozhe 17:48 Two women, Two men.
Yova 20:24 Four women. Five beats per measure.
Vito Horo 23:28 Two women with choir. My favorite.
Douda E Bolna 26:29 One man with choir.
Dilmano Dilbero 30:00 Full choir.
Ergen Deda 32:29 Full choir. Rhythmic part counts 7 beats.
Interview with Dora Hristova 35:41
up
thank you so much fot the timestamps!!!
you, kind sir, deserve way more likes. thank you!
Thanks a lot! If you want to know, my favorite is Ergen Deda (for some reason it was "Diado" in the original recording). And it seems to be the favorite of the singers and listeners alike, as it closes their presentation. Dum takatakata Dum. Fabulous!
Your favourite is actually 23:28 Douda e bolna. Vito horo is 17:48. Dai mi Bozhe is 26:29. They got it wrong in the studio I guess.
When their first album came out way back in the 90’s? I was in Tower Records Store NYC. A two block two story behemoth of a record shop, and they played the album, and the whole place became utterly silent, people, me included just staring into space and listening. Of course I bought the album (Tape?) and have treasured it since. LOVE this music! 😍
Wow, that must be a cool memory. Imagine meeting someone who was there at the time - you'd instantly feel connected with them for sharing this experience.
A tribute to the strength and resilience of a people dominated by the Ottoman Empire for over five centuries ; mesmerizing , the timeless heart of a people ......
C'est tellement beau... Que dire de plus?
Who needs cathedral reverberation when you can harmonize group of voices so perfectly
My daughter was trained in western choral music. When I first played Le Mystere des Voix Bulgares for her, she said, "They do everything wrong, and it sounds wonderful!" It was wonderful for me to have introduced her to a different fine musical tradition.
Jim Fisher How it´s wrong, if it sounds beautifully? 😉
@@veselgana It's only "wrong" by western choral music standards, that's what he means. Bulgarian folk music preserved an older style of singing. It goes against what his daughter was taught as a western choir singer.
You were lied and you learned it wrong.
@@nijagm no, its just different music theory styles lol
this music is extremely fascinating to me. i am a person who has sung a lot of the "western" choir canon, both ancient and modern (what is in it and not is very nebulous, so i dont think western is a very good word for it, but still) and i do not think i could sing this, at least not even a smidge close to as good as they do it. the approach to harmony and tone and the human voicebox is so different from a traditional "western" system that the sharpness of the notes would probably be impossible for me to replicate, the rythmic structure is hard for me to even conceptualize. i think this type of music being broadcast on a channel such as kexp is very refreshing, especially with a music world that is so adamant on lifting western classical composition systems up as the correct way to compose and play music
now this is something I've never heard before. sounds like voices from another world
Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA. IRFAN. Bulgara. ORATNITZA. COSMIC VOICES FROM Bulgaria. KAYNO yesno solnce
They are from another world
My deceased mother was an immigrant from Skopje, I am proud of you, I greet you all with respect and love, God bless the Balkan Turks 🙏🇧🇬🇲🇰🇹🇷
I cried a few times through this wonderful performance. I was deeply touched, when I heard "Le Mystère des Voix Bulgares" for the first time around 1985 and had the privilege to listen to one of their incarnations live around 1990. Now I understand more about how music works, but this profound, elementary effect on my soul remains a mystery to me.
I'm a french native living in Varna, even if I can't understand a word, your chants tell the story of humanity's heritage since creation, you are the divine givers🙏 which are beyond rewritten books of human history...YOU ARE THE LIVE VOICES THAT SPEAK THE TRUTH ABOUT HUMAN HISTORY
An amazing comment! Respect!
How come you don't understand but live in Bulgaria?
@dollynina8992 😅 it is simple, you dont have to understand everything to live...
@@dollynina8992 Because my Bulgarian is basic and the languish is very hard to learn
@@veselliq Yep, and I also draw on paper or use my hands to make myself understood when I run out of words
as a croatian with rich and diverse history of ethnic and choral music without instruments...this bulgarian one is my favorite one. pure perfection of harsh emotional sincerity with beautiful harmonies and highly technical !!!! I couldn't praise it enough
I loved Croatia! Me and my wife visited in 2015 - great people, wonderful nature and sea! We did a Contiki sail on the coast and the yacht crew was Croatian - they were great and were kidding - watch out they can understand us ;) We had a storm one day and i could hear from the captain's deck a lot of words and especially something having to do with a mother everybody was worried but i giggled like crazy:) ..... would love to come again! Croatia is a gem!
As a professional musician and composer..
Gorgeously exquisite. Beyond words... universal..inspiration....
I dont understand how 16:57 is possible. That chord they're singing sounds microtonal in itself, but it also sounds like it has a microtonal relationship to the upper voices. How do they find that pitch? How do they maintain those microtonal pitch relationships? Not to mention the beautiful decrescendo from the upper voices. All of this is mindblowing. Help.
They use minor seconds in Hungarian scales , maybe its that, idk if they're singing in just intonation either
It takes discipline. Timeless record.
Pozdrav iz Beograda!
I love Bulgarian women’s choirs. It heals something deep inside my soul.
Crying with Joy, thank you for your touring your amazing talent
IT IS ANTISEMITIC
Source?
@@graemeatkinson8411 YOU ARE A COMMUNIST NAZI
My soul is crying from happiness. Greetings from Rila mountain. Thank you KEXP.
I don't know why but this touches me in such a profound way, I simply start to tear up hearing those harmonies.
Saw a performance many years ago at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. I was captivated then and continued to be so since vis cd and YT videos. Thank you ladies.
So happy, Le Mystère Des Voix Bulgares has always been extremely beautiful to my ears.
These voices are so tough/strong, so beautiful, definitely in love with them 🎉
LOVE and Respect from Romania , you are our Brothers! we were an empire once for almost 1k years!!
❤️❤️❤️👍
@@az91500 ❤
Thank you for this. As a musician this is pure gold, one of the best things I have listened to in my entire life.
Thank you RUclips random algorithm, this is just superb. The most haunting, serene, beautiful music I've ever heard. It's just so incredible, it sounds like the music you hear when you arrive in Heaven.
It is out of this world... Big thank you from Lebanon the land of faithful but tired souls 🌸
Нашата българска народна музика е една от най-красивата и лекувита в света. Да живее България❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ Обичаме българската народна музика ❤❤❤❤
Аз съм 13-ят воин!
Bulgarian Choir is visceral and reaches the soul quickly. It's my favorite above all others.
Thank you, as a Bulgarian I appreciate all the positive comments. My country has a lot of traditions and beauty, especially in Nature and in its customs; unfortunately I, as having grown abroad, don't know many of them.
Mehmetyo is the best choral music ever written or performed in the history of music!!!!! Please God let me get through this minutes without bursting into tears!!!!!!!! I have to listen to this live once in my life!!!!!!! PLEASE COME TO ARGENTINA!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Here are the lyrics for you. Very dark, but times were dark in Bulgaria at the time:
Delyo has become hayduk,
the hayduk, the rebel
with the Dumbovi and the Karadjovi clans.
Delyo gave the following orders
to the ayans (local notables) of Zlatograd,
to the brazen-faced governors:
- There are two aunts of mine in the village.
Do not make them Turks (= convert them to Islam),
do not besmirch them,
because when I come back
a lot of mothers will cry,
a lot of young brides.
Gyulsume told Delyo:
- Beware, Delyo, beware,
you are being threatened, Delyo
the Zlatograd rulers,
the brazen-faced governors,
they cast a silver bullet
for you, Delyo, to kill you.
- Gyulsume, my love Gyulsume,
not yet is born a man
who could kill me.
I hope you get a chance to listen to them live, I'm happy that people are enjoying Bulgarian culture.
I can't get enough of these beautiful voices. Leaning thr history too, truly amazing. Thank you for your strength and courage keeping this alive through being ruled by an empire you didn't choose
I love that they don’t shy away from a very forward and nasal sound and instead lean into it. It makes it cut through so clearly.
This music sounds like someone made a stew of 2000 years of history and trans-continental cultures and then turned it into sheet music. It sounds like the search for life's meaning. It's just so out of this world brilliant.
Xaxa look our bulgarian history from old great bulgaria
Bulgaria being where it is and with its complex history, youre not that far off.
Well said. There are so many colors in there that it's hard not to see so much
well we have officially formed as a country in 681 A.D
And as much as we have christian influence we were at first a pagan society.
It's actually waaaaay out of this world right now...
"Izlel e Delyu Haydutin" is travelling on the Voyagers 1 and 2.
Deemed worthy space music. Thank you and you're welcome.
Pin this comment. You nailed it!
As Bulgerian reading all this nice comments of people and people saying they cry makes me so proud. I wish the whole world knew about Bulgeria our traditiona and history because is special. Thank you guys for the nice comments. ❤️🇧🇬
I was watching a Hussein Chalayan runway, and this music was sounding.
I found this video litte bit for casualty.
I almost cried! I am mexican, and this is absolutely beautiful.
Do you know why the band's name and title are in french ? Nice song and choir amazing technics
Thank you for keeping your wonderful traditions alive! It nurtures us all.
So incredibly beautiful. I'm crying.
This is the most beautiful music I’ve ever heard, rarely does anything bring me to tears but this music brings me tears of joy and unexplainable hope and love within a minute of listening. I’m so thankful that your culture has kept its traditions because they are beautiful and strong. So much love from an American 🇺🇸❤️🇧🇬
I`m Bulgarian , I`ve been listen this music all my life and still everytime I`m amazed with tears in my eyes
As a man of 54,I was in choir for most of my school years, this is fabulous, gets me into my feels
@@williamprice1844 i will be 73 i n Feb. I still dance. 🥰
@@williamprice1844 wonderful. 🥰
The second song broke me into tears almost immediately. Beautiful
Me too, but I know the lyrics 😉
The lead singer's voice cut right through my soul!
we would have a better society if only people would listen to good stuff like this. MashAllah. thank you KEXP
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Truth to power!
I disagree strongly. I listen to this, oud music, Turkish microtonal, jazz, pop, rap, Electronic music. As do my friends. We don’t cause trouble.
Mind bogglingly beautiful, Hypnotic, and somehow so familiar, literally like ancient voices calling out to you. UNREAL.
Amazing🇮🇹🇮🇹🇮🇹
because they are ancient voices ❤️ (bulgarian here)
Wow...never heard something like this...voices full of space...the longer you hear the deeper it goes in places of your soul you never wanted to feel...where you are out of control...archaistically...like fire & wind, like the moon & the sun, like a bird in a tree and a bear, his mouth full of sweet honey, drops to the herbs in the wood. Strange & mystical.
How many times do I have to watch to be satisfied... I hope these songs will still be listened to in the next centuries.
This has to be the most incredible and miraculous musical phenomenon in the History of the world. This is folk music of such sophistication and originality, it´s unbelievable.
Man... I find it extremely difficult to express feelings lately but life somehow bought me to this music and I'm sitting just in awe and have tears coming...
This is amazing
You are speaking my language - Peace my friend
i lost my hearing on my left ear during my military service, i've always been a musician ever since i was a child, i get goosebumps easily when listening to good music, my musical prowess is even close category to being perfect pitch, i never get the formal education that's why i enlisted in the military to save up enough money to study music later. I never get the chance to study because of my health, now i'm 25, i still have good hearing on my right ear, but God i wish i had my full hearing to fully enjoy this wonderful performance. It made me tear up, it's just so beautiful, almost like it's from somewhere inside my heart.. It's hard to explain.
Sorry for your story. Hope there is a next life that you could to what you wanted but even if there is hope you could still do it. Im not sure if you have to stop yourself.
This is wonderful. Thank you Bulgaria, love and peace from Texas.
Try. DJ89. ABAGAR QUARTET. TRIO BULGARKA. MARIA DIMITROVA. NUSHA CHOIR. Choir ANGELITE. NELI ANDREEVA. PHILIP KOUTEV CHOIR. ISIHIA. DIA. COSMIC VOICES FROM Bulgaria
Thanks Texas. ❤❤ Greetings from Bulgaria 👋👋👋👋👋👋
Прекрасный хор!! Замечательное исполнение всех композиций!!
я согласен
I know nothing from Bulgaria but this was amazing .... 😢❤ i am working on creating a fantasy world with amazing culture and i think ill put some bulgarian inspirations 🥹❤️