Into The Unknown in Middle English (Medieval Cover) Bardcore

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2025

Комментарии • 48

  • @matthewmazo2829
    @matthewmazo2829 4 года назад +49

    I DEADASS thought this was hildegard von blinging and got SHOOK. still happy w you stevie

    • @stevevagabond
      @stevevagabond  4 года назад +16

      I love Hildegard! More people should make medieval songs :D

    • @Strawberryfidelity
      @Strawberryfidelity 4 года назад +8

      Are you kidding me? Lol Hilldegard Von blinging thinks that using thee and thou will magically transform a song into Middle English. This is true bard core ❤️👍

    • @matthewmazo2829
      @matthewmazo2829 4 года назад +4

      @@Strawberryfidelity thats why I got shook! i was really excited to see her do middle english!

    • @stevevagabond
      @stevevagabond  4 года назад +13

      Hildegard does Early Modern English which is what Shakespeare woulf have used. As a fan of language I like all periods :)

    • @matthewmazo2829
      @matthewmazo2829 4 года назад +2

      Steve the vagabond and silly linguist yeah! But I do like the idea of bardcore expanding to represent other languages of the medieval period. Hence why I was excited for this 💜💜

  • @user-sh6cb7sk6b
    @user-sh6cb7sk6b 4 года назад +40

    thank you for taking the effort to not just shakespearify the lyrics and be done with it, as an amateur sorta linguist, its actually really nice to see

  • @Anastasia_Neva
    @Anastasia_Neva 4 года назад +42

    This version feels more suitable for Bilbo Baggins than Elsa

  • @SrZyrkon
    @SrZyrkon 4 года назад +35

    Between having English as a first language and German as a secondary language, these are surprisingly easy to understand. Love the work, keep it up mate.

    • @stevevagabond
      @stevevagabond  4 года назад +12

      Thanks! My dream is to make songs in every old language :D I am just fascinated with how language changes over time. Making songs in old languages feels like I am breathing life into them. Listening to this makes it feel like you are a listening to a medieval bard performing in his native language :D

    • @SrZyrkon
      @SrZyrkon 4 года назад +6

      @@stevevagabond I have the same fascination. Went to college for linguistic anthropology just because of how much I love the morphology of language over time. Its always cool to see how the most commonly used words are almost identical to the ones used today. Or how different related languages arrived at different words for the same thing (English using "read", German using "lesen", but German uses "raten" which English changed from advised to read).

  • @aikya5684
    @aikya5684 2 года назад +4

    I love how it sounds like an English speaker who doesn't know French trying to make a French accent imitation

  • @holoduke51a
    @holoduke51a 4 года назад +20

    Dutch and English was a lot closer those days

  • @JefferyAClark
    @JefferyAClark 4 года назад +25

    More Old and Middle English covers! Every other week I am having to tell people that the King James Version is not Old English.

    • @matthewkreps3352
      @matthewkreps3352 4 года назад +3

      KJV fans think it is written in the language Jesus spoke.

    • @chongchang1110
      @chongchang1110 4 года назад +3

      I think KJV is Renaissance English given that James Stuart reigned after the English Renaissance of Elizabeth I plus the English at the time before King James and Elizabeth I already evolved.

    • @IPlayWithFire135
      @IPlayWithFire135 3 года назад +2

      @@matthewkreps3352 The KJV-only obsession is rich considering that James was gay or at least bisexual. And the original protestant radicals who influenced all subsequent ultraconservatives, the Puritans, despised the KJV as an Anglican book, preferring their Geneva bibles.

    • @lukewedell7000
      @lukewedell7000 3 года назад +1

      Hell no king James isn't old English

  • @dianan968
    @dianan968 4 года назад +7

    I just realized that if I had a time machine and went to medieval England I'd have biiiiiiiiig communication problems.

    • @acelibrarian
      @acelibrarian 2 года назад

      Yep. that's why time travel stories usually include some kind of universal translator tech.

  • @theyoungmarshjones
    @theyoungmarshjones 4 года назад +4

    Dude your singing is great! I'm so glad I found you in the bardcore universe!!!

  • @AlexDad
    @AlexDad 3 года назад

    "Here they made breakfast" - unknown lands? That sounds like the parent of a small child....
    Absolutely loved this, thank you.

  • @patati.batata4646
    @patati.batata4646 4 года назад +13

    Another room the quarantine maze has led me to today

  • @ElsannaPL
    @ElsannaPL 4 года назад +12

    Great idea and cover :D And English has changed a lot, but still I can understand some (unlike Let it go in Old English, which is veeery different) ;) Still, this one sounds more Germanic and words are pronounced like they're written, it reminds me of when I was starting learning English and I read words as they are written sometimes XD

  • @fabiodaleo4662
    @fabiodaleo4662 2 года назад

    As Italian, if I didn't speak English, that's exactly how I would pronounce the written words

  • @SaralinaLove
    @SaralinaLove Год назад +1

    who is the beautiful singer? love to hear more. just magnificent.

  • @victorian_periodical_parade
    @victorian_periodical_parade 2 года назад +1

    Wow, again lots of Norwegian, and some German in here. Very very nice to listen to. Is that you singing Steve? No matter who it is, great vocals!

  • @ashwinnmyburgh9364
    @ashwinnmyburgh9364 4 года назад +6

    I love Middle English and Old English. I have to ask, is the Middle English used here accurate? or is it more like a personal guess? I'm asking since I have been looking into how the language functions and such.

    • @stevevagabond
      @stevevagabond  4 года назад +12

      I based it on the language used in Canterbury Tales so its as close as we can get. There are no living people who speak Middle English so we don't know how people from the 1300s would have phrased things exactly but we can learn a lot about the language from literature. But remember that literature is only one kind of language. The way we write is a bit different to how we speak but the method I used to make this song is about as close as we can get :)

    • @ashwinnmyburgh9364
      @ashwinnmyburgh9364 4 года назад +4

      @@stevevagabond epic! I love Middle English and wanted to start speaking it just for the heck of it, but was unsure about the phrasing etc. Thanks man!

  • @LuisEduardoBraschi
    @LuisEduardoBraschi 4 года назад

    I left it playing and thought it was Wolverlei. :O
    Way to go!

  • @lillycastitatis6807
    @lillycastitatis6807 4 года назад +1

    Beautiful

  • @Melissa-kw7mt
    @Melissa-kw7mt 4 года назад +2

    It has a slight Italian sound to me!

    • @PaulCentralGames
      @PaulCentralGames 3 года назад +1

      it's because of the Latin influence and vocabulary that's in middle english

  • @carlosfelipearaujo
    @carlosfelipearaujo 4 года назад +3

    Spotify it!

  • @SofiaBerruxSubs
    @SofiaBerruxSubs 4 года назад

    Also this is much more like dutch or german in pronunciation.

  • @Natasha-ig9hr
    @Natasha-ig9hr 4 года назад +2

    Hildegard is great but I prefer this since you actually sing in forms of English which were used during the medieval period (I'm pretty sure Hildegard uses Early Modern but it may be Middle if you know please correct me)

    • @stevevagabond
      @stevevagabond  4 года назад +5

      Its definitely Early Modern. English settled down a lot spelling wise after the invention of the printing press in the 1400s. By Shakespeares time the language was very similar to our language now. The language changed a huge amount in the years 1000 to 1500 but less in thr subsequent 500 years

  • @lisalatysheva6162
    @lisalatysheva6162 3 года назад +2

    Это типо версия английского средневекового? Прикольно.

  • @yosipotomi544
    @yosipotomi544 4 года назад

    Disney should use it🤣🤣🤣

  • @ivarlosna6516
    @ivarlosna6516 4 года назад +1

    The vowel change made no sense, this has more resemblance to the written language.

  • @Rippingcartar
    @Rippingcartar 4 года назад +1

    Middle Englisc sound verī beautifull but it is shame þære no þorn or Ƿynn

  • @jhonnyduarte2392
    @jhonnyduarte2392 4 года назад

    This REALLY sounds like Brazilian accent k it's exactly what they teach us to not to do when speaking English k someone knows why? K

    • @teletek1776
      @teletek1776 3 года назад

      english has changed over the centuries

    • @PaulCentralGames
      @PaulCentralGames 3 года назад

      It's the norman french influence that makes the language sound like this

  • @Rippingcartar
    @Rippingcartar 4 года назад +1

    Mē licaþ hē,