je veux cette musique, entre autres, a mes obseques cet oiseau symbolise la liberte et sa joie d exister.. Amis, savez vous que les chasseurs les tuent et les mangents ? Que le ciel leur tombe sur la tete !
It is not "Traditionnel Tzigane " ! ( Traditional gypsy) Ciocârlia (Romanian folk tune) Ciocarlia (meaning the skylark) is a Romanian tune, allegedly composed by the Romani-Romanian pan flute player Angheluş Dinicu[1][2] in the virtuosic style of the urban lăutarească music from late 19th century. Angheluş Dinicu first presented the tune in 1889 at the inauguration of the Eiffel Tower. However, the most famous version would become that of his grandson Grigoraș Dinicu, that adapted the tune for violin. George Enescu also was inspired by Ciocârlia for his composition the Romanian Rhapsody No. 1 for orchestra. Ciocârlia has been covered numerous times, but because it is a piece of lăutărească music and not a piece of Romanian peasant music it cannot be considered representative for the Romanian peasant spirit.[3] In the case of the Ciocârlia, like with other famous tunes of lăutărească music, there were attempts to hide the name of the composer in order to make it seem anonymous/traditional.[4] It is known as Ševa (Шева) and čučuliga (Чучулига) in Serbian, Bulgarian and Macedonian. It has also become highly popular in the Jewish Klezmer repertoire.[5] In Georgia, the tune became widely adopted into traditional folk music repertoire and is known as "Torola" (ტოროლა, the lark)[6] During the communist-era, the Romanian intelligence service operated a numbers station believed to be used by spies in foreign countries. The station known as "V01" became well known for its use of Ciocârlia as its opening interval, which would be followed by a series of number-coded messages in Romanian and concluded with the words "Terminat." The station fell off the air soon after the 1989 coup and overthrow of Ceausescu.[7] ruclips.net/video/b5Pn1X1_a64/видео.htmlsi=jVGf9XvNiHKKERB_ From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The song is not Tzigane and is a pure Romanian treasure song named Ciocirlia….but some idiot on RUclips that knows everything about other nations titled with their own hatred name…besides that was played like crap.
❤ merci pour ce morceau et ce chant d alouette
Чудо!!!!!
Thank you so much for this beautiful piece. My father had it in one of those old vinyl records of 78°
je veux cette musique, entre autres, a mes obseques cet oiseau symbolise la liberte et sa joie d exister.. Amis, savez vous que les chasseurs les tuent et les mangents ? Que le ciel leur tombe sur la tete !
Quel régal
It is not "Traditionnel Tzigane " ! ( Traditional gypsy)
Ciocârlia (Romanian folk tune)
Ciocarlia (meaning the skylark) is a Romanian tune, allegedly composed by the Romani-Romanian pan flute player Angheluş Dinicu[1][2] in the virtuosic style of the urban lăutarească music from late 19th century.
Angheluş Dinicu first presented the tune in 1889 at the inauguration of the Eiffel Tower. However, the most famous version would become that of his grandson Grigoraș Dinicu, that adapted the tune for violin. George Enescu also was inspired by Ciocârlia for his composition the Romanian Rhapsody No. 1 for orchestra.
Ciocârlia has been covered numerous times, but because it is a piece of lăutărească music and not a piece of Romanian peasant music it cannot be considered representative for the Romanian peasant spirit.[3]
In the case of the Ciocârlia, like with other famous tunes of lăutărească music, there were attempts to hide the name of the composer in order to make it seem anonymous/traditional.[4]
It is known as Ševa (Шева) and čučuliga (Чучулига) in Serbian, Bulgarian and Macedonian. It has also become highly popular in the Jewish Klezmer repertoire.[5] In Georgia, the tune became widely adopted into traditional folk music repertoire and is known as "Torola" (ტოროლა, the lark)[6]
During the communist-era, the Romanian intelligence service operated a numbers station believed to be used by spies in foreign countries. The station known as "V01" became well known for its use of Ciocârlia as its opening interval, which would be followed by a series of number-coded messages in Romanian and concluded with the words "Terminat." The station fell off the air soon after the 1989 coup and overthrow of Ceausescu.[7]
ruclips.net/video/b5Pn1X1_a64/видео.htmlsi=jVGf9XvNiHKKERB_
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Tsiganes, Gitans... les seuls à faire entrer les 4 vents dans une salle de concert... en sifflotant! époustouflant
Je pensais que c était une version de RJD2 mais pas du tout la même chose , cependant pas déçu du tout . Magnifique !!❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🤎🖤🤍♥️
Sublime ❤❤❤
Bravo, où peut-on se procurer la partition piano violon ? D'avance merci !
Peu importe l'origine de cette musique..
Pourvu qu'elle nous fasse vibrer, n'est-ce pas cela l'essentiel?
The song is not Tzigane and is a pure Romanian treasure song named Ciocirlia….but some idiot on RUclips that knows everything about other nations titled with their own hatred name…besides that was played like crap.
Isn't the name "Ciocarlia", which precisely means "lark" ("alouette") in French ?
@@bruno.giordano Ciocarlia it's not traditionel tsigane. Not at all tsigane.
@@zarazac2626 ok, so what ? That's not what I was talking about.