Thank thee for this. As is stated in other bardcore comments on other videos, I wonder how future internet archeologists will see this. Thank you for the music!
Montero (Hight Call Me By Thy Name) Camel By Camel Anyone For Thee Giants Torn Asunder I Wisheth Down Under Kings & Queens Paranoid Android Enemy of Mine Let Somebody Depart Brown Eyed Maiden Little Red Chariot Runneth To The Hills Come Hither Eileen Changes of Fortune Midnight Sky in Bardic Style 34+35 Summons Live Be Life Smokin Out The Casement Light Switcheth Seventeen Going Underneath Won't Stand Yonder Emo Maiden No Woman Nay Weep She's All I Long to Be Satisfaction Guaranteed Wap (Whence Arises Praise) Blinding of Lights Oh My God Dreams of Slumber Moscow Mule, Aye Heather of the Moor Brave Warrior Abcdefu (Aye, Be Seein' Thy Foe) Borneth To Be Wild Badeth Guy Shallow Pool Master Of Puppets Anyone of Noble Birth Time After Time Doth Pass Rehabilitate Thy Soul What A Feeling Doth Stir Happier Than Ever Before Surface Pressure Deep The Children Aren't Alright Shinigami Eyes (Death's Glance) Watermelon Sugar Sweet Dance Monkey Jig Sweet Talker of Words Black Summer's Eve Beggin' for Mercy Mr. Brightside We Don't Speak of Bruno Macarena Dance Killing Me Softly I Feel Good in Heart Free Fallin' from Grace
@@davideanilit's pretty cool to trace how we went from proto-germanic to anglo-saxon (small but important differences adopting the sentence structure from the Frisians who tagged along with the Angles, Saxons and Juttes), to middle English shortly after William the Conqueror conqured in 1066 brought in a ton of French, Latin, and Greek, also being influenced by the Old Norse during the Vikings and Dane Law, then they all merged together had a great vowel shift (sounding like a bunch of extremely drunk New Englanders, by the time of the King James Bible and Shakespeare, pirates, then the language started to split between the US and UK after the US gained independence, it's only been since the 1960s and 70s that we've really been sharing music and films on a fairly regular basis and have since been moving back towards each other in vernacular to varying degrees. By the way the Y in Ye is not a y sound. It comes from a letter called the "Thorn" and pronounced th but since the symbol of "thorn" wasn't available. The majority of printing presses came from Germany in the early days and printing houses just used the Y until it was at some point agreed to replace the "thorn" and Y with TH to avoid the confusion a Y made at the beginning of Ye, Yis, Yat, Yere, Yem, Yeir, etc... So "Ye olde Bookstore" was just The old bookstore with the extra e some people wrote as spelling wasn't really standardized back then. Ironically it was the explosion of literacy that stabilized the shifts in language between the US and UK.
Montero (Call Me By Your Name) 0:00 - 2:50
Camel By Camel 2:51 - 8:34
Anyone For You 8:35 - 12:00
Giants 12:01 - 15:16
Torn 15:17 - 20:21
I Wish (?) 20:22 - 23:33
Down Under 23:36 - 27:10
Paranoid Android 27:11 - 33:16
Enemy 33:17 - 36:20
Let Somebody Go 36:22 - 40:41
Brown Eyed Girl 40:45 - 44:04
Little Red Corvette 44:05 - 48:17
Run To The Hills 48:18 - 52:45
Come On Eileen 52:46 - 57:20
Changes 57:21 - 1:00:55
Midnight Sky 1:00:57 - 1:04:36
34+35 1:04:37 - 1:07:22
Live Is Life 1:07:36 - 1:11:39
Smokin Out The Window 1:11:46 - 1:14:56
Light Switch 1:14:57 - 1:18:15
Seventeen Going Under 1:18:16 - 1:22:16
Won't Stand Down 1:22:16 - 1:25:40
Emo Girl 1:25:41 - 1:28:29
No Woman No Cry 1:28:32 - 1:34:12
She's All I Wanna Be 1:34:13 - 1:37:53
Satisfaction 1:37:54 - 1:41:35
WAP 1:41:36 - 1:44:46
Blinding Lights 1:44:47 - 1:48:11
Oh My God 1:48:12 - 1:51:52
Dreams 1:51:53 - 1:56:03
Moscow Mule 1:56:03 - 2:00:13
Heather 2:00:15 - 2:03:43
Brave 2:03:44 - 2:06:59
Abcdefu 2:06:59 - 2:09:48
Born To Be Wild 2:09:50 - 2:13:30
Bad Guy 2:13:31 - 2:16:48
Shallow 2:16:49 - 2:20:16
Master Of Puppets 2:20:17 - 2:28:52
Anyone 2:28:55 - 2:32:02
Time After Time 2:32:04 - 2:36:02
Rehab 2:36:04 - 2:39:33
What A Feeling 2:39:34 - 2:43:25
Happier Than Ever 2:43:26 - 2:48:16
Surface Pressure 2:48:20 - 2:51:36
The Kids Aren't Alright 2:51:37 - 2:55:05
Shinigami Eyes 2:55:06 - 2:58:00
Watermelon Sugar 2:58:01 - 3:01:09
Dance Monkey 3:01:11 - 3:04:34
Sweet Talker 3:04:37 - 3:07:33
Black Summer 3:07:35 - 3:12:09
Beggin 3:12:13 - 3:15:42
Mr. Brightside 3:15:45 - 3:19:37
We Don't Talk About Bruno 3:19:39 - 3:22:54
Macarena 3:22:56 - 3:26:24
Killing Me Softly 3:26:26 - 3:31:32
I Feel Good 3:31:33 - 3:34:22
Free Fallin 3:34:22 - 3:39:20
Good job! Thanks, I will pin your comment
i dont think we talk enough about how profoundly sinister this version of WAP sounds
Thank you!
I never knew I needed these medieval mixes in my life until now.
hahaha, great to hear welcome onboard, happy to have you here!
2:50 😵💫the flashbacks to *that* dancing cat
come on Eileen sounds like it would be a perfect shanty!
Thank you!
Greeting and salutations, fellow Troubadour!
Hail friend and well me!
Let us get ye olde partie started my hearties!
Thanketh thee for dropping in!
Thank thee for this. As is stated in other bardcore comments on other videos, I wonder how future internet archeologists will see this. Thank you for the music!
Aww, thank you for the love and support, Appreciated!
This is the soundtrack for my D&D's campaign local tavern the Three Shekkals. Its great for roleplay. Thank u!
Thats awesome, glad you're band of adventurers enjoy it!
Here I was, thinking I was the only one listening to Camel by camel, but alas finally the truth was revealed. I'm not alone.
You're not!
Why does the Macerena, of all things, make sense in this style?
Bardcore is magic!
@@Bardcore I absolutely have to agree with your statement! I can't wait to hear even more of your mixes.
Can someone place the playlist please. With Medieval language. Peace.
Montero (Hight Call Me By Thy Name)
Camel By Camel
Anyone For Thee
Giants
Torn Asunder
I Wisheth
Down Under
Kings & Queens
Paranoid Android
Enemy of Mine
Let Somebody Depart
Brown Eyed Maiden
Little Red Chariot
Runneth To The Hills
Come Hither Eileen
Changes of Fortune
Midnight Sky in Bardic Style
34+35 Summons
Live Be Life
Smokin Out The Casement
Light Switcheth
Seventeen Going Underneath
Won't Stand Yonder
Emo Maiden
No Woman Nay Weep
She's All I Long to Be
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Wap (Whence Arises Praise)
Blinding of Lights
Oh My God
Dreams of Slumber
Moscow Mule, Aye
Heather of the Moor
Brave Warrior
Abcdefu (Aye, Be Seein' Thy Foe)
Borneth To Be Wild
Badeth Guy
Shallow Pool
Master Of Puppets
Anyone of Noble Birth
Time After Time Doth Pass
Rehabilitate Thy Soul
What A Feeling Doth Stir
Happier Than Ever Before
Surface Pressure Deep
The Children Aren't Alright
Shinigami Eyes (Death's Glance)
Watermelon Sugar Sweet
Dance Monkey Jig
Sweet Talker of Words
Black Summer's Eve
Beggin' for Mercy
Mr. Brightside
We Don't Speak of Bruno
Macarena Dance
Killing Me Softly
I Feel Good in Heart
Free Fallin' from Grace
I adoreth ye dancing feline harlot of Egypt song !
❤️
😂😂😂😂... Can't imagine that people actually used to speak like this a few centuries ago😂😂
@@davideanilit's pretty cool to trace how we went from proto-germanic to anglo-saxon (small but important differences adopting the sentence structure from the Frisians who tagged along with the Angles, Saxons and Juttes), to middle English shortly after William the Conqueror conqured in 1066 brought in a ton of French, Latin, and Greek, also being influenced by the Old Norse during the Vikings and Dane Law, then they all merged together had a great vowel shift (sounding like a bunch of extremely drunk New Englanders, by the time of the King James Bible and Shakespeare, pirates, then the language started to split between the US and UK after the US gained independence, it's only been since the 1960s and 70s that we've really been sharing music and films on a fairly regular basis and have since been moving back towards each other in vernacular to varying degrees.
By the way the Y in Ye is not a y sound. It comes from a letter called the "Thorn" and pronounced th but since the symbol of "thorn" wasn't available. The majority of printing presses came from Germany in the early days and printing houses just used the Y until it was at some point agreed to replace the "thorn" and Y with TH to avoid the confusion a Y made at the beginning of Ye, Yis, Yat, Yere, Yem, Yeir, etc... So "Ye olde Bookstore" was just The old bookstore with the extra e some people wrote as spelling wasn't really standardized back then. Ironically it was the explosion of literacy that stabilized the shifts in language between the US and UK.
🇵🇸
perrfect music to play Age of Empire !
awww, thank you!
02:13:31 bad guy - the main song i wanted to hear and case anyone else searching
Thank you for the comment!
Can this be used on twitch streams?🥺
I'll allow it, though I think if it is saved as a recording there may be issues with the composition copyright holders
@@Bardcore Noted. Thank you Love
propre !!
Thank you for the comment!
where did society go so wrong, we could've had it all
Thank you for the comment!
😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘
😘