Where Is this dance from? Moravia, i Guess? I Just love the part of the dance that Starts at the second half of the Video. And i love the song so so much that Starts at about 1:26 minutes!!😍👏👏 With These rhythmic elements of the dance, the clapping and stomping, that add to the music and the whole melody - wonderful!❤ What Is that song called? Can anyone Tell me? I hear it so often when i watch Czech dances but i could never find Out how it's called... But constantly have it in my ear, which drives me even more crazy not to know the title!🤣🙈
@xiaojunlvrr True, but the dance and the last part of the music looks nothing like Bohemian culture, from what I've seen and heard so far (maybe and hopefully I'm wrong?)... The dance looks so much more like traditional Slovak dances(although there are definitely differences to every Slovak dance I've ever seen), but I would so love if there were Czech dances like this! I love Czech culture, especially Moravian and I've spent so many time trying to learn about it and the differences and similarities between Czech and Slovak music and dances(and culture), but it's so hard to find out anything when you've never been in either of those beautiful countries.
@@spiritofthewinds9089 i must say that the dress looks very bohemian, especially the skirt silhoulette and the hair piece (called ,,vínek"), also the men's trousers that originally came from germany or austria and then were typical in some of the south-bohemian regions, but the music is definitely moravian, i can tell from the lyrics that are in this specific moravian dialect that sounds almost slovak. unfortunately i dont know much about dances, but ive got a blog on tumblr abt bohemian culture and especially dresses if youre interested>
@@thisisfay6727 thank you :) yes, the costumes of the men at least(don't know much about female ones) look very Bohemian. But I didn't know those came from Germany or Austria originally! I always thought it's just a similarity due to cultural and historical influences between these countries or maybe the other way around(that the Bohemian culture influenced the German one and in many ways). I'm German(Northern Germany) and here we don't have much culture in any way with costumes or traditional music or dances etc. But I know they always reminded me of Bavarian ones, which is why I always was so much more interested in all those beautiful costumes from Moravia, especially Slovácko. But there's so incredibly much to learn, so much diversity of costumes and dialects etc, pretty impossible to learn for an "outsider" :P I have to admit, on a whole, I've spent a lotttt of time learning about Moravian culture and much less about Bohemian, although I'm sure it's very beautiful, too! What is your blog called? :) I just love Czech culture in a whole and would love to learn everything about this beautiful country(including the language, which I started with a while ago) :D Do you also post about Moravian costumes in your blog or only Bohemian? One way or the other I would be very interested. But I'm looking so bad for some way to learn about all the different costumes of Moravia especially, since there are just so many! The past months I've watched so many more videos of Moravian dances and I think the last dance really looks very very Slovak. But idk. Maybe it's also CZ, would be great and maybe someone knows who stumbled about this comment :) But that melody I still haven't found any text to, otherwise I'm pretty sure I would have found the song by now. Only always videos without text... Maybe it's Hungarian and not even Slovak, maybe Moravian... Doesn't sound Bohemian to me... Who knows.. :P Edit: I just remembered what the melody at 1:26 reminds me of - faintly: the Moravian verbuňk (don't know which region exactly, but looking at the kroj of the dancer in the video I know that song from it would have to be Kyjov, I think?) "stojí javor v širem poli". Parts of the melody... but I know there are a lot of similarities with verbuňks like those... Obviously this dance here in this video is not a CZ verbunk in any way, neither music nor dance, but maybe it's the same region this one here is from? Idk... could be completely wrong about that ;P
I wish more was posted on the net about folk dances not in the stereotypical clog dances. I have the same issue finding German folk dance posting in nly showing Bavarian dances. As soon if all of Germany is Bavarian. Same a Dutch only doing clog dances. We know that the Dutch like all others woar more than just one style of clothing. Thanks for posting this one.
Try searching by regions specifically - they are more often listed as such as opposed to being labeled generally national, since music, dances, clothing and other traditions vary so much village to village and region to region. In my country, though small, differences are notable in places even some 20 km apart.
@@jammmy30 Do hory ma poslali. It is from Czech - Slovak border. Or Do hory ňa poslali or Dohory mňa poslali. I is in Moravian - Slovak dialect (or in Slovak). ruclips.net/video/01hi4cBO5LQ/видео.html
@@its1sasha142 Do hory ma poslali. Or do hory ňa poslali. It is song from Moravian - Slovak border, White Carpathian region, Moravian Kopanice, I thing. It is in Slovak language or Moravian Slovaks dialect.
@@its1sasha142 Let me more precisely: There are three melodies. The first is the song "Do hory ma poslali", 90% of it is a song from Moravské Kopanice (this includes several small villages with scattered settlements in the White Carpathians near the Slovak border in the Uherské Hradiště district.). At @1:14 a short intermezzo that I have not identified begins and at @1:25 the third melody begins. I heard this melody to the song "Když sem išel od milenky ". You can find it on RUclips under this name or similar titles, e.g: ruclips.net/video/7mXAild14gY/видео.html
I'm German and I've never heard it before, but the very first slow part could well be a German melody, I have no idea. Maybe the Germans took it from them, maybe the other way around, maybe Germany has nothing to do with it. But the last part in minor is definetly so not German and I just loveee that part! :D Does anyone know what it's called? The one that starts at 1:26? I hear it in so many Czech dance videos and coud never find out what it's called!
Fantastic dancers and fantastic dance♡
Greetings from Türkiye Turkey♡
Thank you very much for this perfect video♡
11 or 12 years ago, we saw them live in Italy. A blonde dancer from that group was my first crush ever 😂😂😂
Is there a blond dancer? ( if so something must be terribly off with my screen colors)
@Sümerian girl ( GÜNAY ) it was a dude and he's not in this video.
Either way, it doesn't matter if you find her pretty when someone else does
😊
Ceska nacionalna muzika je jedna od najlepsih na svetu !
I agree!❤ Do you know what the song Is called that Starts at 1:26 minutes?
🤣🤣🤣 yeah sure
@@saltandpepperandmint ?
@@spiritofthewinds9089I really want to know the name of the song too 😭
Exciting! From England.
I can do the moves and love the dance my ancestor did.
Beautiful czech cultural dance 🇨🇿 💃 🩰 🕺👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
ულამაზესი კოსტიუმები ❤
Wow, I love it. Love to Czechia from Russia
Czechia Is no longer part of Russia every since the 1900s
@@Ecpliseofficial-10 he didn’t say anything about Czechia being a part of Russia
@@saltandpepperandmint and I wasn't talking to you😁
@@Ecpliseofficial-10wtf xd
@@Ecpliseofficial-10 what a retarded comment 🤣 I don’t give a shit who you were talking to, OP was not talking to you either, bitch
Can i go back
🇨🇿🇨🇿👍🏻Bravo
Where Is this dance from? Moravia, i Guess? I Just love the part of the dance that Starts at the second half of the Video. And i love the song so so much that Starts at about 1:26 minutes!!😍👏👏 With These rhythmic elements of the dance, the clapping and stomping, that add to the music and the whole melody - wonderful!❤ What Is that song called? Can anyone Tell me? I hear it so often when i watch Czech dances but i could never find Out how it's called... But constantly have it in my ear, which drives me even more crazy not to know the title!🤣🙈
@xiaojunlvrr True, but the dance and the last part of the music looks nothing like Bohemian culture, from what I've seen and heard so far (maybe and hopefully I'm wrong?)... The dance looks so much more like traditional Slovak dances(although there are definitely differences to every Slovak dance I've ever seen), but I would so love if there were Czech dances like this! I love Czech culture, especially Moravian and I've spent so many time trying to learn about it and the differences and similarities between Czech and Slovak music and dances(and culture), but it's so hard to find out anything when you've never been in either of those beautiful countries.
@@spiritofthewinds9089 i must say that the dress looks very bohemian, especially the skirt silhoulette and the hair piece (called ,,vínek"), also the men's trousers that originally came from germany or austria and then were typical in some of the south-bohemian regions, but the music is definitely moravian, i can tell from the lyrics that are in this specific moravian dialect that sounds almost slovak. unfortunately i dont know much about dances, but ive got a blog on tumblr abt bohemian culture and especially dresses if youre interested>
@@thisisfay6727 thank you :) yes, the costumes of the men at least(don't know much about female ones) look very Bohemian. But I didn't know those came from Germany or Austria originally! I always thought it's just a similarity due to cultural and historical influences between these countries or maybe the other way around(that the Bohemian culture influenced the German one and in many ways). I'm German(Northern Germany) and here we don't have much culture in any way with costumes or traditional music or dances etc. But I know they always reminded me of Bavarian ones, which is why I always was so much more interested in all those beautiful costumes from Moravia, especially Slovácko. But there's so incredibly much to learn, so much diversity of costumes and dialects etc, pretty impossible to learn for an "outsider" :P I have to admit, on a whole, I've spent a lotttt of time learning about Moravian culture and much less about Bohemian, although I'm sure it's very beautiful, too! What is your blog called? :) I just love Czech culture in a whole and would love to learn everything about this beautiful country(including the language, which I started with a while ago) :D Do you also post about Moravian costumes in your blog or only Bohemian? One way or the other I would be very interested. But I'm looking so bad for some way to learn about all the different costumes of Moravia especially, since there are just so many!
The past months I've watched so many more videos of Moravian dances and I think the last dance really looks very very Slovak. But idk. Maybe it's also CZ, would be great and maybe someone knows who stumbled about this comment :) But that melody I still haven't found any text to, otherwise I'm pretty sure I would have found the song by now. Only always videos without text... Maybe it's Hungarian and not even Slovak, maybe Moravian... Doesn't sound Bohemian to me... Who knows.. :P
Edit: I just remembered what the melody at 1:26 reminds me of - faintly: the Moravian verbuňk (don't know which region exactly, but looking at the kroj of the dancer in the video I know that song from it would have to be Kyjov, I think?) "stojí javor v širem poli". Parts of the melody... but I know there are a lot of similarities with verbuňks like those... Obviously this dance here in this video is not a CZ verbunk in any way, neither music nor dance, but maybe it's the same region this one here is from? Idk... could be completely wrong about that ;P
I wish more was posted on the net about folk dances not in the stereotypical clog dances. I have the same issue finding German folk dance posting in nly showing Bavarian dances. As soon if all of Germany is Bavarian. Same a Dutch only doing clog dances. We know that the Dutch like all others woar more than just one style of clothing. Thanks for posting this one.
Was genau meinst du mit diesem Kommentar?
Try searching by regions specifically - they are more often listed as such as opposed to being labeled generally national, since music, dances, clothing and other traditions vary so much village to village and region to region.
In my country, though small, differences are notable in places even some 20 km apart.
Kisses to Czech people
❤❤❤❤❤
Это похоже на венгерский народный танец.
Яка назва танцю? І хто виконує?
can some send me the music of this
50/50 with cristobal
что это за музыка?
Чешская. Именно этой не знаю но очень похоже на «танцуй, танцуй, выкруцай» (tancuj tancuj vykrucuj ale pecku ne zrucaj )
@@jammmy30 Do hory ma poslali. It is from Czech - Slovak border. Or Do hory ňa poslali or Dohory mňa poslali. I is in Moravian - Slovak dialect (or in Slovak).
ruclips.net/video/01hi4cBO5LQ/видео.html
To jsou moraváci......Oni jsou divoký východ.
lol
noooo❤🎉🎉🎉
No moving...... Please earn and share!
7
Misha doesn't dance like this
I think thats a german march song i hear it bevore
It could have same melody, but this is traditional Czech song from Moravia.
@@jaroslavotradovec5983 could you Please tell me where I can find ethnotechno from Czech Republic?
@@its1sasha142 Do hory ma poslali. Or do hory ňa poslali. It is song from Moravian - Slovak border, White Carpathian region, Moravian Kopanice, I thing. It is in Slovak language or Moravian Slovaks dialect.
@@its1sasha142 Let me more precisely: There are three melodies. The first is the song "Do hory ma poslali", 90% of it is a song from Moravské Kopanice (this includes several small villages with scattered settlements in the White Carpathians near the Slovak border in the Uherské Hradiště district.). At @1:14 a short intermezzo that I have not identified begins and at @1:25 the third melody begins. I heard this melody to the song "Když sem išel od milenky ". You can find it on RUclips under this name or similar titles, e.g: ruclips.net/video/7mXAild14gY/видео.html
I'm German and I've never heard it before, but the very first slow part could well be a German melody, I have no idea. Maybe the Germans took it from them, maybe the other way around, maybe Germany has nothing to do with it. But the last part in minor is definetly so not German and I just loveee that part! :D Does anyone know what it's called? The one that starts at 1:26? I hear it in so many Czech dance videos and coud never find out what it's called!