My Master as well forbade such frivolities, especially for servants. When confronted and punished I slew my Master in a fit of rage. On the run, I soon joined a traveling group of gypsies on the carnival circuit. Having learned of my misdeed they respected me for opposing the tyranny of the lord of the manor. 'Tis no phase to be sure.
@@madisondines7441 It's not a particularly new concept. It's been really common at renaissance fairs for decades to do medieval style covers of contemporary music.
@@eerongal Sure, but it has only really blown up recently. I was the only one into this, until I began getting recommendations by all of my friends a few weeks back.
Thou is used in the same place as “I.” Thee is used where “me” would go. Thy is like my and thine is like mine. Thou is the informal way of saying you. If you say you then it is plural or formal. The way Hilda uses thou is grammatically correct, she is a good Elizabethan lass. A doctor would probably use “you” with a patient, but if you were to use thou the sentence would be “Thou shalt succumb to plague in 4 minutes, shall I summon the friar to perform thy last rites?” Thou is still used today in modern English in accents like in Yorkshire. Hope I was helpful 😃
In Portugal and Galicia we had these medieval songs called “cantigas de amor” or love songs which were basically a bard writing love songs to a lady he fancied in the royal court and he could not identify the lady (mostly because she was probably married) but he would express his admiration and how he thought she was perfect and wished he was worthy of her love. All this to say that I can definitely see that in this song and humans haven’t changed a bit
The word ''weird'' is definitely old www.etymonline.com/word/weird?ref=etymonline_crossreference But yeah ''weirdo'' is from 1950's although it is similar to a Scottish word from the 1890's. Still too late idd.
If I have ANY little nitpick, it would be that. I'm not sure if the word creep was around then, bit it at least sounds like it would fit. She goes to great lengths to basically rewrite all these lyrics. I was really surprised that word stayed in.
I'm running a D&D campaign, and my players discovered an eccentric Performing Arts Tavern and every time they visit, I play one of your songs and say a flamboyant and popular young travelling bard from the city of Waterdeep called Hildegard Von Blingin' is up on stage with a group of minstrels, performing it. The players have come to love it and actively look forward to going to the tavern to hear the next one! We use it as an opportunity to have a little break, get some more beers/wine, etc.
Yeah - I'll introduce my playgroup to a Blingin' Bard as well... Although, my current Bard /Sorcerer is currently performing Songs from Heilung with two hired Helpers :D Those Chants REALLY get your Barbarian INSPIRED....
I have heard some very popular bards who provoke almost riotous reactions from women especially, and they call themselves the Insects or the Bugs or something like that...?
These songs are so satisfying to listen to. I did not expect to be adding “bardcore” to my ever growing list of genres but this is unironically amazing
I can't help but reminisce of my times as a squire. When my good mentor had me slaughter pigs tied to rafters to have me used to the blood and screams of combat and battle, I was blinded my first time! Oh blood does not wash out the eyes as dirt! I was blinded from it! I was in this visionless state for a weeks time! What a time that was!
Out of all of these I've heard, this one has the least changes. It's a mark of how timeless this song is, that it can be so easily adapted to any style or era and just fit
Meanwhile two Spanish inquisitors hiding from sight debating which one of them who going to run to her and kick her into the water to determine if she's a witch or not
In my early 20s.. around 2004-2005.. I got super obsessed with Henry Vlll and his wives omg! This was long before The Tudors show and etc. I absolutely LOVE the whole style of medieval and renaissance look/feel💕 I've been in love with all this stuff for many years. Nice to know there are others who feel the same 💯🥰
I like to imagine a movie about someone that travels back in time to the Medieval Age and the entire soundtrack is like this: modern songs sang in medieval style and everything is beautifully sad and aesthetic
This version is so hauntingly beautiful, the vocals, the instrumental, everything adds to the depressing ambience of the song. I can't express my love for this piece enough.
So, I know this is a joke, but I'm a massive language nerd and this is an excuse to ramble about something I find cool. The language here is 16th century English (aka Early Modern English) - the kind of English that Shakespeare spoke and wrote in. It's a little tricky for modern speakers of the language to read, but it is at least recognisably English. So, given how different Shakespearean English is from modern English, how different might the English spoken 400 years before that be from what we speak today? We don't have to guess; we still have some surviving texts from the period. The text below is the first 13 lines of of Layamon's Brut; a text from somewhere between 1190 and 1215 which is (assuming Wikipedia hasn't lied to me, because I can't read this shit either) a book on the history of Britain - the first such in English since the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle written some 300 years prior. An preost wes on leoden; Laȝamon wes ihoten. he wes Leouenaðes sone; liðe him beo Drihten. He wonede at Ernleȝe; at æðelen are chirechen. vppen Seuarne staþe; sel þar him þuhte. on-fest Radestone; þer he bock radde. Hit com him on mode; & on his mern þonke. þet he wolde of Engle; þa æðelæn tellen. wat heo ihoten weoren; & wonene heo comen. þa Englene londe; ærest ahten. æfter þan flode; þe from Drihtene com. þe al her a-quelde; quic þat he funde. buten Noe.& Sem; Iaphet & Cham. & heore four wiues; þe mid heom weren on archen. I'd be willing to bet that if you hadn't been told that the text was in English, you wouldn't have recognised it as English. English didn't use th for the two sounds we use it for today; it used 'ð' (called Eth) for 'th' as in "the" or "with", and 'þ' (called Thorn) for 'th' as in "theory" or "think". In addition, there was a pretty substantial vowel shift during those 400 years, leading to a number of vowels being pronounced differently but, due to the standardisation of spelling happening during the shift, only sometimes spelled differently. Also, English still had a proper case system around this time; most of which was gone by the time of Shakespeare and only a tiny amount of which remains today (mostly in the form of pronouns). So yeah; add about 400 years to the dates given here, and you'll be far closer to the mark. Hope somebody found this interesting.
I have probably heard hundreds of covers of this song and this is my personal favourite. Angelic singing of a pure melody, with very delicate and understated vibrato. Mello backing music, and it not only preserves, but actually improves upon the melancholy beauty of the original. Beyond perfect.
Having discovered bardcore only recently I must say that this is by far my favourite not only in the bardcore genre, but also among "Creep" interpretations in general (actually including the original). Many thanks for this masterpiece of music!
More archaicized lyrics: When thou wert before me I could not meet thine eye Thou art like an angel Thy skin makes me cry Thou driftest like goosedown In a beautiful world I wish I were precious Thou art so very precious But I am a lout I am a wastrel What devil hath brought me here? I don't belong here I care not how it hurts I much crave control I want an unblemished body I want an immaculate soul I wish thee to mark it When I'm not to be found I wish I were precious Thou art so very precious But I am a lout I am a wastrel What devil hath brought me here? I don't belong here She hieth from the door She hieth e'r She hieth 'non, anon, anon, anon, anon What e'r maketh thee happy What e'r thou shouldst want Thou art so very precious I wish I were precious But I am a lout I am a wastrel What devil hath brought me here? I don't belong here (×2)
This is like that movie, "Yesterday" where the guy is the only one in the world who knows The Beatles, but a person traveled back in time, became a bard, and sang modern songs.
I've been trying to put a finger on it for a long while but I think the reason I am so drawn to these covers is because the way you use your voice in this style makes you sound like a flute. Striking but with breath and crystal clear sound. A hard sound to achieve continously.
I clicked on these thinking they would be funny, clever little medieval covers of good songs, but these actually ARE beautiful songs. I unironically enjoy them. Please keep making more.
Forget the comment section! Not only should you press the "subcribe" button, you should also press the "all" button with the ringing bell icon! She has not failed us before, IMHO. Not even once.
I don't really know anything about music subgenre etymology, but tavernwave just FEELS wrong. The wave suffix always makes me think about how you can see the waveforms in digital audio editors.
I can't explain why but is the fact that she pronounced "I AM a wierdo" without contraptions what cracked me up. No apostrophe bullshit, we ain't shortin words back in the 1430
I actually really like the musical arrangement a lot. I just wish there was a version with the original lyrics so I don’t get weird looks when I’m blasting this in my car.😂
@@abikalin I have always loved all things medieval and also have read the King James Version of the Bible so it will become familiar if you give it a chance.
Thy voice is that of the Angels themselves! Your tone is ethereal, other-worldly and magical! I kind of miss the equivalent of a pick scrape on the lute before the chorus however :D
It's hard for a cover to simply be good. It's harder for a cover to be exceptional. It's yet more difficult for a cover to rival and embody the true artistic intent of the original song while simultaneously being artistically relevant and original in its own right. This cover definitely falls in the latter category. What a sublime experience.
if you like Jazz, you should listen to the Richard Cheese cover of this song. it’s kind of amazing and I feel like it embodies the things that are great about good covers
My master forbids such melodies. I tell him "it is not a phase, m'lord."
yes
baraka obama
you should of put "it is not a sect, m'lord
@@farraca731
A. I wanted people to understand what I said, and
B. I was thinking way too much about it and just got it over with lmfao
My Master as well forbade such frivolities, especially for servants. When confronted and punished I slew my Master in a fit of rage. On the run, I soon joined a traveling group of gypsies on the carnival circuit. Having learned of my misdeed they respected me for opposing the tyranny of the lord of the manor. 'Tis no phase to be sure.
Bardcore is one of the good things that happened during the pandemic.
And it's literally less than two months old as a genre.
@@madisondines7441 It's not a particularly new concept. It's been really common at renaissance fairs for decades to do medieval style covers of contemporary music.
Aren't medieval covers being done for years?
@@eerongal Sure, but it has only really blown up recently. I was the only one into this, until I began getting recommendations by all of my friends a few weeks back.
how ironic
This songs brings back so many memories of the plague and dying at age 30.
the good ol' days
Feels like it was just yesterday.
I relate to this on a spiritual level because I died at age 30
2020 much
Lol the plague is for losers
You know you’re down bad when you’re crying to a medieval cover of radiohead at 8 am
Good energies. I feel ya
Her voice is beautiful and it's easy to identify with the lyrics. Most of us want to be better than what we are.
Sending you love, friend.
Hope you’re doing better now bestie
Hey,that's a natural reaction when you experiencing awe inspiring beauty. Especially in a world as ugly as ours
90s: HipHop
2000s: Pop
2010s: Dubstep
2020s: MEDIEVAL
plagues shall do that to thee
We'll get there, don't worry.
I guess next year will be tribal drums instrument
2030s: Gregorian chants
It's bardcore
"can you make our king depressed?"
"say no more"
😂
Canst thou
*challenge accepted 'me lady*
Holds't mine mead!
Medieval alternative is the thing I didnt realize I was missing in my life
I think youll find its called bardcore
This song fits perfectly in the Cinderella story. Being bully by her perfect step siblings. Being call a creep and just wanted to be special.
@The Strawberry Pimp once I went down this rabbit hole there was no return... thanks RUclips algorithm
@@you_know_who3720 quite possibly the best name for a music genre
Well said
"Thou art like an angel"
Thee: 👁️👁️👁️👁️👄👁️👁️👁️👁️
“Fear not”
At the least thine lady hath several
eys, myne only hath one
Be not afraid
She runneth out the door
💀💀💀💀
FEAR NOT
-cherubim
Plague: happens
RUclips algorithm: care for some bardcore in these trying times?
I like how this all started from the Coffin Dance craze
bardcore XD XD XD
Bahahahaha bardcore, I lol’ed at that
lol you just named a whole genre, good job!
Bardcore... Thou art a true master of words.
When thou realised thou cannot afford thy beloved’s dowry
@Telios Abraxas Though hath made me laugh profusely.
@@erickt1974 Such a brightened bunch.
Cersei Lannister: 👁👄👁
Thy betrothed*
please, rate my cover for this song))
Doctor: You shall succumb to plague in 4 minutes, shall I summon the friar to prepare thou last rites?
Mineself:
You is Thou, right?
@@ramarsal0224 yes, thy is yours
@@polishka7529 close, thy is "your" and thine is "yours"
@@Acriimony what about thee?
Thou is used in the same place as “I.” Thee is used where “me” would go. Thy is like my and thine is like mine. Thou is the informal way of saying you. If you say you then it is plural or formal. The way Hilda uses thou is grammatically correct, she is a good Elizabethan lass. A doctor would probably use “you” with a patient, but if you were to use thou the sentence would be “Thou shalt succumb to plague in 4 minutes, shall I summon the friar to perform thy last rites?” Thou is still used today in modern English in accents like in Yorkshire. Hope I was helpful 😃
Great rendition of this classic by Sir Thomas of Yorke.
😂😂
lol
Thomas de Yorke, leader of the Band of Radiohead
Haha I call him that all the time :)
When you lust for her but her father has already given her hand to the lord in the neighboring kingdom.
Omg is that the real Reed Spacer??!!?!?!
(Good comment btw lol)
@@kappa3667 The one and only!
We reside in a kingdom
That's when you use the Seduction Focus ;)
When the fair peasant girl chooses lord Chadwick over you
The peasant girl hath a choice?
Maidens never go for nice bards like me
@@posteveryside-beatsnews *shooketh. Now stop lying and self-advertising.
at ease brother, they often tha dullards nay intellectuals like us..
Apologies.
"Verily, this is greatly saddening. Bard Alexa, play thy lute to the melody of Despacito."
This might be the greatest thing I have ever had the pleasure of reading
Alexa: "Cometh over in thine direction"
ah yes, cantata despacitvs
Thou hast writ a great remark, if only the scribe wouldst permit such a task, I would gift thee with a thousand likes.
@@happychaosofthenorth why I thank yee very kindly, my lord or lady. It is kind of thee to think so!
In Portugal and Galicia we had these medieval songs called “cantigas de amor” or love songs which were basically a bard writing love songs to a lady he fancied in the royal court and he could not identify the lady (mostly because she was probably married) but he would express his admiration and how he thought she was perfect and wished he was worthy of her love.
All this to say that I can definitely see that in this song and humans haven’t changed a bit
ALO
Sim!!!
“Thy skin makes me cry”
So ... She showed her ankle ?
🤣🤣🤣
Her hands, your pervert. Have some manners
Welp. Thankfully he didnt inform the Town Guards lest she burned for her sinful ways!
@@naylachagas3865 Not only thy lady's hands, but thy lady is mayhaps fair of face, too.
WOAH WOAH WOAH!!! There are children here!!!
The "She runneth out the door..." part is so beautiful.
so true 😭
2:25
I was flabbergasted. That part was done so perfectly, I wasn’t quite prepared
it's the best part
I'ts a "polyphonic overtone singing" or some like that. The sound of two notes at the same time. *-*
I thought these were funny at first but they’re actually calming lol. Her voice is so pretty.
nOt aS pReTtY aS yOu
AGREED!
@@gigel99324 Thank you so much for letting me borrow your yacht last weekend. The bitcoins were also appreciated. Hope she sees this bro
Alex Gunner also thanks for that million you gave me. I know you said it was chump change but still.
666 likes ?
-Demonic screeching in the distance-
I like how it's supposed to be medieval, yet they kept the word 'Weirdo'.
The word ''weird'' is definitely old www.etymonline.com/word/weird?ref=etymonline_crossreference
But yeah ''weirdo'' is from 1950's although it is similar to a Scottish word from the 1890's. Still too late idd.
All could've been rectified if it was spelled wyrdo!! :D
Now imagine she had done a cover in Old English xD
Maybe “cretin” instead
If I have ANY little nitpick, it would be that. I'm not sure if the word creep was around then, bit it at least sounds like it would fit.
She goes to great lengths to basically rewrite all these lyrics. I was really surprised that word stayed in.
"What in hell am I doing here? I do not belong here"
Methinks this doth hit different upon this year of our Lord
Hildegard Von Blingin' is now 100% Canon in my dnd world as a famed travelling bard. Keep doing the Lords bidding, thou fair maiden.
You are not the only one, I can say this. My players will surely hear her inspiring performance this friday!
I'm doing the same in my campaigns XD this is brilliant.
If I still were DMing, that would happen for sure :)
AH GOOD IDEA NOW LET ME STEAL IT
She's in it to win it. My table better be ready.
I'm running a D&D campaign, and my players discovered an eccentric Performing Arts Tavern and every time they visit, I play one of your songs and say a flamboyant and popular young travelling bard from the city of Waterdeep called Hildegard Von Blingin' is up on stage with a group of minstrels, performing it. The players have come to love it and actively look forward to going to the tavern to hear the next one! We use it as an opportunity to have a little break, get some more beers/wine, etc.
Yeah - I'll introduce my playgroup to a Blingin' Bard as well...
Although, my current Bard /Sorcerer is currently performing Songs from Heilung with two hired Helpers :D Those Chants REALLY get your Barbarian INSPIRED....
Jesus Lord, I want to play with you and I'm not even into D&D!
I was thinking the same wanna try get matt Mercer to pick this channel up and hopefully they'll collab
I’m so stealing this!
I have heard some very popular bards who provoke almost riotous reactions from women especially, and they call themselves the Insects or the Bugs or something like that...?
A popular song among the edgiest teenagers of the 1300s.
It doesn't seem like you know what "edgy" means.
lol what. Ok. Tell me what it means then master.@@D_YellowMadness
Ah, the days when I was 'edgy'. Now I am mostly rounded.
Brilliant 😊🎉🎉
The weirdest genre of music I never knew I wanted.
Welcome to the Medieval Times Lovers haha
*best
Right? Where do I give all my money. Make more immediately
"Bardcore" as someone called it
it’s this whole channel dude
My suggestion: Arctic Monkeys - Do I Wanna Know? I just need that sweet lute riff
yesss!!!
Trueeee!
Heck yeah, love that song!
Omg perfection!
Would be dope
When the village's leper falls in love with the Lord's daughter.
All I can think about is the "I want your disease" line from the lady gaga song they did earlier. I'm not sure how I feel about this thought..
She runneth out the door
What does a leper hockey game end in?
*a face off*
:(
These songs are so satisfying to listen to. I did not expect to be adding “bardcore” to my ever growing list of genres but this is unironically amazing
I know, right? I shared this genre with my best friend, and we were shocked but I'm actually really into it....
When your girlfriend breaks up with you at the Renaissance Fair
*It's Medieval Music NOT Renaissance Music xD*
🤣😆🤣😆🤣💯💯💯
@@QueenPersephoneKore95 hahahahaha
@@QueenPersephoneKore95 most Ren. faires are medieval though, it's a misnoma.
I'm so damn dead, lol!
This brings back happy memories. One of my twelve children lived past his third birthday.
Good times, bro.
@@lourdescanete4844 Good tymes my good men
When you said one of my twelve children lived past his third birthday, I felt that.
I can't help but reminisce of my times as a squire. When my good mentor had me slaughter pigs tied to rafters to have me used to the blood and screams of combat and battle, I was blinded my first time! Oh blood does not wash out the eyes as dirt! I was blinded from it! I was in this visionless state for a weeks time! What a time that was!
A fellow Anti vaxxer I see
The uncensored version:
“I wish I was special
So ploughin' special”
One could also use "figging."
I mean, "fuck" is a saxon word, so it'd be accurate - another example of the Tiffany problem for you.
THANK YOU!
@@singtothesilence This.
So befouling!
Out of all of these I've heard, this one has the least changes. It's a mark of how timeless this song is, that it can be so easily adapted to any style or era and just fit
Your voice is so clean and crisp and it’s perfect for this kind of music.
@@posteveryside-beatsnews I'm for the protests and all, but that sucks, and it's made worse by the fact that you're self-avertising.
@@rubenleejohnsen2037 WRONG ANSWER! For speaking you're mind you will be sentenced to the Racist Gulag you bigot!
*c r i s p*
@@rubenleejohnsen2037 protestors lame
Are you saying Thumb York’s weird moaning isn’t crisp enough for a medieval cover of his own song?! HOW DARE YOU
I didn't know that medieval renditions of modern songs were what was missing from my life. Thank you for making me whole.
your hole? my hole!
Recommend wins again
Preach
You know what else is missing in your life? Jesus!
@@watashiboku7225 actually, He is an integral part of my life thank you very much.
The mental imagery of a woman standing on a balcony or pier, lamenting woes... makes this so very haunting and enchanting.
a literal creep.
Meanwhile two Spanish inquisitors hiding from sight debating which one of them who going to run to her and kick her into the water to determine if she's a witch or not
In my early 20s.. around 2004-2005.. I got super obsessed with Henry Vlll and his wives omg! This was long before The Tudors show and etc. I absolutely LOVE the whole style of medieval and renaissance look/feel💕 I've been in love with all this stuff for many years. Nice to know there are others who feel the same 💯🥰
ok
Faizal F this made me snort
I played this during a boss battle during my DND game, and we were laughing so hard because it went perfectly with the campaign.
Shant we praise this vocal musician, she performed thy high notes noticably near perfection.
nathaniel kaniatobe it’s magnificent
I was literally about to comment this
She has great breath control too, all-around incredibly skilled
Hell ya she did!
@honk honk says: This has nothing to do with the original comment. Moron.
I like to imagine a movie about someone that travels back in time to the Medieval Age and the entire soundtrack is like this: modern songs sang in medieval style and everything is beautifully sad and aesthetic
Coming back to this in 5 years
Lionel Schweetz we will wait and u do I’ll be the first to greet u
Westworld sort of does this.
Keithustus literally just about to say Westworld 😂
So basically Yesterday, except yestermillenia.
My music teacher: Ok for you next song pick a classic Medieval hymn.
Me:
Sneaky
We are really using this in music class over here lol
@@katiegarnett3897 Das crazyy
This version is so hauntingly beautiful, the vocals, the instrumental, everything adds to the depressing ambience of the song. I can't express my love for this piece enough.
Only 12th century kids will remember. This was on the billboard chart for 6 weeks in a row in 1143 AD.
So, I know this is a joke, but I'm a massive language nerd and this is an excuse to ramble about something I find cool.
The language here is 16th century English (aka Early Modern English) - the kind of English that Shakespeare spoke and wrote in. It's a little tricky for modern speakers of the language to read, but it is at least recognisably English. So, given how different Shakespearean English is from modern English, how different might the English spoken 400 years before that be from what we speak today? We don't have to guess; we still have some surviving texts from the period. The text below is the first 13 lines of of Layamon's Brut; a text from somewhere between 1190 and 1215 which is (assuming Wikipedia hasn't lied to me, because I can't read this shit either) a book on the history of Britain - the first such in English since the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle written some 300 years prior.
An preost wes on leoden; Laȝamon wes ihoten.
he wes Leouenaðes sone; liðe him beo Drihten.
He wonede at Ernleȝe; at æðelen are chirechen.
vppen Seuarne staþe; sel þar him þuhte.
on-fest Radestone; þer he bock radde.
Hit com him on mode; & on his mern þonke.
þet he wolde of Engle; þa æðelæn tellen.
wat heo ihoten weoren; & wonene heo comen.
þa Englene londe; ærest ahten.
æfter þan flode; þe from Drihtene com.
þe al her a-quelde; quic þat he funde.
buten Noe.& Sem; Iaphet & Cham.
& heore four wiues; þe mid heom weren on archen.
I'd be willing to bet that if you hadn't been told that the text was in English, you wouldn't have recognised it as English. English didn't use th for the two sounds we use it for today; it used 'ð' (called Eth) for 'th' as in "the" or "with", and 'þ' (called Thorn) for 'th' as in "theory" or "think". In addition, there was a pretty substantial vowel shift during those 400 years, leading to a number of vowels being pronounced differently but, due to the standardisation of spelling happening during the shift, only sometimes spelled differently. Also, English still had a proper case system around this time; most of which was gone by the time of Shakespeare and only a tiny amount of which remains today (mostly in the form of pronouns).
So yeah; add about 400 years to the dates given here, and you'll be far closer to the mark. Hope somebody found this interesting.
@@Parker8752 holy shit, thanks for the info though
back when it was a literal chart on a wooden board and post
AD 1143
No it wasn't
Okay but her voice is unironically angelic
For real!
And ironically, your like count is at 666 rn
@@vikli5966 808 three days later, y'all invest in bardwave meme stock RNRN
@MirrorEye bruh
@MirrorEye Go away from your computer or phone and step outside and be with yourself for a while see if you get anoyed by yourself and if so get help.
Stop saying this is better than the original. This is the original.
lady gaga‘s cover was good, but it’ll never be better
Hahahaha
Username checks out.
Pretty much feels like it. Take a listen to the Escala all girls choir version, just as haunting.
looted gravel I can’t find this version ?
I have probably heard hundreds of covers of this song and this is my personal favourite. Angelic singing of a pure melody, with very delicate and understated vibrato. Mello backing music, and it not only preserves, but actually improves upon the melancholy beauty of the original.
Beyond perfect.
when she said "I could not look thee in the eye" i felt that 😔
Same dude
When meself, a bruitish orc, fall in love with thee angelic elf.
lol
Wtf😂😂🤣
What if me am that kind of Orc?
@@NoobPTFO then thine luck hadst run out from the time of thine birth.
i feel you
I would love to see a concert of this where everyone comes in period clothing
... during a plague!
I would go
owen brennan lmao
I'd love to lock the fire exits from the outside of a concert where everyone comes in period clothing.
In a castle hall ideally
Unironically one of the best covers I've heard in my life
When thy fair maiden doesn’t love ye the same way thou would slaughter the saracens for
Best comment ever🤣🤣🤣
Could've said the whole thing in old English!
and joust with the next knight.
You would slaughter the saracens for the way ? Not for the maiden ?
English, do you speak it ?
I doth believeth this calleth f'r a crusade
When I’m older and my kid calls me ancient I’m going to show them this and tell them that this is what listened to as a kid
Based
Yes, saved for much later!
Nah bruh. Make them watch “2012” and say you survived that shit.
The Chronicle Plays for real bro hahahahaha
When you lust for the elven maiden, but knowest thou’rt a peasant farmer
what the f
@@thescarecrow897 youre stoopid. its not ok. get an education.
Tiffany i think i love you...but not in a creepy way...
Farmer peasant.
Unless you are really interested in collecting peasants on your land or something. 😄
@@chadmulligan5629 EAT THE SALAD RAW
This song hits me every time. I’m crying like a madman right now. You have the voice of a million angels, never stop singing my lady!
I feel like I'm being punched in cursive
Punched, in the feels, I hope. If psysically, then I suggest call the local exorcist near you. Lol.🤪
Peasant approaches maiden: good morrow my sweet lass.
Maiden: creep
*song plays in background as the peasant looks down at his shoeless dirty feet...
Perfect imagery
🤣
I read this as the peasant staring at the girl's feet lmao
YOU MADE MY ENTIRE DAY
Same’th
A broken heart cannot be healed with leeches.
Underrated comment.
This is the first comment that made me burst out in laughter, I wish you well in gaining likes
Yaaaa
Indeed. The humors become too unbalanced for leeches. Perhaps thee should let blood instead.
@@allenjunge4127 dang you beat me to it😅
This is absolutely phenomenal. The vocals, the lyrics, and instrumental
"I want perfect soul"
This person is witch
Go get the duck.
@@tabytastick Your comment made my laugh. Thanks for brightening my day.
Bruh😂
« Thy skin makes me cry »
She is also an heretics
But I'm a witch
What in hell am I doing here
She's running out
I would pay so much money to have a medieval game with these songs
"FBI" everybody
Skyrim 2.0
Warband
*Medieval Lawsuits...*
Witcher 4
Which would definitely fit with this song as witchers are considered weirdos and mutants
This voice... takes me back to 1254.
*such memories dance for many*
Nostalgiac art thou.
How many reincarnations would that be?
1254 am
Having discovered bardcore only recently I must say that this is by far my favourite not only in the bardcore genre, but also among "Creep" interpretations in general (actually including the original). Many thanks for this masterpiece of music!
More archaicized lyrics:
When thou wert before me
I could not meet thine eye
Thou art like an angel
Thy skin makes me cry
Thou driftest like goosedown
In a beautiful world
I wish I were precious
Thou art so very precious
But I am a lout
I am a wastrel
What devil hath brought me here?
I don't belong here
I care not how it hurts
I much crave control
I want an unblemished body
I want an immaculate soul
I wish thee to mark it
When I'm not to be found
I wish I were precious
Thou art so very precious
But I am a lout
I am a wastrel
What devil hath brought me here?
I don't belong here
She hieth from the door
She hieth e'r
She hieth 'non, anon, anon, anon, anon
What e'r maketh thee happy
What e'r thou shouldst want
Thou art so very precious
I wish I were precious
But I am a lout
I am a wastrel
What devil hath brought me here?
I don't belong here (×2)
Bravo sir!
Bravo!
now someone should make it
Indeed bravo.
This makes me want to travel back in time and perform this on the streets just to see if they burn me at the stake
christina ! You've got strange desires.
I'll be the backup dancer 💃🏻
Can I come? I’ll harmonise.
🤣🤣🤣🤣 What the hell? Why?
Don't worry, I'll be in the crowd screaming: BURN HER, BURN HER!
This is like that movie, "Yesterday" where the guy is the only one in the world who knows The Beatles, but a person traveled back in time, became a bard, and sang modern songs.
You're not wrong
I don't know about "Yesterday" bit it's also a major part of Back to the Future which given its fame might be a better example. :p
This one would be a quick ticket to being called a witch lol.
@@AlanGChenery Ah. You mean, the Johnny B Goode part.
and would probably hang for it depending on the time.
I've been trying to put a finger on it for a long while but I think the reason I am so drawn to these covers is because the way you use your voice in this style makes you sound like a flute. Striking but with breath and crystal clear sound. A hard sound to achieve continously.
I clicked on these thinking they would be funny, clever little medieval covers of good songs, but these actually ARE beautiful songs. I unironically enjoy them. Please keep making more.
This is exactly what I thought, and how I feel!
Agreed
Forget the comment section! Not only should you press the "subcribe" button, you should also press the "all" button with the ringing bell icon! She has not failed us before, IMHO. Not even once.
Creep is a brilliant song. It’s based in the Hollies “All I need is the Air that I breathe”.
the harmonies on the “she runs” part is something i’d die for
Big agree
Runneth*
Saul Jimenez ah yes, i forgot what century we were in for a second
Elly thou forget thy period for a mere second
Same
This is history right here. So far the best names I've heard for this genre are Bardcore and Tavernwave
Old timey
I don't really know anything about music subgenre etymology, but tavernwave just FEELS wrong. The wave suffix always makes me think about how you can see the waveforms in digital audio editors.
nothing4mepls yeah, -wave sounds like more electric ig? kinda like vapor wave and stuff, w/ bright colors. bardcore def fits more
My vote goes to Bardcore. The -wave suffix means something more atmospheric or electronic sound, at least to me
Tavernstep.
one of the best covers that captures the tone of the angst implicit in this song. understated and gorgeous. well done.
"Tell me sir knight, what is this tune?"
"Creep by Radiohead"
"What in the hells is a radio?"
"... Creep by Envoyhead"
I doth lament the dark ages of education: Radio is a Latin word. ;-)
Radio is just the Latin word for "round"
Radiohead meaning Round head would kind of make sense to a medieval person.
@@Novusod that's not true radio is the modernization of radius, the radius of the circle.
@@edoardoposteraro7772 and doesn't that come from the same latin word...?
Creep by messenger pigeonhead
"She runneth out the door"
OMG, she runneth out the door
I cannot believe she runneth out the door
Oh why has she runneth out the door? Poor lady
This had the same energy as the "and they were roommates" vine
Gwendolyn Clark what’s the vine? Idgi
@@sweetjanexo if you search 'and they were roommates' you'll see🙌🏻
I don't think it's mentioned often here, but the singing voice is so lovely!
indeed, she's really talented!
Thee has a great singing voice
Who is she?! She's really talented
I can't explain why but is the fact that she pronounced "I AM a wierdo" without contraptions what cracked me up. No apostrophe bullshit, we ain't shortin words back in the 1430
When thy crush sends a parchment saying thy just wants to be foes ☹️
A foe is an enemy lol
@@avi_s0ncin0 i'm unsure if i should explain it to you or not
@@hestiashearth478 I think he gets it, he's just boring
lol, i thought it was funny
No enemies to lovers 😥😥
"What in hell am I doing here?" - Everyone who got here through the recommendations. However, this doth slap.
Indeed, thee doth slap.
Slapeth*
I fell to deep in the RUclips blackhole tonight, goodnight y'all ✌
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I actually really like the musical arrangement a lot. I just wish there was a version with the original lyrics so I don’t get weird looks when I’m blasting this in my car.😂
when the Hunchback of Notre Dame looks longingly at Esmeralda...
Quasimodo, why the heck i remember his name.
But in the end he got Madeline.
@@christianmoralesortiz4688 In the end he starves to death because he holds Esmeralda's corpse for days.
@@joeblow9275 ay yo too dark
Big mood
Wow, stumbled across this and I blown away by the beauty of this lady's voice. Like and a sub!
mine own mother: what tune doth thee like these days?
thee: it is hard to explain
*'tis hard to explain, mother
Thoust would not understand mother
@Marceline Ingot not really. No one would have ever uttered such a sentence, it's grammatically incorrect
@scribbletrash official *mine own mother: what tune doth cause thee pleasure these days?
Urban tapestry music
‘What in hell am I doing here’ - 2 million people
A happy accident lol
I think almost all 7.8 billion of us share that feeling these days...
RUclips algorithm knew I need this even before I knew.
Don't know but the owner of this channel seems fine with you being here.
basically
Thy voice hits thine ear like an Angel. If listening to this is sin, then I shall never repent.
"Thy" voice
jdmalm123 thank you lmao I have no idea how to speak this new language I must study the texts of old.
You sing too beautifully for me here. No joke, I need that depressed grit D:
@@abikalin I have always loved all things medieval and also have read the King James Version of the Bible so it will become familiar if you give it a chance.
Thou shalln’t!!!
Creep is one of my favorite songs of all time and this just elevated it so much. WOW!
"I want thee to notice
When i am gone" hits hard
Yep
You mean hits BARD
Nineteen minutes old.
2k 'Likes.'
Something is right in this world.
1 hour old 17k likes
4 days old 146k likes
NE'ER HAVE I SUBSCRIBED TO A THING WITH SUCH HASTE
This is totally your music scene lol
*tis a truth that thou speaketh on this manner*
Same
VERILY
I happened upon this channel by chance and absolutely love the music.
The vocalist has the voice of an Angel.
And then it came to pass that Aragorn son of Arathorn sang softly:
"But I am a creep I am a weirdo"
This made me think of Legolas and Gimli and how much they care for each other despite the hatred between elves and dwarves. :(
@@angrysnekgoeschomp3240 they fought side by side, and their kinship was legendary 🏹
Other people: "Then, this happened"
Chad Tolkien: "And so it came to pass..."
In the au where Arwen leaves Aragorn to take the ship to the white shores of Valinor
if this isnt the top comment In a week then this world is hopeless
This version makes me want to cry so hard. Something about the vocals with the simplistic music is just beautifully sad.
You need meds.
@@Skyrilla thou needest empathy.
@@vp3841 thou needeth*
that's weird
Jim Williams ❤❤❤
when your crush dies becuse of rats
I'm wheezing
And you still chill with them? Yup, creep.
oh rats
LMAO
OooOoo fleas on rats fleas on rats
Wow, those vocals are beautiful. This is truly a new art form.
This new/ancient genre is truly amazing 😏
When your fairest maiden is a lorde and you are a simple serf...
I thought that said scarf and had so many questions
*lady
Suddenly I'm imagining Thom Yorke as a court jester singing this...
Thom would be a troubadour!
yeah sort of like ben stiller vibes where he entertains us but he's not funny.
I see him more as a disfigured medieval peasant
I praythee put these on Spotify so I mayst enjoy while a-hunting.
They’re on SoundCloud, can’t find Spotify
Oh, pray, doest this please!
RUclips. V a n C E D with mi cro G
Are they on bandcamp
This
Thy voice is that of the Angels themselves! Your tone is ethereal, other-worldly and magical! I kind of miss the equivalent of a pick scrape on the lute before the chorus however :D
It's hard for a cover to simply be good. It's harder for a cover to be exceptional. It's yet more difficult for a cover to rival and embody the true artistic intent of the original song while simultaneously being artistically relevant and original in its own right. This cover definitely falls in the latter category. What a sublime experience.
Perfectly put. As a bit of a bard myself, I doff my hat to you! All 500 of them!
Agreed. This is really classy.
Thou doth pen quite a lovely review for this sublime song of perfect artistic recapture, Sire!
if you like Jazz, you should listen to the Richard Cheese cover of this song. it’s kind of amazing and I feel like it embodies the things that are great about good covers
Start a Patreon already I want to support you so I don’t feel bad for requesting a song
Kiss From A Rose is unintelligible and flute filled already it’s perfect
Yes please start a patreon
LET US PAY YOU
I agree with OP this shit is amazing
Yes please, let us toss a coin to our minstrel! 💕
I’m starting to get addicted to these “bardcore” songs.
This song is so bardcore
Me too bruh
me too I was waiting till they upload a new one today
European bardcore taking over the scene
"It is not a periodical experience, its a long term manner" i told me lord, in despair.
When peasants fall in love with nobility:
it's usually the other way around.
@Sparticus Booker Spittook at this lol
😂
@Sparticus Booker Beastiality sahll result in an execution of the gruesomest
That sums it up
“So what kind of music do you like”
Me: It’s complicated
Chris Abella just say bardcore
I honestly hate it when people ask me that, because my tastes are so eclectic and random that it's hard to explain in a simple way. XD
@@ashleytuchin7693 same :D
World: Chaos
RUclips algorithme : medieval modern song go flut flut
One must have equal parts beauty and ugliness lest the balance of their life be thrown entirely into bedlam
Quite the time to use plague music
IMAGINE, a wlw medieval bard pining for the fief lord's intended on their engagement feast.