Thanks for the great reaction to NEMOPHILA! In some interview, they were asked about the possibility of a European tour, to which they replied that of course it is possible. They are a truly brutal band, but at the same time very beautiful.
I would love it if they gave some love to their euro-fans as well, and didn't just cater to the US fans. They are truly one of the great bands of our time, regardless of gender or nationality.
Haraguchi-san and Murata Tamu have the nickname of "Laughing Thunder" because of how thunderous they're playing is and that they are constantly smiling and laughing while playing.
Thanks for watching. Nemophila is a Greek word. The band pronounces it the japanese way because they're japanese. ruclips.net/video/KOwCqNea-hQ/видео.html
@@ChiliConCarnage Then it follows that the "Japanese way" would be the correct way and the pronunciation of the flower is immaterial. I see so many Americans (I'm American) pronounce Rammstein and Wacken phonetically and it's irritating to me. Do you agree that it's correct to pronounce German names as Germans do?
@@daveminers3404 I don't agree that the japanese way is the correct way. If we're talking about a band name like Hanabie, then the japanese way is the way to pronounce it, but Nemophila took it's name from the "scientific" greek name for that flower. It's in their logo, and every country pronounces "scientific" names (greek and latin) in their own way, or in the way of the language they're speaking when they say the word. It doesn't really matter what way you intone a word, but in the case of, in your example, german and greek/latin, there's a difference, and the difference is that greek and latin are universally used across the globe as the "scientific" naming conventions. I, as a european, don't care how US Americans pronounce things, as long as they include all the letters and don't add any extra, as they often do. If you get annoyed by US Americans pronouncing foreign words and names in the US American way, then don't bring any US Americans to Norway because you'll die of annoyance. :D Personally, I don't care. I don't expect people from other countries to know the correct pronunciation of Norwegian words and names.
Thanks for the great reaction to NEMOPHILA! In some interview, they were asked about the possibility of a European tour, to which they replied that of course it is possible. They are a truly brutal band, but at the same time very beautiful.
I would love it if they gave some love to their euro-fans as well, and didn't just cater to the US fans. They are truly one of the great bands of our time, regardless of gender or nationality.
Haraguchi-san and Murata Tamu have the nickname of "Laughing Thunder" because of how thunderous they're playing is and that they are constantly smiling and laughing while playing.
That makes perfect sense.
🤘🏻🌸🤘🏻
🤘❤️🤘
Nemophila so good!
I agree!
The best band right now.. imo.. ⚡️🤟🏻⚡️
They are for sure at the top of the list. Thank you for watching.
Yes, you are right. They are using some small backtracks for filling but other than that, they sound amazing as always.
Pronounced the Japanese way: “Ne-Mo-Fi-La” (“neh-mo-fee-la)
Thanks for watching.
Nemophila is a Greek word. The band pronounces it the japanese way because they're japanese.
ruclips.net/video/KOwCqNea-hQ/видео.html
@@ChiliConCarnage Then it follows that the "Japanese way" would be the correct way and the pronunciation of the flower is immaterial. I see so many Americans (I'm American) pronounce Rammstein and Wacken phonetically and it's irritating to me. Do you agree that it's correct to pronounce German names as Germans do?
@@daveminers3404 I don't agree that the japanese way is the correct way. If we're talking about a band name like Hanabie, then the japanese way is the way to pronounce it, but Nemophila took it's name from the "scientific" greek name for that flower. It's in their logo, and every country pronounces "scientific" names (greek and latin) in their own way, or in the way of the language they're speaking when they say the word.
It doesn't really matter what way you intone a word, but in the case of, in your example, german and greek/latin, there's a difference, and the difference is that greek and latin are universally used across the globe as the "scientific" naming conventions. I, as a european, don't care how US Americans pronounce things, as long as they include all the letters and don't add any extra, as they often do. If you get annoyed by US Americans pronouncing foreign words and names in the US American way, then don't bring any US Americans to Norway because you'll die of annoyance. :D Personally, I don't care. I don't expect people from other countries to know the correct pronunciation of Norwegian words and names.