THE SECOND LINE (Historical Documentary of New Orleans Music & Culture)
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- Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
- Documentary Pilot For a Tulane University Program called Music Rising, Executive Produced by BILSUM MUSIC & DIRTY SOUTHERN HOLLYWOOD
in New Orleans Louisiana September 2014.
Executive Producer Bill Summers & Dirty Southern Hollywood Films
Edited by Stefan Solea.
We encourage any and everyone to use the information within this video freely to educate students all around the world!
PLEASE SHARE!
This could have been three hours and I'd have watched every minute
I love second line and really respect its history when I’m there it speaks to my soul! I can’t wait to move to NOLA and celebrate every Sunday!
I want to let loose in dance in a second-line parade! Let my troubles go and feel GOOD.
Trap deville, i appreciate you for sharing this content
I live all the way in san diego &
Saturday oct 8,
My family is creating a 2nd. Line for my father,
'Cause he said, there better be a "second line" for him!
My father, gerald patrick,
was a drummer, in his youth &
I was raised to dance.
Thank you for the culture my father loved
Great video! Helped me put together a presentation for Black History Month!
EXCELLENT Video
THANK you for posting this
He said that a spirit takes over.
@NAT TURNER Perfect answer,
@@tanyaperrier1019 Being natural born killers and terrorists are your people's thing.
Beautiful video
Great Video!
amazing music
GOLD
How can I get a copy of the full documentary
REST EASY SQUIRTMAN 🕊️ 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
Excuse me but was Squirtman still in New Orleans when he passed ?
Luvly!
Thanks so much, I'm gad you enjoyed it!
Documentary of the Rank of Banners would be awesome to see.
Yesssss
🙏🙏🙏
Who is the first trumpet player?
I am very interested in understanding the similarities between a second line and a Chirimia Bunde from the Afro Colombian community. If anyone can help me make those links I would greatly appreciate it. Because the instruments and format are so similar!
Our uniquely rich regional Black-American LaLwizyàna Kréolité ethnic group's secondlining culture here in New Orleans, Louisiana doesn't have anything in common with no afro-Colombian culture.
@DaTruthTeller504 the connection is the bloodline of Africa. The soul knows regardless of location.
It looks like a Chirimia in Colombia comes from similar roots as second line Carnival in the Caribbean (Trinidad,Jamaica,etc…) simply due to the function coming from west/central Africa. If I’m not mistaken, many of the enslaved African coming through the New Orleans port were originally from Congo/Angola area as well as Senegal. I wish I had a more in depth answer for you but this would be my guess given my knowledge as an African American. This kind of thing was probably done in other parts of the world too but look at the areas of Africa we come from. Just a mixture of European instruments with African percussions and dances. Also that specific cowbell/symbol rhythm that you’ll hear in New Orleans second line jazz (and in Chirimia) is believed to come from present day Nigeria. I hope this helps!
@@DaTruthTeller504 Except the Afro-Columbian Dominican Creole and Louisiana Creole are both the direct descendants of Saint Dominigue Franco-Haitian Creole, and speak a mutually understandable Latin Creole language that is _not_ mutually intelligible with Classical French. Like it or not, your Louisiana Creole language has a number of Taino loanwords, meaning you too are Afro-Columbian, whether you like it or not.
@andreaardila656 The oldest roots of both the Ligne Seconde and Chirimia Bunde lie in the Bantu Expansion of about 4000 years ago. The various Bantu tribes were violently racist toward the Pygmy and Khoisan indigenous peoples of Western and Central Africa (even today), and as a sign of supplication toward the Bantu invaders, the Pygmy and Khoisan would perform synchronized tribal woodwind music. It was thought that as the Bantu themselves were enslaved thousands of years later, they did the same thing to their slavemasters, in order to appease them musically.
Music is a universal language, and we are all related.
The original people of New Orleans ancestors came by way of negroland but or not originally from there but have strong roots they overpopulated the hamites they were they're already from ancestor oak disobedience to ABBA were punished and arrived on this port of this city and many more down south being born and raised in this city and still live in this city this I know will remain true my facts and truth come from biblical learning and studying all of the comments are crucial because not in a bad way we all have a bit of the truth especially the natives the original people of this city and this land and as someone stated Indians / Indigo and the original people =same people
Enjoyed your video
Facts! Psalms 83:2 For, lo, thine enemies make a tumult: and they that hate thee have lifted up the head.
Psalms 83:3 They have taken crafty counsel against thy people, and consulted against thy hidden ones.
Psalms 83:4 They have said, Come, and let us cut them off from being a nation; that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance.
Psalms 83:5 For they have consulted together with one consent: they are confederate against thee:
Being souf Carolina I always say we got some kinda roots ta Louisiana we literally talk da same but is just GEECHI GULLA instead of CREOLE we say “ova dey” “outchea” we put all our words togetha folks from Charlston SC or Georgetown SC sound exactly like y’all I’m from a more country part of SC but it’s all the same dialect every time I hear the band with this kinda music I automatically start dancing….not sure if I’m doin it right but it feels right sadly souf Carolina is the ORIGINAL slave state so we have no history we aren’t connected to our ancestors and the old folks with the knowledge of how we came and who we really are is lost…I really hate it boe fr can’t wait to experience this it feels like a home I been ta PEACE AND LOVE ✌🏽
South Carolina ain’t nothin’ like New Orleans. Don’t even try it. We are not the same.
@@michaelvaughn3703
Have you to Charleston?
Well it's definitely NOT "just" like New Orleans but when you're there you'll notice some vague similarities. It's definitely NOT as lively musically or culturally as the N.O
@@herewegoagin4667 Yea, I’ve been. It’s a dump.
@@michaelvaughn3703
Nah man Charleston nice. It's like a quiet, clean French Quarter and Garden District in one.
Brah, Stop lying to yourself! Because North/South Carolinas ain't nothing like Black New Orléans or the rest of Black Louisiana. You Gullah-Geechee clowns are p@r@sites always trying to latch y'allselves onto us Black-American LaLwizyàna Kréolités here in La'Nouvéllé-Orléans (New Orléans) and LaLwizyàna (Louisiana). Plus, We don't sound nothing alike!!! We Black New Orléanians and Black LaLwizyànans are one of a kind of people...Ya'heardme!!!👍🏾
Amaru ka
is this really how second line started?? are they sure it didnt start from like so called native americans. if you think about it the whole second line dance is more similar to indian dances than agrican dances by the way they move thier legs. second line dancing is almost like a skip jump move kinda. and its a lot of chanting and the main instrument is a tambourine. and thats what indians used. you dont need a trumpet to second line. and people still second line with indian costumes. ijs
OG GATTI same people
From what I've seen, most styles of dance are rooted in what is now called Africa. Have not seen all forms of dance, but it would not surprise me if ALL, in some manner, originated in Africa or are influenced by the many cultures in... Africa.
From my own in depth studies travelling around the world I have learned that many cultures seem to share a tremendous amount of similarities.
You need to visit West Africa! Start in Ghana! Africans were here first!
Don't get stressed by "others" always trying to "define" and explain Black people's culture and traditions, i go through this ALL THE TIME with this SAME THING here on youtube with WHITE PEOPLE putting THEIR twist on our culture and they NEVER grew up with this tradition 'historically' but all of a sudden, they're AUTHORITIES on OUR culture...... go figure!
I hate it when I watch I video such as this one and the guy who's telling the story calls the people Africans.. it's a damn shame that we just are unaware of who we are we are not from the continent of Africa.. an it bothers me that with all this technology and with all these documents the so called black people still don't know and if you tell them they think you're crazy.. my ignorant black folks I love you but damn.. why won't you just ask and actual African if we are the same people and see what they say
Don patchey31 we were captured from currently named Africa
we are not Hebrew cut that shit out, we are descendants from the African continent, we are apart of the African Diaspora
ruclips.net/video/seHqvrd8ETw/видео.html. Nigeria funerals
Bro there's way to much evidence that links us to the many cultures of West Africa. That Hebrew Isrealite stuff is ridiculous
ruclips.net/video/cjiXPYvxHos/видео.htmlm6s Vietnam funeral