Moscow announcement here is non-standard and quite old. On some occasions the Metro invites actors, singers and other celebrities (known mostly to those who watch Russian TV) to record temporary announcements for holiday season or some or other anniversary of something or else. This is one of those cases. Actual announcements sound different. Also, in Moscow, when the train goes towards the city center, the announcements are male, and when towards the outskirts, female. That is done for convenience of blind people (who are not many but actually actively use the Metro) and also as an intuitive hint for everybody else. When that originally was implemented, back in Soviet times, it was like “center → work → boss calls” and “outskirts → home → wife calls”.
0:44 subtitle: suri chui sound: suri ni nerawarenai tame ni kichouhin no kanri ni ha zyubun gochui kudasai (To avoid being targeted by pickpockets, please take care with your valuables.)
Paris announcements in foreign languages will depend on lines. Lines 1 has Japanese; German is mostly on Line 5, Italian on Line 14 and 3, Spanish on Line 4 For pickpokets, it will also depend on the line. When announcements are made in stations, Japanese comes often. At least English is after French in every occurrence. For those who like non standard station calls, Tram T3a and b have those as "audio art display", each station call has a different jingle and couple of voices (two announcements, one in a different voice, sometimes children voice ). And it's not temporary, it's a feature since extension of T3a and creation of T3b in 2012. Lines 1 and 14 also have non standard announcements for Halloween (some trains even feature orange lighting and cobwebs. Announcements are centered on Witchcraft and Wizardly world similar to Harry Potter (don't forget your luggage becomes "Don't forget to take your wand and broomstick with you" On Line 14, Halloween is frequently the occasion to become a ghost train ride for children at a set time in off peak hours. A staff member serves as animator and the train is programmd with unschedule braking and stops to make it behave like it was controlled by ghosts !
Warsaw is not *that* off. Voice of Mr. Jasiński is still used on the one left "soviet train" and on the Alstom trains, but the side annoucements as well as ones on new trains are exclusively made by Mr Gudowski with luggage annoucement by Mr Knapik
For Madrid you could have chosen a station from line 8, as they have bilingual announcements. I'd recommend the announcement from Colombia into Nuevos ministerios, as it's probably the longest!
🇮🇪 LUAS: Tram destination: Tallaght. Next stop: Abbey Street. Alight for O’Connell Street shopping district *Ceann scríbe an tram: Tamhlacht. An chéad stad eile: Sráid na Mainistreach. Turling do cheanta siopadóireachta Shráid Uí Chonaill*
Yes, it's true, it's in all languages, one of them announces line 1 (Piraeus Kifisia) it's not in English, only in Greek, in the old days the Athens metro only said it in Greek
@@MichalakispublicTransportGames I do not know about you, but we have automatic translation of comments into Russian from almost all other languages. I translate: From what year did the author (that is, you) dig up this record? For more than ten years in the Moscow Metro, Yulia Romanova has been announcing the station in a female voice on all lines. And this record is very outdated and irrelevant.
What about Liverpool, United Kingdom (Merseyrail)? It only accepts English though. "This is the Merseyrail service to Liverpool Central. The next stop will be Kirkdale." for English. English is the only supported language for that metro.
Moscow announcement here is non-standard and quite old. On some occasions the Metro invites actors, singers and other celebrities (known mostly to those who watch Russian TV) to record temporary announcements for holiday season or some or other anniversary of something or else. This is one of those cases. Actual announcements sound different.
Also, in Moscow, when the train goes towards the city center, the announcements are male, and when towards the outskirts, female. That is done for convenience of blind people (who are not many but actually actively use the Metro) and also as an intuitive hint for everybody else. When that originally was implemented, back in Soviet times, it was like “center → work → boss calls” and “outskirts → home → wife calls”.
Ah, I understood here in Greece in 2004 with the Olympic games the English announcement came in and it's nice you can see it on my channel
Not in Minsk
Not in Kyiv
0:44
subtitle: suri chui
sound: suri ni nerawarenai tame ni kichouhin no kanri ni ha zyubun gochui kudasai
(To avoid being targeted by pickpockets, please take care with your valuables.)
Paris announcements in foreign languages will depend on lines. Lines 1 has Japanese; German is mostly on Line 5, Italian on Line 14 and 3, Spanish on Line 4
For pickpokets, it will also depend on the line. When announcements are made in stations, Japanese comes often.
At least English is after French in every occurrence.
For those who like non standard station calls, Tram T3a and b have those as "audio art display", each station call has a different jingle and couple of voices (two announcements, one in a different voice, sometimes children voice ). And it's not temporary, it's a feature since extension of T3a and creation of T3b in 2012.
Lines 1 and 14 also have non standard announcements for Halloween (some trains even feature orange lighting and cobwebs. Announcements are centered on Witchcraft and Wizardly world similar to Harry Potter (don't forget your luggage becomes "Don't forget to take your wand and broomstick with you"
On Line 14, Halloween is frequently the occasion to become a ghost train ride for children at a set time in off peak hours. A staff member serves as animator and the train is programmd with unschedule braking and stops to make it behave like it was controlled by ghosts !
Warsaw and Berlin announcements are way diffrent than that .
I made this video a long time ago
Correct, nowadays in Berlin, the new speaker Phillipa Jarke and a new jingle is used.
You can see it's old because Tegel is not in use anymore.
Warsaw is not *that* off. Voice of Mr. Jasiński is still used on the one left "soviet train" and on the Alstom trains, but the side annoucements as well as ones on new trains are exclusively made by Mr Gudowski with luggage annoucement by Mr Knapik
Glasgow subway should have a really hard to decipher announcement, but instead best I can tell it has none
So her. Glasgow has no train announcements??? What a shame 😞😥
Haha
For Madrid you could have chosen a station from line 8, as they have bilingual announcements. I'd recommend the announcement from Colombia into Nuevos ministerios, as it's probably the longest!
3:56 That chime is same as Alfa Pendular train from Lisbon. :P
Barcelona announcements ding is the same as são paulo line 5 lilac, amazing!
SCR fan found.
Bro 😎 is scr ❤
the berlin U-bahn announcements were changed 2 years ago
This video was made by an acquaintance of mine for years, I think it is 4-5 years ago
Kyiv metro has a different announcements since 2018
Japanese is my favourite European language 😅
London announcements are way too long!
Yes, you are right!!!
@@MichalakispublicTransportGamesThen there's Finland lol
Not quite long for me as a British man. I always hear it when I board Underground.
@@MichalakispublicTransportGames also the announcement keeps yapping until the train arrived
3:55 on the top right the logo looks like the MBTA logo
Toulouse !!!!!❤❤❤❤ 0:52
🇮🇪 LUAS:
Tram destination: Tallaght. Next stop: Abbey Street. Alight for O’Connell Street shopping district
*Ceann scríbe an tram: Tamhlacht. An chéad stad eile: Sráid na Mainistreach. Turling do cheanta siopadóireachta Shráid Uí Chonaill*
4:30 gong from line B and voice from line A 🤔
There may have been a problem with the sounds
6:09 they also have english speaker
I made the video a long time ago and forgot to post it
@@MichalakispublicTransportGamesThey had it since 2012 as much as I can remember. 7 months are not that long ago😅
4:11 kiwi
I didn't know Japanese and Chinese are European languages...
They just announce in those. AFAIK no other European systems announce in languages from other continents.
Given the fact there are so many Asian tourists in paris…
So what?
6:25 я из Москвы,и у нас не такой информатор
So many european metro only use their native language except Athens, which fully uses both Greek and English for all of their announcements ??
Yes, it's true, it's in all languages, one of them announces line 1 (Piraeus Kifisia) it's not in English, only in Greek, in the old days the Athens metro only said it in Greek
2:20 The Uk
2:47 Germany
6:30 Из какого года автор откопал эту запись? Уже больше десяти лет на всех линиях голос Юлии Романовой
Can you please speak in English because I don't understand Russian I don't know I only know Greek English and a little German
@@MichalakispublicTransportGames I do not know about you, but we have automatic translation of comments into Russian from almost all other languages. I translate: From what year did the author (that is, you) dig up this record? For more than ten years in the Moscow Metro, Yulia Romanova has been announcing the station in a female voice on all lines. And this record is very outdated and irrelevant.
Bucharest 🇹🇩❤️
Bruh where‘s Vienna?
You Forgot Valencia (Spain)
I will put it in another video simple this video. It was the fault of an acquaintance of mine
What about Liverpool, United Kingdom (Merseyrail)? It only accepts English though. "This is the Merseyrail service to Liverpool Central. The next stop will be Kirkdale." for English. English is the only supported language for that metro.
5:18 metrou București
Eu stau in București
Where is Vienna 😢
I'll do a part 2 anyway thanks for telling me
@@MichalakispublicTransportGames Awesome, excited for that
The polish voice in this video sadly is out of date
WHERE IS MILAN
I forgot to put, I will also do part 2
Hahaha
where is belgium
What!?!
???
Mi 🇪🇸 ❤❤
6:33 umm wth ,why dont u include old soviet dictore, he would sound more bettwr then that womans voice
Such as?
@MichalakispublicTransportGames such as Aleksey Rososhanski and Sergey Kulikovski they are both old soviet dictors
@@toilet_gaming784Excuse me, maybe the announcers?