Arvo Part - Fur Alina

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 дек 2024

Комментарии • 247

  • @CouldLiveOnYouTube
    @CouldLiveOnYouTube 7 лет назад +73

    We’re so lucky. He’s alive now. Such a great example of a very high level of existence. Musicians- composers- the most divine there is.

  • @JennaGwenna
    @JennaGwenna 13 лет назад +27

    "I'd say that i had a need to... concentrate on each sound, so that every blade of grass would be as important as a flower."
    some of the most profound words i have ever heard.

  • @trotskypropagator
    @trotskypropagator 12 лет назад +40

    the look in his eyes when he say he can´t understand himself is so moving and humble

    • @twillertorganprojects
      @twillertorganprojects 5 лет назад +1

      Yes it is. And what a fine attidude that the composer want to talk about his way of composing.

  • @goytabr
    @goytabr 16 лет назад +20

    The music is already so beautiful that it hurts, but having its creator himself guide us through the labyrinthine complexity that so few and simple tones are capable of creating, that verges on the sublime! What an experience! Also great to see the simplicity and humility of a great genius who doesn't behave like a star and is in fact as humbled and awed as we are by the emotions he just reveals us. Incredible video!

  • @twobirdstone
    @twobirdstone 13 лет назад +9

    He describes his music in such a beautiful way. Everything he said was so poetic.

  • @diegoesteta
    @diegoesteta 14 лет назад +6

    What I like the most about this video is the struggle Arvo Part has in translating between mediums. There is a sense of poetic aphasia, an honest struggle to put into words what has come to him loud and clear in music. I lack the profound sensibility to fully grasp the significance of the voices he invokes, but it is not hard to get a glimpse of the invocations, and it is not hard to see how he is unable to express it in words. He knows it...

  • @couldliveonyoutube1841
    @couldliveonyoutube1841 8 лет назад +127

    "A need to concentrate on each sound, so that every blade of grass would be as important as a flower" Arvo Pärt

    • @barakados
      @barakados 4 года назад +4

      @@tarukofusuki
      "To see a World in a Grain of Sand
      And a Heaven in a Wild Flower
      Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
      And Eternity in an hour"
      William Blake

    • @barakados
      @barakados 4 года назад +6

      ​@@tarukofusuki I don't keep quoting: I quoted (one time). And I don't understand what is offensive for you. We can think different, no problem. For me he is giving an image to the students could apprehend the essence of his composition, even he said "I don't understand myself". iIt's nothing technical, is poetic and even philosofic, that I won't try to explain you. Because seeing your agressivity, your eagerness to be right, your demand about evidence sand the mention of money, doesn't worth to explain to you, you don't have sensivity enough to understand what he says or what he plays.

    • @couldliveonyoutube1841
      @couldliveonyoutube1841 3 года назад +5

      @@tarukofusuki nothing cute about his analogy at all. Every pause, every note, has equal value just as a flower is as important and equally as mysterious as grass. I don’t think he’s attempting to impress anyone, to me he’s so egoless and humble - very beautiful he almost looks translucent to me. I would never say nobody cares about what he’s trying to say. What are you saying he is really talking about? What don’t we get? His simplicity is what makes his music so deep and beyond any logical human thought. Did you ever listen to Cantus with the Hilliard ensemble? It’s five minutes long, and it’s one of the most beautiful pieces I know. I watched him humbly giving the conductor instruction as well as rewriting parts of original scores and he somehow gets the musicians via the conductor to produce the precise sound he wanted when composing the piece. His sweetness on Tabula Rasa can bring tears to my eyes. I love Arvo Pärt 💐🌱🌱🎹🎻🎻🎻🔔

    • @couldliveonyoutube1841
      @couldliveonyoutube1841 3 года назад

      @@tarukofusuki can YOU?

    • @couldliveonyoutube1841
      @couldliveonyoutube1841 3 года назад +1

      @@tarukofusuki if you’re dying to make it logical. And technical. And kinda boring, frankly.

  • @user-zb9qk3ml9r
    @user-zb9qk3ml9r 5 месяцев назад +1

    The pauses throughout add depth and are hypnotising!

  • @juliannabg5
    @juliannabg5 15 лет назад +3

    I find this to be exquisite. The simplicity of this piece is profound and his sensitivity for the texture of sound is inspiring. His music is deeply stirring.

  • @SilentForestArts
    @SilentForestArts 14 лет назад +1

    Arvo part! In times of despair or utter confusion this music is my hope that remnants of world remain pure, and truely good. All i can say is thankyou

  • @closeyoureyesmusic
    @closeyoureyesmusic 4 года назад +1

    Wonderful to have this opportunity to listen him describing his mindset and his approach to composing music. Thing that I miss about the composers from the past

  • @TwilightFalls
    @TwilightFalls 12 лет назад +6

    I've never heard such depth in such simplicity

  • @DelendaEstCarthago1
    @DelendaEstCarthago1 16 лет назад +2

    Right. A piece of music does not need tobe "difficult" in order to be profound and beautiful. More people, especially musicians, need to understand this.

  • @Ibshits
    @Ibshits 14 лет назад +7

    Thank you so much for uploading this. Never seen him move and talk, yes he is one of those few who are living great art embodied.

  • @gabriellehto
    @gabriellehto 16 лет назад +1

    Arvo is so great, he is a genius! Für Aline is so simple and so deep! It's music from the soul! Tks a lot for share! Gabriel Lehto

  • @Jakyden
    @Jakyden 15 лет назад +5

    It really feels like if our soul is indeed eternal and if we could still listen to something after we die, this would be it.

  • @kutkuiu
    @kutkuiu 11 лет назад +50

    There is a disturbing mistake in translation in 2:08. The correct sentence is: "I would call it neutrality".

    • @matiasvikingr6254
      @matiasvikingr6254 5 лет назад

      Hello! could you write the sentence in Estonian "A need to concentrate on each sound, so that every blade of grass would be as important as a flower"... I would really appreciate it.

    • @johannessarapuu559
      @johannessarapuu559 4 года назад +1

      @@matiasvikingr6254 "Mul oli vajadus niisuguse [järele], ma nimetaksin seda neutraalsuseks, kus niimoodi kontsentreeruda iga heli peale, et igal rohuliblel oleks nagu lille staatus."
      This is the full phrase he said, starting with "I'd say that I had a need to..."
      It's a fairly incomplete sentence by him, not quite the best way to present the sentence, but that is how he said it.
      The part you requested may sound better this way:
      "Vajadus kontsentreeruda igale helile nii, et igal rohuliblel oleks nagu lille staatus."

    • @matiasvikingr6254
      @matiasvikingr6254 4 года назад

      @@johannessarapuu559 oh thank you very much!!, specially for the good explanation!. I find Pärt one of the, if not The most, enigmatic and interesting composers of recent times. Thanks again!

    • @johannessarapuu559
      @johannessarapuu559 4 года назад

      @@matiasvikingr6254 You are very welcome! I agree with you, Pärt is truly the pearl of our time. Best wishes to you!

  • @dancewomyn1
    @dancewomyn1 13 лет назад +1

    This is sublime!! To hear the artist describe so poetically his thought process for a work of art.. I'm humbled, and grateful to RUclips for moments like this...thanks for posting!

  • @bullsquid42
    @bullsquid42 12 лет назад +11

    Thank God for this man.

    • @barakados
      @barakados 4 года назад

      Thank this man to take us god

  • @Hami.Fallah1386
    @Hami.Fallah1386 2 месяца назад

    He is living in another planet where you can find different lovely sounds

  • @ulfgj
    @ulfgj 12 лет назад +5

    still a favourite vid i come back to now and then...

  • @pierrey-qmgrhmevurbgmes
    @pierrey-qmgrhmevurbgmes 12 лет назад +13

    I recommend you to listen the "Sanctus" from the Berliner Mass, from Mr Pärt. Probably the most amazing and moving piece i have heard in my entire life.

  • @spectralwaterfall
    @spectralwaterfall 16 лет назад +2

    OH man this is so beautiful. its so great how he descibes his music and notes. And you can really see with what great feelings he plays it.

  • @krystalos1
    @krystalos1 3 года назад +1

    It touches my soul. Deeply. At its core

  • @JoniLahdesmaki
    @JoniLahdesmaki 10 лет назад +31

    Pärt feels his melody is neutral, but searches for another word.. I think he himself noticed, how neutrality is relative. When it is neutral to him, it is because it doesn't differ from his own personality. For me the melody is much like Arvo Pärt himself in this video - it is carefull, restrained, excited, fearfull, introverted.. Most of all very, very human.
    Arvo Pärts Alina is Extremely beautiful music, Every note bears a meaning here - as he noticed, in this piece there is a need to concentrate on each and every note. For me it seems like a kind of perfectionism, take your mind off the piece, break the meditation, and the world will crumble.

    • @p.jacobs643
      @p.jacobs643 5 лет назад +3

      I think he was trying to say that the individual notes sound neutral, when played individually, but when played together, they form a shifting relationship that can no longer be regarded as neutral.

  • @Kawaiiization
    @Kawaiiization 8 лет назад +5

    I'd listen to him talk about his music all day long!

  • @irreversiblemess
    @irreversiblemess 11 лет назад +42

    "like two people whose paths seem to cross, and then they don't"

  • @JustSoStupid
    @JustSoStupid 14 лет назад

    we're so proud, that we have a composer like this. he has brought estonia to the world. and his pieces .... there aren't any words to his music, it's beautiful, although, it's too less to say to his music. it's powerful. when somebody plays it, you just stop for a second, your heart misses a beat and you just listen to this and you are so into it and ... it can't be described. in my head, some weird things happen. i'm telling you, this music just conquers you and you are into it.

  • @mkartmkart6335
    @mkartmkart6335 Месяц назад

    I LOVE this video !
    The screaming whisper though fog
    begs to be expressed
    in the listeners ear
    I believe it is there

  • @TheSolidGloryisJesus
    @TheSolidGloryisJesus 17 лет назад

    You said it! What I gift this man is. I love this guy. Love his remarks at the end about the composer's path, the 1st & 2nd notes, "the first step is everything - decisive" and "every time I feel I have to start from scratch". He is so brilliant, his heart is what's beautiful - so childlike. He is a man who most understands that music is also for edification.
    (The close-up-loving world-wide music industry scene / crowd really turns my stomach, to be frank...not being smarty, it does.)

  • @mariuscipolla
    @mariuscipolla 15 лет назад

    He is the greatest of the minimalists. In this lesson he explains everything. A wonderful genius.

  • @NathanLorenzana
    @NathanLorenzana 12 лет назад +10

    This is surely the highest end of RUclips.

  • @banjojamur
    @banjojamur 13 лет назад +2

    If an audience would listen to this music in a concert, they would hardly know when to applause

  • @guibox3
    @guibox3 14 лет назад

    What philosophy! There is so much depth, breadth and height to music to discover that most of us in the worlds are morons who are happy skimming the surface and stop at tantalizing only our 5 senses without knowing how to use them. Part taps into the genius of understanding that is there for us to discover but never do. Music is so much more than beat and rhythm. There is a philosophy, a will, a dynamic of life there that we don't take the time to understand. How profound Part is here!

  • @anysorrowyoulike
    @anysorrowyoulike 13 лет назад +1

    @blackynth Concept is key. Understanding why one makes the art one does is vital to being an artist. Putting paint on a canvas with absolutely no idea why you did it is pointless in most circumstances. Obviously, Part has a very strong conceptual idea concerning his work, as he should. He's a brilliant artist. I don't see this interview as much as a "master class on how to create art" but rather a helpful and inspiring insight into just one artist's practice.

  • @PersianTunedPiano
    @PersianTunedPiano 15 лет назад +1

    Very inspiring. Thank you so much for posting.

  • @WandaStan
    @WandaStan 16 лет назад

    Very original, interesting great music, indeed, Thanks for sharing, Jan

  • @yourforte
    @yourforte 16 лет назад +1

    A sign of a masterpiece is that every note has its place. Nothing superfluous. One of the great things about Pärt's music is that he gives such importance to the individual note. You can buy the sheet music for this and I think Universal Edition are generously putting some of Pärt's sheet music online for free download.

  • @jefv.6582
    @jefv.6582 12 лет назад +4

    such amazing richness in so little.

  • @yourforte
    @yourforte 16 лет назад +1

    This piece is undoubtedly a masterpiece. Just because it's not technically hard to play doesn't mean that (compositionally speaking) every note is not thought through with the utmost care. The deepest emotions seem to be expressed through this simple-sounding music.

  • @escuelailumina7101
    @escuelailumina7101 5 лет назад +1

    Un placer escuchar al genial Arvo Part profundizar en su bellìsima obra Fur Alina.

  • @danielacinelofee
    @danielacinelofee 10 лет назад

    This helps me find my way to sharing his work in a performance setting. Thank you for posting.

  • @methaverse
    @methaverse 13 лет назад

    Our world famous composer.
    Greetings from Estonia:)

  • @hellwheresthefire
    @hellwheresthefire 14 лет назад

    he seems like such a lovely man. and great music.

  • @mateusz471
    @mateusz471 7 лет назад

    Geniusz prostoty, ten utwór to moje DNA, ustawia mnie na właściwe tory

  • @backrack01
    @backrack01 14 лет назад

    i love how he explains his music. i cant play a lick but i get him. it feels nice.

  • @775987mb
    @775987mb 8 лет назад +7

    I beg your pardon, I'm translating this for an italian friend of mine.
    Domanda dal pubblico: "Diamo un'occhiata ad Alina...?"
    0:21 "Vi mostrerò l'inizio"
    0:23 "Non mi piace questo timbro, ne userò uno più risonante".
    0:42 "Ascoltate questa voce..."
    0:56 "...Piuttosto neutrale"
    1:08 "Anche, neutrale..."
    1:11 "Entrambe, insieme"
    1:26 "Un po' più serio, o complicato"
    1:33 "Come due persone, le cui parti sembrano attraversarsi le une alle altre, ma non si incontrano"
    2:00 "C'è una certa neutralità, qui... Direi che ho avuto una specie di bisogno di... No, non la chiamerei neutralità... Ho bisogno di concentrarmi su ciascun suono. In modo tale che ogni filo d'erba sia importante quanto un fiore. Questo è...
    3:00 Potrebbe essere come un malfunzionamento di una radiolina, sicché ogni singolo segnale a volte sembra testimoniare casualmente una vita intera. O il futuro, o il passato, o qualcosa fuori del tempo. E' come se io dicessi che un filo d'erba ha l'importanza di un fiore, e vedessi in questa esile frase musicale qualcosa di più rispetto ai soli tasti bianchi e neri.
    3:36 E poi...
    3:46 Tenete questa nota...
    3:59 Non è tanto la tonalità ad essere importante, qui, ma è la combinazione con questa triade (di note). Questo rende uno speciale sentimento di unione, e l'anima comincia a narrarla senza fine.
    Ascoltate...
    4: 48 E così, ancora... Io immagino il direttore d'orchestra fare il gesto del braccio in levare, quando tutto l'insieme ha inizio. Noi non possiamo ancora sentire nulla. E la gente nella sala da concerto non sa cosa stia per accadere. Poi il direttore traccia il tempo in levare... Il levare, quello in cui alza la mano... Ecco, quell'istante contiene la formula dell'intero lavoro: il suo carattere, la dinamica, il tempo... E un mucchio di altre cose. Il direttore e i musicisti lo sanno per via della pratica svolta assieme. Io immagino il compositore nella stessa posizione, prima che cominci a scrivere. Lui deve avere la consapevolezza o una percezione di quello che sta per accadere quando la mano va giù. Qual è la prima nota...? E qual è la seconda...? Il primo passo è tutto, è decisivo...!
    Questa è una storia complicata e io non mi capisco granché da solo... Però ho un'idea di cosa voglio dire. Già, io sono sempre alla ricerca di questo: qualche volta mi viene facilmente, ma qualche volta non mi viene per niente. Ogni volta sento che devo cominciare da una lacerazione.

    • @marsabat
      @marsabat 7 лет назад

      775987mb
      Ciao. Mi permetto di fare una micro-correzione alla tua traduzione. Spero risulti utile al tuo amico e ad altri italiani che si imbattano in questa piccola meraviglia.
      Nella parte finale del suo discorso dice più precisamente: "quasi non capisco me stesso."
      E, in chiusura, quello "start from scratch" è un modo di dire che significa "ripartire da zero".
      Molto bella l'immagine della 'lacerazione' tuttavia. Chissà che Pärt non avesse davvero quella in mente... :)

    • @SirXander
      @SirXander 6 лет назад

      start from scratch = ricominciare da capo (non da una lacerazione)

  • @TEAcreativesUTube
    @TEAcreativesUTube 14 лет назад +1

    bless him...a true master.

  • @paolorosazzap.9471
    @paolorosazzap.9471 3 года назад +1

    Auguri e Lunga vita al Maestro che oggi compie 86 anni.

  • @RealEros1
    @RealEros1 14 лет назад

    What a fun way to think about music.

  • @MichaelFlynn0
    @MichaelFlynn0 15 лет назад

    absolutely beautiful. Thankyou Arvo

  • @francescosiro
    @francescosiro 16 лет назад

    i'm happy to see your faces, your eyes when you finish this ....
    '

  • @gaelleman
    @gaelleman 13 лет назад

    I love his voice

  • @psycofloyd
    @psycofloyd 11 лет назад +13

    I sleep to this every night

  • @karlletourneau
    @karlletourneau 17 лет назад

    Arvo est un homme très intérieur
    plongé dans lui-même, comme en témoigne ce master-class

  • @lukasz
    @lukasz 16 лет назад

    I have no words to describe this...

  • @ad2181
    @ad2181 15 лет назад

    Simple and beautiful.

  • @jimfarey
    @jimfarey 14 лет назад

    Love the line about the 2 paths crossing, but then not.

  • @ridecruz88
    @ridecruz88 14 лет назад +3

    "Beauty will save the world" - Dostoevsky

  • @calmamatheuzinho
    @calmamatheuzinho 13 лет назад +8

    "A blade of gras has the status of a flower."

  • @rafelgarritinet191
    @rafelgarritinet191 2 года назад

    Gracias de corazón después el silencio.

  • @rafadv2
    @rafadv2 6 лет назад +1

    “Like two people whose paths seem to cross...and then they don’t”

  • @hymnofashes
    @hymnofashes 15 лет назад

    @donniecatalano For those of us who think he is creating a numinous world, rather than describing it, his music is a source of great fascination.
    You don't have to be a craven fanboy, or approve of everything he does and believes to appreciate its beauty.

  • @JustSoStupid
    @JustSoStupid 13 лет назад

    i don't know why, but i love the way he speaks...

  • @MichaelFlynn0
    @MichaelFlynn0 2 года назад

    and thankyou Arvo again.

  • @declice
    @declice 13 лет назад

    i'm proud to live in the same country as this lehend!

  • @MarcoCoiatelli
    @MarcoCoiatelli 15 лет назад

    Wonderful !!!

  • @twillertorganprojects
    @twillertorganprojects 5 лет назад +1

    Great the composer himself, not on a nice intrument but that does not matter. His style is brilliant. And what a fine attidude that the composer is willing to talk about his way of composing.

  • @m1ke1981
    @m1ke1981 7 лет назад +7

    The women sitting next to him is his wife.

  • @papakilatube
    @papakilatube 14 лет назад +1

    "The soul yearns to sing it endlessly...."

  • @CrippledPotato
    @CrippledPotato 14 лет назад

    I saw this on tv last night :D

  • @LesterBrunt
    @LesterBrunt 5 лет назад +1

    To me it sounds like a lonely flower standing in a field blowing in the wind and the rain.

  • @barakados
    @barakados 4 года назад

    What a humble genious. "I don't quite understand myself"

  • @ErikLolindir
    @ErikLolindir 16 лет назад

    Arvo in my OPINION is ONE OF the more brilliant composers of our time. He has HIS approach as other fine contemporary composers have THEIRS. My inclination to his work does not mean that other composers are less qualitatively. There are different approaches to music as there are different approaches to fine art. I can not judge Arvo to be better or worse than Hovhanness, or Copeland. etc. They each make a contribution to the literature.

  • @fescolfaro
    @fescolfaro 14 лет назад

    @Hyardacil Up until that point, it was not possible to play in more than one key without retuning the instrument, which means that composers were limited to the confines of major/minor/modal systems with strict centers plus a few closest neighboring exceptions. Most quality pop music today spins around the tonal system, for example.
    Bach is the turning point between Renaissance and modern music (neue-musik and Arvo included, for opening up possibilities outside a "pure" tonal system).

  • @pjsmoulder
    @pjsmoulder 16 лет назад

    thumbs up just for writing, '...so beautiful that it hurts...'

  • @Hybow4ever
    @Hybow4ever 15 лет назад

    His from Estonia, so am I. He's probably the most famous Estonian ever.. Estonia always seems to want fame, but it's such a small country ( 1,3 million people) that even estonian songs being played in US dance shows make it into Estonian songs. :)

  • @OUTBOUND184
    @OUTBOUND184 16 лет назад

    Very strange that Arvo did not demonstrate this on an acoustic instrument (ie piano) which to me would seem essential on a piece in which the acoustics of the sound enhance the beauty depth tenfold. Still, thanks for putting this up.

  • @railpressureflip
    @railpressureflip 13 лет назад

    @summertimegirl44 I believe so. From all the photos I've seen. Even though I've heard that at the recording he did not play the song, someone else did.

  • @miggtorr
    @miggtorr 14 лет назад

    It's as if performing it is more of a ritual than listening to it. It's as if in order to truly understand the meanings embedded in each note, one must fully immerse oneself in the music. And the only way to do that, and make it completely personal is to perform it. Yes... this piece seems quite introsepctive, as if written more for the performer than for the audience.

  • @Mysticalman68
    @Mysticalman68 13 лет назад +2

    @TheReasonableLogic Just an old Yamaha Clavinova.

  • @chickenmuffin
    @chickenmuffin 16 лет назад

    This is NOT bullshit.. Pärt is arguably the most brilliant composer of this era!

  • @rolandaniel
    @rolandaniel 13 лет назад

    GENIUS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Stake2
    @Stake2 16 лет назад

    You're right. Repetition is death.

  • @miggtorr
    @miggtorr 14 лет назад

    @BenNCM i see. i guess when you look at it from a spacial point of view it makes more sense. but still, as the composer is the architect, the performer is the builder. And he has more understanding of the structure than those who look upon the it, the audience.

  • @riobravo7040
    @riobravo7040 12 лет назад

    Why the keyboard is transposed a semitone up?
    Anybody noticed it?

  • @yourdearmirror
    @yourdearmirror 15 лет назад +2

    when I heard pärt talk, first I thought he just was a intelectual extravagant, but now I see that it was far away from truth.
    when he tell that every grass has the potentiality as a flower as every tune has it, and show example, then I surrender.
    It is just a simple man like me.

  • @LordOfLemon
    @LordOfLemon 13 лет назад

    @declice: It's legend, and I am proud to live in Estonia too :)

  • @TheOssumPawesome
    @TheOssumPawesome 11 лет назад +4

    To me this song has always seemed like a woman you love breaking up with you.
    You know what the words are going to be, but it's the space in between them, the hesitation that hurts the most.

  • @fescolfaro
    @fescolfaro 14 лет назад

    @Hyardacil well good, then since you got no grudge we can talk :)
    The thing with Bach that gets overlooked (probably for being too technical) is that his greatest contribution to the evolution of music and the tonal system weren't his fugues or unprecedented counterpoint language (that was later bashed as old fashioned, as you pointed out). It was his tuning temperament (proofed over "The well tempered Clavier").

  • @Bulk02
    @Bulk02 15 лет назад

    extraordinary

  • @MScJorgePoveda
    @MScJorgePoveda 16 лет назад

    Part explica aqui el drma existencial de todo creador.Saber lo que se va a crear,no tener claro como comenzar,o teniendolo,ignorar lo que sigue.Sin un borrador..siempre improvisando..asi es como se compone cualquier cosa:un escrito,una melodia,o se esculpe una pieza..La simplicidad que le imprime sublime belleza a su musica es la misma de la naturaleza.Como si se cumpliera con un algoritmo cosmico,el creador que se apart de esta regla de oro es artificial y no "llega".

  • @joaquindalessio
    @joaquindalessio 16 лет назад

    I discovered him recently, and I think only a thing... He's GOD!!!!!!

  • @clintwatson79
    @clintwatson79 15 лет назад

    pure genius

  • @lovestoshag
    @lovestoshag 11 лет назад +3

    Which piano brand is this that Arvo is playing?

  • @Izaskun2005
    @Izaskun2005 11 лет назад

    Priceless..

  • @jNS278
    @jNS278 15 лет назад

    is this song suitable for a concert???

  • @Goldengirl88
    @Goldengirl88 13 лет назад

    @markaliis001 Cool! i love his song bogoroditse devo! its the best.

  • @karuke01
    @karuke01 15 лет назад

    Mulle meeldib üha uuesti ja uuesti seda kuulata.

  • @zarathustra8789
    @zarathustra8789 6 лет назад +2

    Thanks for this beautiful upload. By the way, I suppose he's speaking in his native tongue, Estonian? If so, it's the first time I heard it and it sounds beautiful, kind of reminds me of Hungarian for some reason...

    • @momaroria15
      @momaroria15 5 лет назад

      Hungarian and Estonian are distantly related languages.