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I was four years old when I first heard this at a funeral. I was raised singing these songs in our families kitchen. Hearing this version still gives me goosebumps and a swell of happiness.
The Irish died in millions at the hands of the British Empire but we are still here despite oppression ....wherever we were born or live we are still Irish and proud.Great video lads love from the Irish
I just stumbled across this in listening to Mo Ghile Mear and as an Irish-Scot it means a lot to see these songs getting more notice. Cause it leads to a greater knowledge of Irish and Scottish history, most people like to skip over the 800 years of colonisation that Ireland went under from the English. The song is a caoineadh (lament) written after the defeat of Bonnie Prince Charlie at Culloden. It’s written from the point of a widow and the Gallant hero, or Darling in another version is her dead husband. (Bear in mind the song is very old and there’s a fair few versions) The Jacobite rebellions where a moment of hope for the Gaelic peoples of Scotland and Ireland and after Culloden things got even worse for us. For example singing a song like this was considered high treason. We’ll yet be free and we’ll yet have a United Ireland.
I love you Bros! The loveliest thing on this earth is to share the beauty of music with people who love it as you do. The light in your eyes!! Thank you for sharing this with us!
I am so happy that this has touched your soul. I hardly know where to begin. Here in Cork I lead this song often. It is about Ireland (the widow), in which she has appeared in the form of a beautiful but tragic woman, to the poet in an ‘ashling’ or ‘dream vision’ … it is about ‘Bonnie Prince Charlie, the legal heir of the throne. To this day we sing this in the places where Irish is still spoken.
Curfá ’Sé mo laoch mo ghille mear ’Sé mo Shaesar, ghille mear, Ní fhuaras féin aon tsuan ná séan, Ó chuaigh i gcéin mo ghille mear. x2 Bímse buan ar buairt gach ló, Ag caoi go crua is ag tuar na ndeor Mar scaoileadh uaim an buachaill beo Is ná ríomhtar tuairisc uaidh, mo bhrón. Curfá Ní haoibhinn cuach ba suairc ar neoin, Táid fíorchoin uaisle ar uatha spóirt, Táid saoithe 's suadha i mbuairt 's i mbrón Ó scaoileadh uainn an buachaill beo Curfá Is cosúil é le hAonghus Óg, Le Lughaidh Mac Chéin na mbéimeann mór, Le Cú Raoi, ardmhac Dáire an óir, Taoiseach Éireann tréan ar tóir. Curfá Le Conall Cearnach bhearnadh poirt, Le Fearghas fiúntach fionn Mac Róigh Le Conchubhar cáidhmhac Náis na nós, Taoiseach aoibhinn Chraoibhe an cheoil. Curfá x2 Ó chuaigh i gcéin mo Ghile Mear.
That's not from Dublin. The song "mo Ghile mear" is in irish ( meaning " my gallant hero" )and is usually sung in the south west of Ireland, in Kerry and Cork.
Honest question, honest aswer: As an estonian, it upsets me over the world that it's hard for someone to understand that ones own sisters and mothers are fighter pilots home goddesses loving guys over the world and then runoff stinking guys want to hurt them, their own sisters and mothers. What uglier can one do? It's not ok gentlmen
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I was four years old when I first heard this at a funeral. I was raised singing these songs in our families kitchen. Hearing this version still gives me goosebumps and a swell of happiness.
The Irish died in millions at the hands of the British Empire but we are still here despite oppression ....wherever we were born or live we are still Irish and proud.Great video lads love from the Irish
I just stumbled across this in listening to Mo Ghile Mear and as an Irish-Scot it means a lot to see these songs getting more notice. Cause it leads to a greater knowledge of Irish and Scottish history,
most people like to skip over the 800 years of colonisation that Ireland went under from the English.
The song is a caoineadh (lament) written after the defeat of Bonnie Prince Charlie at Culloden. It’s written from the point of a widow and the Gallant hero, or Darling in another version is her dead husband. (Bear in mind the song is very old and there’s a fair few versions)
The Jacobite rebellions where a moment of hope for the Gaelic peoples of Scotland and Ireland and after Culloden things got even worse for us. For example singing a song like this was considered high treason.
We’ll yet be free and we’ll yet have a United Ireland.
Coming from a brit I agree completely and I wish for this also ❤❤
I think Boris is after a united Ireland too 😂
I love you Bros! The loveliest thing on this earth is to share the beauty of music with people who love it as you do. The light in your eyes!! Thank you for sharing this with us!
thank you
This is a song of sorrow following the failure of the Jacobite Rebellion. Bonnie Prince Charles is the gallant hero referred to, who fled to France.
I am so happy that this has touched your soul. I hardly know where to begin. Here in Cork I lead this song often. It is about Ireland (the widow), in which she has appeared in the form of a beautiful but tragic woman, to the poet in an ‘ashling’ or ‘dream vision’ … it is about ‘Bonnie Prince Charlie, the legal heir of the throne. To this day we sing this in the places where Irish is still spoken.
Te poet speaks to her in the words of the song,
it refers to the battle of culloden, which also involves the Scots
Music has no boundaries.
Proud to be Irish :)
my great grandpa on my dad's side was Irish, as was my grandpa on my dad's side. i'm honored and proud to have irish ancestry and blood
Y'all should check out Mo Ghille Mear as I discovered it. The Chieftains, featuring your own Gordon Sumner, a.k.a. Sting.
I love that version. This version is also fantastic.
Fantastic!! I loved this, and your reaction..
Hey guys🥰 its pronounced "muh yeela mar" so happy you enjoyed it xx
Oh you guys are from the 37th county Liverpool no wonder you were drawn to it.
Pretty sure there are 32 counties pal
My gallant hero . From an ranger later black 47 . Watch that a scouse lad becomes a hero . A dub playing a scouse really 🇮🇪
Mark waters is the name of the lead singer
Curfá
’Sé mo laoch mo ghille mear
’Sé mo Shaesar, ghille mear,
Ní fhuaras féin aon tsuan ná séan,
Ó chuaigh i gcéin mo ghille mear.
x2
Bímse buan ar buairt gach ló,
Ag caoi go crua is ag tuar na ndeor
Mar scaoileadh uaim an buachaill beo
Is ná ríomhtar tuairisc uaidh, mo bhrón.
Curfá
Ní haoibhinn cuach ba suairc ar neoin,
Táid fíorchoin uaisle ar uatha spóirt,
Táid saoithe 's suadha i mbuairt 's i mbrón
Ó scaoileadh uainn an buachaill beo
Curfá
Is cosúil é le hAonghus Óg,
Le Lughaidh Mac Chéin na mbéimeann mór,
Le Cú Raoi, ardmhac Dáire an óir,
Taoiseach Éireann tréan ar tóir.
Curfá
Le Conall Cearnach bhearnadh poirt,
Le Fearghas fiúntach fionn Mac Róigh
Le Conchubhar cáidhmhac Náis na nós,
Taoiseach aoibhinn Chraoibhe an cheoil.
Curfá x2
Ó chuaigh i gcéin mo Ghile Mear.
thank you, go raibh maith agat
Sea Gaeilge ár dteanga bhunaidh
If you want to react to some good irish music, react to seo linn
That's not from Dublin. The song "mo Ghile mear" is in irish ( meaning " my gallant hero" )and is usually sung in the south west of Ireland, in Kerry and Cork.
Yeah but the people singing it are the UCD choir
The legends mentioned like Fionn mac Rionn are from Ulaid though
Honest question, honest aswer: As an estonian, it upsets me over the world that it's hard for someone to understand that ones own sisters and mothers are fighter pilots home goddesses loving guys over the world and then runoff stinking guys want to hurt them, their own sisters and mothers. What uglier can one do? It's not ok gentlmen
Wut?
.. Béarla fir imoibriú HA