An Gréasaí Bróg - LYRICS + Translation - Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh
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- Опубліковано 24 тра 2018
- Cartoon Saloon/Sónta animation: • An Gréasaí Bróg
An Gréasaí Bróg ("The shoemaker"), also known as Beidh Aonach Amárach ("There's a fair tomorrow"), is a popular children's song from West Clare
Album: Anam an Amhráin (Cartoon Saloon/Sónta - TG4)
Performed by Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh - Фільми й анімація
Firstly: Wow! That voice! Muireann could sing the McDonald's jingle and I'd still pay $20 for the album. This is such a lovely version of the song. It's cute, sweet, and it captures a moment. Here's the mother who dearly loves her daughter, and now she's remembering what early adolescence was like with all its emotional turmoil, and she's empathizing, but she still has to be the Mom, and put her foot down, and say, "No, sweetie, you're not walking 5 miles alone to get lost in a crowd of strangers so you can pester the cobbler." Teir abhaile riu. This is just wonderful!
This song is in Irish, a Celtic language. There ar about six extant Celtic languages: Irish, Manx, and Scotch Gaelic (Goidelic); and Welsh, Cornish, and Breton (Brythonic). All of these languages ar in danger of dying out. However, Celtic languages wer once widely spoken, including in Continental Europe, and even in Turkey. E.g. Gaulish, Celtiberian, Lepontic, Noric, and Galatian (spoken in Turkey). I am planning an alternate history, CeltWorld, where the Celts prevail, and the Celtic languages remain widely spoken.
Interesting idea. I would read it. Aye, Boudicca repelled the Romans, and there were certainly large Gaulish and Iberian Celtic populations. A couple of different strategic decisions, and the Celts might have owned most of central Europe, maybe more. They were great sailors, they could have expanded into the orient, or reached the Americas before the Scandinavians. It's got possibilities. I look forward to seeing what you do with this idea. There's an odd sci-fi titled "1491" that you might look at.
Galician is also Celtic
i am too
This song is in Breton, not Irish. Both are Celtic languages but they aren’t the same.
I speak Irish fluently, this is Irish, not Breton@@nbenefiel
I remember someone singing this song some 7 years ago and the melody + some words have been stuck in my head ever since. Not knowing enough Gaeilge, I never managed to find it online. Thank you so much for sharing, my heart did a little dance when it recognised it!
My great grandmother use to sing this to me. Instantly recognized the melody.
Sorry to be so offtopic but does any of you know of a tool to log back into an Instagram account??
I somehow lost the account password. I would love any tricks you can offer me
Love that!
I knew all the words and was really confused. I must have learned this in Primary school and its been buried somewhere in the back of my brain! So nice to hear again 😊😊
Same
I learnt this as a child in the Gaelscoil but through the years it just got lost in my memories. This was such nostalgia stumbling onto this! Before the song even began, I read Beidh Aonach Amarach in the description and it brought these memories flooding back. Thank you!
Wow, nice rendition. This is the slowest and most relaxed I've heard this song, but it still fits.
Emily Whaley Wait, this is slow?!
Dolphin Song Dolphin Song Well, I was introduced to this song by the group Gaelic Storm, under the name "Beidh aonach amárach" and I suppose the pace is around the same, but this version is far more laid back, to me at least. Galeic storm's is more energetic. It's difficult to explain, just that this version sounds far more like a lullaby.
ua-cam.com/video/ZbJ9CbmxqGY/v-deo.html
Wait, this song gets FASTER? I could barely understand the child in THIS one! looks like I need to learn one hell of a lot more.
This version actually has faster tempo than Gaelic Storm's Beidh Aonach Amárach. What makes GS sound more punchy is the instruments they use :)
@@emilyb5307 Don't forget Altan's version of it!
This is about a girl who falls in love before she's a teenager! Why do I love it?
In essence, it's about how annoying kids are.
I was thinking about the same thing!
I think it’s more a childhood crush on the shoemaker
Its kinda supposed to be about anoying kids-
Is this the same girl that wanted to go to the pub when she was six?
I just remember that "In County Clare there is a hairy ass fair." ua-cam.com/video/zj4xpbOJCSY/v-deo.html
It's probably Mhareai who didn't want to go home
@@meridaskywalker7816 running off with a sailor ;)
Good on the mom for not letting her go, I mean, her nine year old wants to go to a fair because she’s in love with a shoemaker and is being dramatic saying she’ll die if she doesn’t date him.
Yeah I’m sure the shoemaker would be kind about it, but a little embarrassed about the little girl declaring she was in love with him ;)
Plot twist, its a gifted 10 year old boy
There's a German song with a similar melody but I can't remember the title rn. Interesting that there are many songs within Europe that share similar or even the same melodies.
Turns out it’s just this song but in German
Anyone know if Germany was populated by Celts in the recent past? (All of Europe used to speak Celtic languages which got pushed out by Rome.)
@@NiennaFan1 Well in my hometown Mainz they found a celtic settlement. So I would say there were Celts in Mainz. You can look it up. There were a few folks that settled in Mainz besides the romans and Celts.
@@NiennaFan1 The area of modern Germany was populated by Germanic tribes mainly, hence the name Germany. The Celts were oser to the meditteranean. France, Spain, Turkey and of course the British Isles. They were widespread but Germany specifically was dominated by Germanic tribes
Beautiful voice, so light and delicate, and what a delightful little caprice of a dancing song 💖🧚🏼♀️The artwork is adorable.
I know im late but in 2014 a film was released in Irish and English called song of the sea it has an art style like the background if you're interested
When I managed to sing the chorus properly for the first time I felt like a god lmao. Still can't sing much of the song apart form that :P
I love listening to music from my Celtic heritage.
I go to a irsh school and I sang this song for my show and we won
I remember leading this in school under like 1st class me and my cousin loved the song at the time
I really want to learn Gaelic so I can sing these songs as well as teach the language to my children so it doesn't die out. I just really stuggle with it so if anybody has any motivating words that would be appreciated.
Don't give up. I'm trying to learn it myself so I know exactly how your feeling but will be worth the effort 🍀🇮🇪
You've got this! :) Never stop learning. (A quick word of advice: This language is simply called "Irish" by most, or *Gaeilge*. "Gaelic" is actually the word they use for *Gàidhlig*-that is, Scottish Gaelic. ;))
Check out the podcast Bitesize Irish, it's not for teaching but just for motivation to those all over the world learning Irish. 🥰 I find it very encouraging and entertaining!
@@Nova7o9 Oh, yes, that is indeed a great channel!
@@adventureswithaurora It's called Irish, not Irish Gaelic.
I just found your channel and its really amazing. This is quite unusual sound for a traditional irish song, but the arangement is absolute magic. Cello, piano, everything. Pity irish is one of the few languages i can't sing at, because the spelling is so strange. My theory is, that old irish people worshipped a huge mixer and threw their written records into it. Then they used the spelling the mixer created.
Vojtěch Mikloš I just put the songs on repeat until I pick up the sounds. Sometimes you can find phonetic lyrics too.
There are fixed rules for pronunciation in Irish unlike English so if you just learn how letters and certain combinations are pronounced you can pronounce any word. www.smo.uhi.ac.uk/gaeilge/donncha/focal/features/irishsp.html
Old Irish was much stranger than modern Irish, they most definitely worshipped a huge mixer. They had at least two forms of every verb, sometimes wildly different, because of changes in the language done by stress patterns. Also the pronominal object was infixed after the first prefix, and if no prefix was present in the verb, then an empty prefix no- was used. But negating and interrogative particles were prefixes. So something like ‘I understand you’ would be something like ‘under-you-stand-I’ while ‘I don’t understand you’ would be ‘not-you-understand-I’ and ‘do I understand you?’ would be ‘do-you-understand-I?’.
Or, analogous in Czech, it’d be sth like: roz-tě-umím, ne-tě-rozumím, či-tě-rozumím?, etc.
This blog post is a great description of this madness, which claims that ‘describing the Old Irish verbal system as 'complex' is like referring to the Arctic as 'somewhat chilly'’: mvtabilitie.blogspot.com/2008/09/also-known-as-most-demanding.html
Orthography was the least problem of the Old Irish language. :P
@Vojtěch Mikloš
,
along with putting the song on repeat and listening over and over till I get the sounds, I often use the speed settings to slow the song down to a pace that I can hear each syllable & phoneme. I have done this for many songs over several years and have learned to sing several. I can look at the written Irish now & hear how many words and phrases sound. I am hooked on this on & a couple others to learn & sing for my granddaughter. keep at it & you will be surprised.
ps - another method that I have learned and used is to take the lyrics word by word, stopping & repeating each in the line till I can say the entire line (start by speaking it till you have it, then add the singing part). do each line in the verse till each can be said and sung individually, then put them together till the whole verse can be sung. in a seisiun, even if I only know one or two verses, I offer that. short but sweet & that motivates me to learn any others. often there are only 2 to 5 distinct verses and they repeat one or two.
BEAUTIFUL!!!
Keep up the good music!!
**thumbs up**
This is such a sweet little song!
Aaaaa I can’t get this out of my head
i used to listen to so much as a child wow
I could listen to this song on repeat for hours!
I lived n Dublin for most of the 70’s. I saw Alan Stivel at either the Olympia or the National Stadium, I forget. I fell hard for Rene Werner who played the fiddle. I still have a crush on him. I fell in love with Breton music that night.
So precious and charming💖
Lovely
Lovely song!❤️
I am an undergraduate student of Literature in Brazil and we're just readind the short story called 'Araby', from the book 'Dubliners', written by James Joyce, which tells the story of a young boy who goes to a fair called Araby to by a present for the girl he's in love with. I had never read Joyce before, found it just mesmerizing . Talking about it to my daughter, she showed me this song and I am in awe!... thank you so much for sharing this amazing work!
Beautiful
Omg childhood song right here lmao
Very nice.
This has the same beat as another irish song, I cannot remember the name of it sadly.
just judging by my irish family, i wonder if at one point, the first irishman pronounced all the letters, but then he discovered beer
The first Irish speakers didn't use the Latin alphabet, that was imposed after the medieval Anglo-Norman conquest. It doesn't map brilliantly onto how Irish is spoken, and you lose a fair amount of nuance. There are no letters in the Latin alphabet to convey the nuances of certain Celtic sounds, so early transliterators combined letters into rough approximations.
Lee Mack has a comedy video about Irish names, that they just pull Scrabble letters out of a bag and go “that’s your name, good luck” ;)
Haha.
But 😳 why does the beginning sound like the Wii start-up music
can you please do siul a ruin?
Why do I feel like this could be Mheiri when she was a kid
Oh, so I'm not the only one who thought about it!😂
I think her parents ended up wishing she was still in love with a shoemaker....
@@meridaskywalker7816 then she’d live closer to home ;)
WHAT LANGUAGE IS THIS?! I LOVE IT
probably Gaelic
It's Irish :)
Irish Gaelic.. :-)
Americans call it Gaelic, the Irish call it the Irish language, Gaeilge or just plain Irish. It's what the Irish spoke up until the 1700s as a first language when the English forced them to speak English and tried to eradicate Irish culture.
it's the southwestern dialect of Irish (Co. Kerry).
If anyone knows anything about getting started learning the Irish Celtic or Gaelic languages let me know, I’m interested in trying my hand at one of the two. Also if you are someone or know someone who speaks either language i’d love to pick your brain.
I speak irish if you had questions?
@@whistlingbanshee5038 Irish Gaelic right? How did you learn? And what are some good ways to get comfortable with the language?
@@fraangelico803 school. It's a mandetory subject through Primary and Secondary school so everyone learns it. It's taught terribly though, no one is fluent in it.
Duolingo is actually brilliant for irish if your just starting out. It will give you good key words and phrases that will get you comfortable with reading it. I used it and it felt like doing primary school grammer again 😊.
Then TG4 is the Irish tv station. If you search on youtube there's shows like Aifric and Ros na Rún which it can be helpful to watch to see conversations. ua-cam.com/video/JqYtG9BNhfM/v-deo.html
Seo Linn do pop songs in Irish too. They're not direct translations but it can help as you know broadly what the translations is 😊.
@@whistlingbanshee5038 Oh my god thank you, this was an extremely helpful response. I was using duolingo which was helpful, but I assumed it probably wouldn’t be the best way to get comfortable with the more involved areas of the language. Thank you for the recs, plus I’m always looking for music to help learn languages through, so I can’t wait to check that stuff out. Much appreciated! 🍀
@@fraangelico803What was the recommendation the person gave? I also want to learn this language.
I am curious, what is the singer’s 'voice type'? Soprano? Mezzo?
She is 10 or 11 in love with the shoemaker ? No you can not go to the fair! Lol!
👞>💰💰💰💰💰💰
A major 😂
Please do tha mo ghaol! I probably spelled that wrong...
>you cant go to the ball
>but mom i love balls!
Wait but at the beginning
Why is there wii sports start up music
listen for it. Can. Never. unhear.
LMAO I ALREADY FRECKIN TYPED THIS TWO MONTHS AGO? Lololol it's still there
What type of accent is this?
Clair Ryan I mean there are three types of Irish
@@NiennaFan1 I heard there are more.
R
Wait this girl is 10 and wanting to marry??
Marry them young
Probably just has a huge crush on the guy.
I mean it's not that weird. My friend had a huge crush on the dentist when she was like 9. The dentist was like 35
why can't her mother just say "NO"?
'Cause there wouldn't be much of a song
@@gracequach6769 Oh yeah that's true
She basically is, saying “don’t ask me that.” The kid is not being cooperative.
È
Beautiful
R