♬ ‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒♬ A big thank you to everyone who voluntarily financially supports my work and thus makes it possible: ⚫Paypal: www.paypal.com/paypalme/KarlSternau?locale.x=de_DE ⚫Bitcoin: bc1qcskutszqxc9xd7rf6w9t57n09jfce02j2sshvv ⚫Patreon: www.patreon.com/karlsternau ♬‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒♬
@@knightspearhead5718 They're the ones who start it, but normal people are what keep it going. If everyone refused to fight, then warmongering governments wouldn't have any power.
1:36 sorry, but everytime my lastname apears in the lyrics it gives me a bit of goosebump, even if it really means only "no one" hahaha Great song! Danke Karl for remembering this things
@@d.g.b.nugget8446 yeah, it's a total mistery xD I have two hypotesis. One is that my ancestor were sort of a very poor guy. And the other is that when it was registred in Germany or Argentina (i'm volga german, we came here in the 1870') ocurred an missunderstanding Anyways it sounds cool for me and almost keiner knows german in argentina
@@d.g.b.nugget8446 Yeah that might happen hahaha And for my no, I only know some words. For my grandparents were his mother tongue but my parents only understanded it and for me I only know some words for they. Also their german is veery different dialect from standart german, known as Wolgadeutsche
@@mjk97dubstep I agree, it is improbable that somebody was named "nobody". That is not how names used to work. Maybe it was "Kleiner" originally. Anyway with that name you can pull off the cyclope trick from the Odyssee if you come to a German speaking region.
Karl: * uploads anti-war song, telling a story about how war needlessly destroys lifes, families, and friendships, that is still relevant to this day * UA-cam: "Noooo, this is nazi propaganda! We'll ban you!!" beautiful, sad, song!
@@Dudefrom8Carson This is the WW1 version. You can tell because of the lyric about "den grauen Kaiserrock" while the 1870 version it's "den blauen Königsrock".
This song comes from the 1870s, from the French-German war time. And its an Anti-War song. And it was made by the german Arbeiterbewegung (workers movement) which was the base of communism and all other ideoligies people call "leftist". it was made after the battle of sedan, where said Arbeiterbewegung saw their demands fullfilled to stop the war.
God, this sounds like something our hippies would’ve sung during the Vietnam War. Every war is different, but war, war never changes...ugly, inhuman, and always brutal.
look like a napoleonic french song "te souviens tu ?" (did you remember ?) about the French Empire and "Grand Army" war's (Italie, Egypte, Russia ...), very famous during the Bourbon's restoration period (1815-1830)
Yes but this version is from ww1, however yes the original text says german french hungarian danish or from the netherlands, and flanders is replaced by battlefield
The music is inspired from the post-Napoleonic song "Te soviens tu?", composed in 1817, about veteran soldiers form Napoleon's campaigns remenicing about their military life.@@eggisfun4217
We should heed the call of these conscripts of old and become soldiers of freedom. Any leader who wages wars is a tyrant and must be shown that the people are stronger than them.
Stara melodia francuska, wykorzystana przez niemieckiego kompozytora w 1832 roku w pieśni na cześć powstańców listopadowych (1830-31). Popularna w XIX wieku w Niemczech i innych krajach Europy. ua-cam.com/video/_yVl9EDCE1g/v-deo.html
It's a nice sentiment, and makes sense in the context of the retardation that was the justification for WW1, but unfortunately there are sometimes situations where war is necessary for defense.
*The song:* Talks about wearing the grey Kaiser's uniform and going off to fight in Flanders *Some absolute history buffs in the comments:* "ackchewally, this is from the 1870's, not WW1"
The last part sounded revolutionary, but I understand the humor involved, seeing as that was impossible. And yes, we're all brothers here, should've known that before we crippled the west.
♬ ‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒♬
A big thank you to everyone who voluntarily financially supports my work and thus makes it possible:
⚫Paypal: www.paypal.com/paypalme/KarlSternau?locale.x=de_DE
⚫Bitcoin: bc1qcskutszqxc9xd7rf6w9t57n09jfce02j2sshvv
⚫Patreon: www.patreon.com/karlsternau
♬‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒♬
Sorry ♡♡
Bro♡♡
I started getting ads in German because of your channel
So I'm not the only one
lol me too
Same²
Hallo und herzliche Grüße in die Welt.
hallo wiegehts mein feunden ich bin ein pakistani ich spreche deusch
"O tell me why you need soldiers
When every nation loves peace and quiet"
Its sad how often this has too be repeated.
It's not quite that simple, even if it were true that every nation loves peace and quiet.
@@rabbiezekielgoldberg2497 it is that simple.
Nobody wants war except the governments.
@@knightspearhead5718 They're the ones who start it, but normal people are what keep it going. If everyone refused to fight, then warmongering governments wouldn't have any power.
@@LP-mo3sh Occasionally.
As uncle A. once said, we build military because not every nation loves peace.
God Just imagine how bitter, the crippled soldiers must have felt when their countries threw them under the rug.
"you are going to run directly into the machine gun fire"
-Person who created trench warfare
Sehr schön geworden, finde ich.
It always has been.
1:36 sorry, but everytime my lastname apears in the lyrics it gives me a bit of goosebump, even if it really means only "no one" hahaha
Great song! Danke Karl for remembering this things
Imagine how that last name was created
Ouch
@@d.g.b.nugget8446 yeah, it's a total mistery xD
I have two hypotesis. One is that my ancestor were sort of a very poor guy. And the other is that when it was registred in Germany or Argentina (i'm volga german, we came here in the 1870') ocurred an missunderstanding
Anyways it sounds cool for me and almost keiner knows german in argentina
@@mjk97dubstep I‘m sure there’s quite a few people that know german in Argentina but they probably don’t want you to know 😂
Do you know german?
@@d.g.b.nugget8446 Yeah that might happen hahaha
And for my no, I only know some words. For my grandparents were his mother tongue but my parents only understanded it and for me I only know some words for they.
Also their german is veery different dialect from standart german, known as Wolgadeutsche
@@mjk97dubstep I agree, it is improbable that somebody was named "nobody". That is not how names used to work. Maybe it was "Kleiner" originally. Anyway with that name you can pull off the cyclope trick from the Odyssee if you come to a German speaking region.
Karl: * uploads anti-war song, telling a story about how war needlessly destroys lifes, families, and friendships, that is still relevant to this day *
UA-cam: "Noooo, this is nazi propaganda! We'll ban you!!"
beautiful, sad, song!
Plus made during ww1
made before ww1 lole
@@dontcarebruh8385 made in the 1870s
@@Dudefrom8Carson This version is from WW1 tho
@@Dudefrom8Carson This is the WW1 version. You can tell because of the lyric about "den grauen Kaiserrock" while the 1870 version it's "den blauen Königsrock".
This song comes from the 1870s, from the French-German war time. And its an Anti-War song. And it was made by the german Arbeiterbewegung (workers movement) which was the base of communism and all other ideoligies people call "leftist". it was made after the battle of sedan, where said Arbeiterbewegung saw their demands fullfilled to stop the war.
Why would he sing about the grey Kaiserrock, if there was no Kaiser in 1870?
@@brunobrunani4975 I said 1870s, not 1870. Wilhelm I became Kaiser in 1871.
80s i see, looked it up. Thanks for sharing
@@brunobrunani4975 the 1870 original said "ich lieb ihn nicht, den blauen königsrock" btw
ua-cam.com/video/DMXgRM9gnEw/v-deo.html It comes from this.
I have never learnt German but I understand the meaning of the song. Thank you, Karl Sternau for this pleasure
God, this sounds like something our hippies would’ve sung during the Vietnam War. Every war is different, but war, war never changes...ugly, inhuman, and always brutal.
Yeah, it's pretty hard to produce history to the benefit of man when those means themselves force us into exploited relations just to survive
dying for nation is not good when they forced you to do it. A man has honor, but honor does not make his life
look like a napoleonic french song "te souviens tu ?" (did you remember ?) about the French Empire and "Grand Army" war's (Italie, Egypte, Russia ...), very famous during the Bourbon's restoration period (1815-1830)
Thank you, Karl dear. That is very touching. 🇺🇲❤🇩🇪
si
Das ist echt ein tolles Lied und schön gesungen noch dazu!
The song is actually from the 1870's, amazing nontheless.
Yes but this version is from ww1, however yes the original text says german french hungarian danish or from the netherlands, and flanders is replaced by battlefield
This version is from ww1, probably 1917 or 1918
My relative, Friedl Stoff also lost leg as wehrmacht soldier when he fought against american troops in today's Austria
It sounds like musically at "Te souviens-tu" French Napoleonic chant
I know this Word gets used a lot in an ironic sense and also stems from weird online people, but this song warrants it absolutely: B A S E D
We need a remake of this song, one more in tune with the original French version. It's beautiful. Please!
proof that its french?
@@eggisfun4217 search up te souviens tu
The music is inspired from the post-Napoleonic song "Te soviens tu?", composed in 1817, about veteran soldiers form Napoleon's campaigns remenicing about their military life.@@eggisfun4217
Wünderschön und traurig gleichzeitig
Hallo
Kannst du vieleicht mal eine Neuauflage des Liedes ob wir rote gelbe Kragen machen ? Danke schon mal im voraus lg
This song was actually written in 1870, not in late ww1
Though i see it's lyrics have been altered to fit the era
Great song
Liebe es! Aus Amerika🇺🇸🇩🇪
Hallo, ich bin auch Amerikaner
@@goddessoflesbians1153 hallo deutscher
We should heed the call of these conscripts of old and become soldiers of freedom. Any leader who wages wars is a tyrant and must be shown that the people are stronger than them.
Good song Brings a smile to my face Every I listen to it.
Egal welcher Soldat auf welcher seite Kämpfte alle hatten den Krieg seit 1915 satt
Interesting german version of "Te souviens tu".
Defeat, sadness, and lost hopes....
It was written in the 1870s not ww1
This is the WW1 version. You can tell because it talks about the grey Kaiser's uniform, while the 1870 version talks about a blue King's uniform.
Warum nehmt ihr nicht die Original-Version von Zupfgeigenhansel - ist um klassen besser!
Ich habe keine Rechte auf das Original.
I love it.
It's sounds like polish song "Tysiąc walecznych"
Stara melodia francuska, wykorzystana przez niemieckiego kompozytora w 1832 roku w pieśni na cześć powstańców listopadowych (1830-31). Popularna w XIX wieku w Niemczech i innych krajach Europy. ua-cam.com/video/_yVl9EDCE1g/v-deo.html
Beautiful
It wasn't late ww1 the song actually written in 1870 by anonymous solider
Grey emperors uniform* flanders* this is a ww1 version, im aware it was originally written in the 1870s but this is different
Ww1 version
Wie kriegst du nur diese Akzente hin?! Es klingt wie immer sehr authentisch.
Es hat ein sehr kräftig Bedeutung! Es ist mein liebste Lied! ❤
(How is my German?)
Good, but Lieblingslied is one word and the ein is eine. Otherwise good.
- a very credible schoolboy doing German.
ich habe zeigefinger gebrochen und kann den abzug nicht betätigen, aber egal ich kämpfe mit buttermeser weiter.
So wahr
Cool version
amazing song but arent you supposed to not pronounce r if there isnt a vowel after
sehr gut gelungen. grüße aus Kolumbien.🇨🇴🇨🇴👍😀
nice👏👏
Sorry, aber die Version ist mal richtig lustlos gesungen ! Die von Zupfgeigenhansel ist viel besser!
Das stimmt.
Wow as a soldier myself I totally agree with the lyrics
Can we make this into the international for peace
Super Lied!👍
This isnt actually a late ww1 song but composed in the 1870s in Prussia
The text is different in this version
Remarque intensifies.
Nice song
Ich bin gerne Soldat ! Die Schule des Lebens ! Erfolg immer im Leben !
Sehr schönes Lied
If I'm right that means beautiful song
@@Aureus_ Yes you are right
It's a nice sentiment, and makes sense in the context of the retardation that was the justification for WW1, but unfortunately there are sometimes situations where war is necessary for defense.
Blood on the risers?
Gory, gory what a hell of a way to die
@@kommit-456 indeed
Very very noice song
😢 poor guy I hope feels appreciated by now.
In ingen is
Ob ungarn, Dänen, ob vom niederland
Ingen's one is the 1870 version, while this is the 1918 version.
Actually this song is from 1870s
This version was made in ww1
وينك
Sounds like the tune of "Lisa, Lisa"
Hello
رقم
🥺😭
zas is gut
*The song:* Talks about wearing the grey Kaiser's uniform and going off to fight in Flanders
*Some absolute history buffs in the comments:* "ackchewally, this is from the 1870's, not WW1"
Wlidi win raki tamnini 3lik😢
ich bin pakistani
Nahi youvi w hâti
zakinou
Benti twahchtk
سلام
Peace und rip euhre Treue armme mögd Frieden eurer sein salut
Hallo aus Russland!!
The last part sounded revolutionary, but I understand the humor involved, seeing as that was impossible. And yes, we're all brothers here, should've known that before we crippled the west.
Let the man take a rest, no more war.thw anglo Zionist want you all to keep fighting
Usa have this too
It was actually in the late 1870s🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓
This is the WW1 version
Relevant to this day🇺🇦