Simply beautiful. Thanks to all of you in the Georgia Tech Chamber Choir for this performance and honoring those of us of Lithuanian heritage. A beautiful song in the ancient form of the language and about the orphans of the many wars. You all brought tears to my eyes, tonight. Aciu, Labia Gerai!
Yes, I have no idea how this choir from Georgia, USA can pull off such a difficult language. I guess really only three performers really sang the language, the choir was background. But still pretty darn impressive! The comments I have seen all seem to be in agreement that their pronunciation was quite accurate and on point. Pretty proud of them. Good job, ladies and gentlemen! I believe the conductor is of LT descent.
LT is a hard language for us westerners, but glad to hear you think our boys and girls at GT did well. Much respect to you and your language and heritage from here in the US!
My Lithuanian born kids who reside abroad don’t have such excellent pronunciation in their own mother-tongue, as these soloists! It is incredible when foreigners interpret our lyrics better than we ever could - this made all of your ancestors proud, whichever land each and every one of you fare from..
@@Oberschutzee Shame that the chorists pronounce Lithuanian so well? If your comment relates to my children’s pronunciation, I will be happy to take your opinions under advisement if you pick up their monthly upbringing bills dating back to 1996 until 2026, 🤷♀
I absolutely love that song. It is amazing that so few words can express so much pain and suffering. This song perfectly explains the reason behind formation of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, many Lithuanians forgot about.
It is a beautiful rendition of what I understand is an ancient Lithuanian song about an orphan of the many wars. I am proud half LT descent here in the US and although I'm not proficient in the language I am proud that the Georgia Tech choir honored your (our) history. I come back to it from time to time for inspiration. I understand from the comments that the pronunciation from the singers was pretty good. Proud of my berniukai ir mergaites at Georgia Tech. Long live Lietuva!
First singer, I don't know if you are, or your relatives are from India-Pakistan, but I assume you know some sanskritas language not only English. Because your pronunciation is very good.
@@glowingyoongi That is correct. This is from the State of the Georgia in the US, a southern state, just north of Florida. Very proud of their fine tribute to our friends in LT. I have no idea how they became so proficient in such a difficult eastern European language, hard work, I guess. I believe the conductor is of Lithuanian descent. Labai gerai!
Hi, Raison. This is by the Chamber Choir, at "Georgia Tech" which is the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. The state of Georgia is in the southern part of the USA, just north of Florida. I fully understand your question, since one would not think that many Americans would be proficient in such a difficult language as is Lithuanian, (I'm trying to learn, but it may just be impossible) but I understand from the comments below, that they did pretty well! As an aside, I am half Lithuanian, my grandparents having emigrated to the US from Lithuania in 1918. I visited LT in August, Vilnius, Kaunas, Saiulia, and Panevezys to discover my roots, and it is an incredibly beautiful country, and I am proud to be half LT! Back to your question, I believe that the conductor is of Lithuanian descent, pretty cool that our boys and girls at GT could pull this tough one off! Long live Lietuva!
super !!!!!! aciu......
Amazing! Suprised lithuanian song to be performed by not natives with this strong impact! Great job!
Appreciate the beautiful arrangement of the Ancient LT folk song 👏👏 🌹🌹
Super! So happy to hear Lithuanian being sung by non native speakers...wonderful arrangement and performance, valio!
I am obsessed with this version, not only i discovered this song,but i was lucky enough to discover it by you guys. ❤ thank you
Thank you for honouring Lithuanian folk music. Beautiful performance💛💚❤
Simply beautiful. Thanks to all of you in the Georgia Tech Chamber Choir for this performance and honoring those of us of Lithuanian heritage. A beautiful song in the ancient form of the language and about the orphans of the many wars. You all brought tears to my eyes, tonight. Aciu, Labia Gerai!
Thank you so much for your kind words and love
@@axtas You have a special talent. Use it to always do well.
Lenkiu galvą!
This is amazingly beautiful and soulful. Thank you
This is such a spectacular performance of Lithuanian heritage ❤
That is the best version of that song : Lithuanian ancient folk song (Už ežero ugnys dega) by Liucė Liucija Vaicenavičiūtė
Ačiū. Jūs nuostabūs. Puikus atlikimas. ❤❤❤
Love LT😃
Nuostabu 🥰🥰🥰 dėkui jums ❤️🧡🩷💛
An amazing performance, brilliant pronunciation.
Yes, I have no idea how this choir from Georgia, USA can pull off such a difficult language. I guess really only three performers really sang the language, the choir was background. But still pretty darn impressive! The comments I have seen all seem to be in agreement that their pronunciation was quite accurate and on point. Pretty proud of them. Good job, ladies and gentlemen! I believe the conductor is of LT descent.
What an incredible performance.
This is so beautiful!! As a lithuanian I can say you did it very well, thank you!!🇱🇹❤️
LT is a hard language for us westerners, but glad to hear you think our boys and girls at GT did well. Much respect to you and your language and heritage from here in the US!
I have never heard a more beautiful.Great performance. Thank you very much!
Ačiū. Thank you.
My Lithuanian born kids who reside abroad don’t have such excellent pronunciation in their own mother-tongue, as these soloists! It is incredible when foreigners interpret our lyrics better than we ever could - this made all of your ancestors proud, whichever land each and every one of you fare from..
shame
@@Oberschutzee Shame that the chorists pronounce Lithuanian so well? If your comment relates to my children’s pronunciation, I will be happy to take your opinions under advisement if you pick up their monthly upbringing bills dating back to 1996 until 2026, 🤷♀
I absolutely love that song. It is amazing that so few words can express so much pain and suffering. This song perfectly explains the reason behind formation of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, many Lithuanians forgot about.
It is incredible! thank you! jėga!
I have goosebumps from your performance! It’s sad song about orphan! Hard life gives strong people! Respect from Lithuania for your performance.
Don’t think they are from Georgia the country aka Sakartvelo. Georgia tech is in Georgia state in the US
@@kristinaparaschos7169 you are right
Made me cry ❤
Beautiful voice too
Ačiū.
it was best,that i watched last month...big thnx US,it touched my heart..im native Lithuanian,great pronounce..
It is a beautiful rendition of what I understand is an ancient Lithuanian song about an orphan of the many wars. I am proud half LT descent here in the US and although I'm not proficient in the language I am proud that the Georgia Tech choir honored your (our) history. I come back to it from time to time for inspiration. I understand from the comments that the pronunciation from the singers was pretty good. Proud of my berniukai ir mergaites at Georgia Tech. Long live Lietuva!
Wow 😲
simply beautiful.
Very interesting and beautiful! Thank You!
This is amazing! Would you be kind enough to share sheet music maybe?? 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
Wow... Gražu.
🇱🇹❤️❤️❤️
this must be an incredibly hard gig to pull off.. and you've done it so well!
Love LT!
Thank you.
Amazing!
Beautifully done, guys!
Thank you so much for your translation!
Nuostabu ❤
labai ačiū !!
woooooow!!!
Thanks for such a beautiful interpretation of this song ❤
Very beautifully done, thank you!
One little detail: It's in fact "Sunku sodui be karvelio". "Karvelis" means "dove", not axe ;)
Thank you so much for the correction !!
So beautiful
Thank you :)
Gold 99,9 👍💪
🇱🇹💛🇬🇪
Nuostabu 💛💛💛
Wow! What an arrangement and performance. How did you find and decide to do this Lithuanian song??
i need a studio version ASAP!!!
ua-cam.com/video/1LCvWWpW7sQ/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/1LCvWWpW7sQ/v-deo.htmlsi=CyzR5OFQo_dNju6p
Bewitching
Thank you!
First singer, I don't know if you are, or your relatives are from India-Pakistan, but I assume you know some sanskritas language not only English. Because your pronunciation is very good.
❤❤❤❤
Kas čia?😮❤
Fantastika. Grožis. Gruzinai.
kokie Gruzinai?Kur?:)
@@siukslynas The state of Georgia in the USA.
Prie ko čia gruzinai? 😊
Čia Amerikos universiteto choras.
JAV turi valstiją pavadinimu Georgia
@@glowingyoongi That is correct. This is from the State of the Georgia in the US, a southern state, just north of Florida. Very proud of their fine tribute to our friends in LT. I have no idea how they became so proficient in such a difficult eastern European language, hard work, I guess. I believe the conductor is of Lithuanian descent. Labai gerai!
Yes, definitely, performed by Georgia Tech Choir, here in the US. Very proud of them! Tough language for us westerners - seems they pulled it off.....
❤
Where is this and what organization is this? It’s very interesting when foreigners have knowledge of Lithuanian.
Hi, Raison. This is by the Chamber Choir, at "Georgia Tech" which is the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. The state of Georgia is in the southern part of the USA, just north of Florida. I fully understand your question, since one would not think that many Americans would be proficient in such a difficult language as is Lithuanian, (I'm trying to learn, but it may just be impossible) but I understand from the comments below, that they did pretty well! As an aside, I am half Lithuanian, my grandparents having emigrated to the US from Lithuania in 1918. I visited LT in August, Vilnius, Kaunas, Saiulia, and Panevezys to discover my roots, and it is an incredibly beautiful country, and I am proud to be half LT! Back to your question, I believe that the conductor is of Lithuanian descent, pretty cool that our boys and girls at GT could pull this tough one off! Long live Lietuva!
I have some Lithuanian blood on paternal line (my dad died defending Ukraine)
Wow 😮
Ačiū. Thank you.