bakit ba sobrang humaling ko sa sayaw na ito? marahil sa nakaraan kong buhay ay isa akong maranao. i always get emotional kapag nakakanood ako ng sayaw na ito and there's also an excitement i felt to watch them dance.
This is the proof that Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia has one culture root. We have almost similarity in dancing, clothing and traditional music 👍
Yes! And don’t forget Brunei and Taiwan! They share the same indigenous roots as us. I was shocked to see that the natives of Taiwan looks just like us and had the same cultural dance. Also, we are related to Polynesian people. We share the same cultural tattoos as well. It’s so crazy that we’ve all become so separate but still have some common language and tradition.
@@SuperheroComicsTakeover that's the cordillera area people they are the one who immigrates to an island to travel not all civilization also about the visayas? those people are srivijaya immigration since the time was hindu buddhism
Singkil is the Filipino version of the Ramayana, the story of God Ram (Hindu, Indian god). The reason for it being from India is because prior to the Spanish colonialistion, philippines was heavily Indianised and used to have Hinduism mixed with folk religion as its religion
@@kharlmichaelpura371 yes, exactly. All south east asian countries and even east asian countries have a lot of Indian influence since 1500-2000 years ago. It is most apparent in Thailand and Indonesia though, since they are extremely proud of their history and culture, but Malaysia doesn't like it's Hindu past since it's borderline radicalized islamic nation now. As for Philipines, Spanish colonialists were famous for brutal forced conversions and supressing indegenous cultures(more so in Mexico and south america, where all of Mayan books and knowledge was destroyed). Hence, the influences in Philipines decreased. Singkil is the filipino Ramayana, a story of God Ram (who is born as a human) whose wife is kidnapped by a demon king who takes her thousands of kilometres away to his kingdom and he raises an army of apes to defeat the demon king and get his wife back. Singkil initially showed the prince and princess as gods, and other religious things too, however after the region where it is performed became Muslim, they changed the gods to humans so that it doesn't clash with their religion. Extra fact: Thai kings have the title " Rama" because Lord Ram was considered the perfect ruler and perfect man( he was a prince in exile when his wife was kidnapped and later became king when his exile of 14 years was over.)
@@hardekailawadi You are correct Philippines was Indianized, however, it wasn't fully Indianized or Islamized. The powerful kingdoms were majority Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. The majority of the archipelago though was Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw.
My Mother Is Also A Dancer In Nayong Pilipino Since 1990 to 2004 i remember when i was a child i've watching my mother dancing all Philippine Folk Dance in Nayong Pilipino Dance Troup I miss It :)
Hi Ian, greetings to your mother! We still have all the videos from that day (8 dances are still to be edited). Not a single one will go missing .... the dance group was the reason why we do this. At some point I'll find time, then the next dance videos will come .... I can't promise anything, only that all 8 dances are safely stored and will find their way on UA-cam sometime whenever. In any case, none of her efforts will be lost.
This dance is from Pre-colonial Philippines. No Europeans have set foot even had any association with Southeast Asia. Back then, Philippines wasn't so different from Indonesia and Malaysia. The Europeans changed a lot of Philippine culture. Malaysia, Indonesia and Philippines had close ties with each other and traded often, resulting in some shared culture. Filipinos used to be Muslims, like the Indonesians and Malaysians. If you look closely at the props, you'll notice the man carrying a curvy sword, called the 'Kris'. The Malays and Indonesians still have them, but Filipinos don't anymore. This dance is what's left of the shared culture between Philippines and the Malay Archipelago.
basically yes.. even our native language.. not the filipino.. have a similarity with them.. regarding the traditional..sword you can find.. it in our tribe.. my father still keep one..
Maiden Malice its from the Hindu epic Ramayana. The trees falling (bamboo clapping) are when Maharadja Lawana (the demon king Rahwana in hinduism) tried to trap Putri Langkawi (Sita) between falling trees as she tried to escape him by gracefully avoiding them. If you want to see just how sophisticated and rich the Ramayana traditions could have been performed by pre-Hispanic Filipinos, its best to see the Ramayana theatre of Indonesia (Javanese and Balinese) and Cambodia. The Maranao, Tausug etc have preserved the repertoire the best way they could (in snippets only), as the Spanish made them poorer due to cutting off their trade links while simultaneously attacking them to gain a foothold of the sultanate as. Because of this, the old high cultures of the Maranao and Tausug changed to a more military village based culture, and coincidentally they became more islamised than before the Spanish came, (they saw themselves more as part of the Islamic world in reaction to Spanish hostility towards the Bangsamoro). The islamisation had cut off a lot of the sacred parts of the Ramayana and changed what was depicted (in Islam, you cannot depict things that don't have its base in Islam, as it's seen as apostasy, so many things had to be changed, including the clothing, and the roles of the main characters of the Ramayana, who were no longer seen as royal dewi (diwata), but mere human beings). This cut the Bangsamoro off from the Hindu Buddhist beliefs of their ancestors. By contrast, the Javanese despite being Muslim on the surface, kept their Hindu Buddhist culture fully intact, as there were no pressures by their colonisers (the Dutch) to convert to Christianity or westernise their culture. In this case, the Philippines drew the short straw of history as far as colonisers were concerned.
Maiden Malice Correct. A Filipino myself, studied the cultures and history of the Philippines in Middle School or like in Elementary. People wayback with Malay culture are called Borneos.
Not an expert in Singkil but have viewed a lot. This one gets a nod and a full thumbs up. Why? the choreography is simple. Good dynamics; starts slow then fast and climatic, and ends restfully. You get to see each element stand out effectively, the damas get a chance to show their skills on the bamboo too, the gamelan music(kulintang) and the gongs have a moment and the prince and the princes recap the whole ensemble taking turns crisscrossing the double twin bamboo poles which i haven't seen in other choreographies. This one Similar to the one created by Bayanihan Philippines and its really good.
I think this dance actually represents the truly culture of Philippines. Cuz, I think, the previous culture of Philippines influenced by the West to much. This dance share a lot similarities with another Malay and Nusantara cultures.
It represents a part of Precolonial Philippines, not entirety. The reason being is because the powerful kingdoms were Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. The majority of the archipelago though was Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw.
Sherwin Celeste doesn't matter what religion, cariñosa is just so plain, even though it's elegant. Singkil on the other hand is exotic and just fabulous in it's form and music.
@@SherwinCeleste-cj7ng religion isn't a point, is about the traditions of our country. Myself, as a very fanatic traditionalist Catholic (yet I'm a good sinner), I do respect the Filipinos who still have the pre-colonial culture like the Igorots, Bangsamoro, T'boli and many others.
@@SherwinCeleste-cj7ng this is Hindu inspired not Muslim. Also it doesn't matter if it's Muslim or Hindu since Catholicism was only shoved at the throats of our ancestors
Why the is the Princess barefooted? The "singkil" is the anklet that is worn by the Princess and it's missing. That's where the name of the dance came from.
This dance, in my opinion, best captures the essence of Philippine culture. I believe that the Western countries had an influence on the Philippines' ancient culture. This dance, in my opinion, ought to be the national anthem of the Philippines because it exemplifies the splendor of our national identity. I believe that the Western countries had an influence on the Philippines' ancient culture. This dance, in my opinion, ought to serve as our national anthem because it beautifully displays our heritage.
Galing! sabay sabay sila. Very proud pinoy here. I think they could improve their costume. Example yung payong, parang payong ng pang kindergarten. Haha. But, I can't complain with the dance skill.
I dropped a like at this video because we followed these steps for our project and we won we had the highest score because of this dance thank you very much!
Omygosh- i just remember that ma and my classmate dance this and it really went perfect And im the girl holding a umbrella. We actually got the 1 place. Imiss going to school Love the perfection of the dance
I just want to correct some of the comments as to not cause confusion. Yes, Precolonial Philippines were Indianized or Islamized but not the entirety. The powerful more advanced kingdoms were majority Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. However, the rest of the archipelago were Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw. This Animistic belief was more prominent when tattooing was a thing in the archipelago. However, due to Hindu-Buddhism and Islam influencing some ethnolinguistic tribes tattooing was declining within some tribes (Tagalog and Maranao). When Europeans arrived a lot of the religions and beliefs got replaced with Catholicism.
Greatful ako na nexperience ko namagrakepart sa sayaw na ito kahit na taga hawak lang ako sa flag. Sasaywin namin to ng kaklase ko bukas(08/29/19). Naapriciate ko at sobra ko nang Rene respeto ang ganitong sayaw dahil mahirap itong sayawin lalo na na mayroon kawayan na kailangan mo I was an na Hindi masaran ang paa at binubuhat na appreciate ko Ang sayaw na ito.English translation: I'mgreatful to be able to take part in this dance even if my part is only to hold the flag.I was able to appreciate and respect this dance even more because it is difficult carrying the princess. People dancing to the beat and they have to get the timing right so that they don't get injured if the bamboo closes.
This dance was from pre-colonial Philippines, which meant no Europeans have touched Southeast Asia yet. Back then, Philippines often traded with Asia and had close ties with Indonesia and Malaysia, which meant that Philippines shared some culture with Malaysia and Indonesia. This dance is what's left of Philippines' shared culture with Indonesia and Malaysia.
@@barrybbenson9968 what you say is true about trade and this representing Precolonial Philippines BUT only a part of it. These mainly represents the south. The other powerful kingdoms Precolonial were Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. The rest of the archipelago were Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw
Jeremy Ceniza walang singkil ang manguindanao ang sa kanila ay ung manok sa maranao lang nag mula ang singkil and singkil ay panahon pa ni princess lawaiin at mga kawayan na din siya ngtatago kaya ginawang dance
Singkil is the Filipino version of the Ramayana, the story of God Ram (Hindu, Indian god). The reason for it being from India is because prior to the Spanish colonialistion, philippines was heavily Indianised and used to have Hinduism mixed with folk religion as its religion
What you say is true but not entirely. The Philippines wasn't "Heavily" Indianized. The powerful kingdoms of Precolonial Philippines were Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic but the rest of the archipelago were Animistic. They believed in Anito or Dayaw.
I think princess were not allowed to step on the ground. They were carried by the alipins when they are outside. I have read it somewhere. Their feet were sacread. Must have been the reason why they have kawayans as means of transportation.
We’re going to perform this dance at school but less complicated steps and my friend Elaiza is going to be the princess sitting on the bamboo sticks at 2:10 and they can’t even carry her 🤣🤣🤣
Singkil is the Filipino version of the Ramayana, the story of God Ram (Hindu, Indian god). The reason for it being from India is because prior to the Spanish colonialistion, philippines was heavily Indianised and used to have Hinduism mixed with folk religion as its religion. There were also 2 prominent hindu kingdoms 700 years ago, Rajahnate of butuan and Cebu. And the word rajah(and also rani) is a sanskrit word (Indian).
I believe in u my brother.. The maranao their blood mixed because they are also descendants of indian brunie and indonesia so u can see ther culture like TOROGAN which is similar traditional house of indonesian and the singkil dance and Malong which is similar in indian and brunie was the first one they originated from mussel man dayak tribe, one of the most native people living in BRUNIE.. And when islam came to them, their blood was mixed in malaysia, so their language is deffirent from the indonesian malysian indian brunie and tausug, but their language are a little similar
There ain't no Hindu or Buddhist religions or influences here in the Philippines but animism and Islam came as the 1st monotheistic religion by the Indonesians Malaysians and brunein traders they're first became Muslim before us and they spread Islam and there rajahnate or sultanate and culture here that's why there is a kingdom of "amanillah" by rajah sulayman and as a maranao Ramayana has no connections or influences to us even in our traditional dance singkil. Singkil is a original maranao traditional dance and the word rajah means " king " to us is in our language and we still using it but we prefer using sultan or datu and Indo and Malay language has so many similarities to our language.
St. Dominic Savio College Cultural Dance Troupe and Ramon Obusan Folkloric Group- are the best Folkloric Dance troupe performing SINGKIL that I ever watched. ^_^ But for this one? madami akong napansing mali at kulang. Mahalagang hindi makaligtaan ang mga importanteng detalye. 1.) Walang anklet and Shoes ang Prince & Princess 2.) Dapat Sarimanok ang suot na Headdress ng Princess 3.) Walang Chants. Dapat may kanta
Yeah but singkil is the hardest compared to tinikling and the music was different too and singkil was oldest since pre-colonial era of Philippines compared to tinikling during spanish era.
So similar with Malay and Nusantara dances. The male dancer wears Songkok ( traditional malay hat) and also hold a Keris. This dance is truly a Muslim dance.
Not muslim but pre-muslim or Pre-Islam. Malaysia, Philippines, and other Southeast Asian and East Asian countries were influenced by India. This dance is like the Maranao version of India's Ramayana. Also, dancing is haram in Islam so this is definitely a pre-Islam dance.
There's no such thing as Muslim dance. There are dances done by Muslim people, but Islam is a religion, one that forbids dancing and even music. The roots of this dance is a mix of native Austronesian and wider Asian bamboo dances (the Magunatip dance of Borneo, the Bamboo dance of Thailand, and the Mizoram bamboo dance of Nagaland India are examples of similar bamboo dances) with motifs from the Ramayana (Hindu culture, the religion these people were before Islam went there). Indonesian and Malaysians seem to forget Filipinos are their northern older kin. Austronesians moved south from the Philippines into Indonesia and the Malay archipelago to populate those islands. Maybe they can spread the word so Filipinos are not alienated or "othered" in their worldview.
Does anyone have the audio file for this choreography? we want to do the dance without having the clicks of the sticks in the background. Thank you po!!
At 8 min. 26 sec. you see the group picture with the musicians. The entire music was played live and there is no recording without a impact of the bamboo sticks. We're sorry, but we can't help.
Dear God🙏💞 in heaven, I come to you in the name of Jesus. I acknowledge to You that I am a sinner, and I am sorry for my sins and the life that I have lived; I need your forgiveness. I believe that your only begotten Son Jesus Christ shed His precious blood on the cross at Calvary and died for my sins, and I am now willing to turn from my sin. You said in the bible that if we confess the Lord our God and believe in our hearts that God raised Jesus from the dead, we shall be saved. Right now I confess Jesus as my Lord. With my heart, I believe that God raised Jesus from the dead. This very moment I accept Jesus Christ as my own personal Savior and according to His Word, right now I am saved. Amen.
Good Day po. I would like to ask permission po to use this video in our event in school for our National Culture and Arts Month Celebration. Hoping for your reply po. Thank you so much po.
+Maideshuuu you're wrong. I study Philippine dances. Maranao princesses even almost all Maranao people of different classes wore shoes. Get your facts straight.
+Maideshuuu No I am not focusing on just a certain time frame I'm talking about the entirety and the rules of the Maranaos. It is Haram for a Putri (Princess) to step on the ground barefooted. I mean, what royalty would? The prince and the princess wore shoes. The rest don't. I would know because I learned it firsthand. I'm a dancer AND from Lanao. So I repeat, get your facts straight. Disappointing if you're truly studying Philippine dances like me. :)
Gosh, I remember dancing tinikling (a similar dance to singkil but different) and those bamboos hurt your ankles a lot if you're not in sync with the beat.
You have shown your creativity and your skills in this dance but you have one mistake, the princess should not be barefooted. She should have wear golden shoes. But overall this was nicely done! 💕
The Gospel of salvation of our souls: 💜💕💜💖💞💜💕For what I received I passed on to you as of [first importance]: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Peter, and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers and sisters at the same time,
Its not a muslim dance. Its a maranao singkil dance ... Muslim are the people who religion is Islam.. Don't tell me Arabs people dancing singkil... Hahaha
finn's baby magkaiba po ang tunatawag na muslim sa maranao ang ibg sabhin ng muslim ay tumatalima at sumosonod sa nagiisang diyos un po ang muslim ang maranao nanaman ang ibg sabihin ay people of the lake
NSA Sucky lol your hilarious.. know the Filipino cultural dance history first...besides we have lots of different traditional dances from different Philipline regions. That singkil dance is a muslim dance from Lanao almost the same as indonesian and malaysian dance..
+SavageSwan25 mabe it's true that your ancestor were original from our country...like our ppl said Tagalog Ethnics were original come from ppl of Vaie Segan (Melanau Bintulu, Sarawak) and a lot of our words are similar
bakit ba sobrang humaling ko sa sayaw na ito? marahil sa nakaraan kong buhay ay isa akong maranao. i always get emotional kapag nakakanood ako ng sayaw na ito and there's also an excitement i felt to watch them dance.
Beks, basta bakla nakaka relate sa singkil! Fierce at graceful kasi ang galawan!
This is the proof that Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia has one culture root. We have almost similarity in dancing, clothing and traditional music 👍
Yes! And don’t forget Brunei and Taiwan!
They share the same indigenous roots as us.
I was shocked to see that the natives of Taiwan looks just like us and had the same cultural dance.
Also, we are related to Polynesian people. We share the same cultural tattoos as well. It’s so crazy that we’ve all become so separate but still have some common language and tradition.
@@SuperheroComicsTakeover that's the cordillera area people they are the one who immigrates to an island to travel not all civilization also about the visayas? those people are srivijaya immigration since the time was hindu buddhism
Singkil is the Filipino version of the Ramayana, the story of God Ram (Hindu, Indian god). The reason for it being from India is because prior to the Spanish colonialistion, philippines was heavily Indianised and used to have Hinduism mixed with folk religion as its religion
@@kharlmichaelpura371 yes, exactly. All south east asian countries and even east asian countries have a lot of Indian influence since 1500-2000 years ago. It is most apparent in Thailand and Indonesia though, since they are extremely proud of their history and culture, but Malaysia doesn't like it's Hindu past since it's borderline radicalized islamic nation now. As for Philipines, Spanish colonialists were famous for brutal forced conversions and supressing indegenous cultures(more so in Mexico and south america, where all of Mayan books and knowledge was destroyed). Hence, the influences in Philipines decreased. Singkil is the filipino Ramayana, a story of God Ram (who is born as a human) whose wife is kidnapped by a demon king who takes her thousands of kilometres away to his kingdom and he raises an army of apes to defeat the demon king and get his wife back. Singkil initially showed the prince and princess as gods, and other religious things too, however after the region where it is performed became Muslim, they changed the gods to humans so that it doesn't clash with their religion.
Extra fact: Thai kings have the title " Rama" because Lord Ram was considered the perfect ruler and perfect man( he was a prince in exile when his wife was kidnapped and later became king when his exile of 14 years was over.)
@@hardekailawadi You are correct Philippines was Indianized, however, it wasn't fully Indianized or Islamized. The powerful kingdoms were majority Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. The majority of the archipelago though was Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw.
My Mother Is Also A Dancer In Nayong Pilipino Since 1990 to 2004 i remember when i was a child i've watching my mother dancing all Philippine Folk Dance in Nayong Pilipino Dance Troup I miss It :)
Hi Ian, greetings to your mother! We still have all the videos from that day (8 dances are still to be edited). Not a single one will go missing .... the dance group was the reason why we do this. At some point I'll find time, then the next dance videos will come .... I can't promise anything, only that all 8 dances are safely stored and will find their way on UA-cam sometime whenever. In any case, none of her efforts will be lost.
Well, I think their skills are bad ass! I love this! The outfits and dancers are beautiful as well. Proud to be pinay.
Adrian anong ginagawa mo?
This dance is from Pre-colonial Philippines. No Europeans have set foot even had any association with Southeast Asia. Back then, Philippines wasn't so different from Indonesia and Malaysia. The Europeans changed a lot of Philippine culture. Malaysia, Indonesia and Philippines had close ties with each other and traded often, resulting in some shared culture. Filipinos used to be Muslims, like the Indonesians and Malaysians. If you look closely at the props, you'll notice the man carrying a curvy sword, called the 'Kris'. The Malays and Indonesians still have them, but Filipinos don't anymore. This dance is what's left of the shared culture between Philippines and the Malay Archipelago.
we are same blood
basically yes..
even our native language.. not the filipino..
have a similarity with them.. regarding the traditional..sword you can find.. it in our tribe.. my father still keep one..
Maiden Malice syop judging the pilipinos
Maiden Malice its from the Hindu epic Ramayana. The trees falling (bamboo clapping) are when Maharadja Lawana (the demon king Rahwana in hinduism) tried to trap Putri Langkawi (Sita) between falling trees as she tried to escape him by gracefully avoiding them. If you want to see just how sophisticated and rich the Ramayana traditions could have been performed by pre-Hispanic Filipinos, its best to see the Ramayana theatre of Indonesia (Javanese and Balinese) and Cambodia. The Maranao, Tausug etc have preserved the repertoire the best way they could (in snippets only), as the Spanish made them poorer due to cutting off their trade links while simultaneously attacking them to gain a foothold of the sultanate as. Because of this, the old high cultures of the Maranao and Tausug changed to a more military village based culture, and coincidentally they became more islamised than before the Spanish came, (they saw themselves more as part of the Islamic world in reaction to Spanish hostility towards the Bangsamoro). The islamisation had cut off a lot of the sacred parts of the Ramayana and changed what was depicted (in Islam, you cannot depict things that don't have its base in Islam, as it's seen as apostasy, so many things had to be changed, including the clothing, and the roles of the main characters of the Ramayana, who were no longer seen as royal dewi (diwata), but mere human beings). This cut the Bangsamoro off from the Hindu Buddhist beliefs of their ancestors. By contrast, the Javanese despite being Muslim on the surface, kept their Hindu Buddhist culture fully intact, as there were no pressures by their colonisers (the Dutch) to convert to Christianity or westernise their culture. In this case, the Philippines drew the short straw of history as far as colonisers were concerned.
Maiden Malice Correct. A Filipino myself, studied the cultures and history of the Philippines in Middle School or like in Elementary. People wayback with Malay culture are called Borneos.
Not an expert in Singkil but have viewed a lot. This one gets a nod and a full thumbs up. Why? the choreography is simple. Good dynamics; starts slow then fast and climatic, and ends restfully. You get to see each element stand out effectively, the damas get a chance to show their skills on the bamboo too, the gamelan music(kulintang) and the gongs have a moment and the prince and the princes recap the whole ensemble taking turns crisscrossing the double twin bamboo poles which i haven't seen in other choreographies. This one Similar to the one created by Bayanihan Philippines and its really good.
The most beautiful dance in the world!
I think this dance actually represents the truly culture of Philippines. Cuz, I think, the previous culture of Philippines influenced by the West to much. This dance share a lot similarities with another Malay and Nusantara cultures.
It represents a part of Precolonial Philippines, not entirety. The reason being is because the powerful kingdoms were Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. The majority of the archipelago though was Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw.
in my opinion.. this should be the national dance of the philippines!...truly south east asian in its form
The dance is 2000 years old
Sherwin Celeste doesn't matter what religion, cariñosa is just so plain, even though it's elegant. Singkil on the other hand is exotic and just fabulous in it's form and music.
@@SherwinCeleste-cj7ng religion isn't a point, is about the traditions of our country. Myself, as a very fanatic traditionalist Catholic (yet I'm a good sinner), I do respect the Filipinos who still have the pre-colonial culture like the Igorots, Bangsamoro, T'boli and many others.
Yes. Agree.
@@SherwinCeleste-cj7ng this is Hindu inspired not Muslim. Also it doesn't matter if it's Muslim or Hindu since Catholicism was only shoved at the throats of our ancestors
This is so beautiful! I’m not Filipino but this dance I’ve seen so many Pinoys dance when we had culture events at my school
Why the is the Princess barefooted? The "singkil" is the anklet that is worn by the Princess and it's missing. That's where the name of the dance came from.
worn at the Ankles, not at the foot, and the princess needs to be barefooted
Smart, though
🥰🥰🥰
yes the jingle bells ] are named singkil
The best talagaa abg mga muslim na pilipino Christian ako pero supportive ako sakanila
This should be our national dance it shows richerity,beauty and culture its perfect for our national dance
Rhian Umotoy become a politician and pass a bill for it to be approved or not by the president.
im christian pero gustong gusto ko talaga ang singkil proud being Filipino 😇✝️☪️
This dance, in my opinion, best captures the essence of Philippine culture. I believe that the Western countries had an influence on the Philippines' ancient culture. This dance, in my opinion, ought to be the national anthem of the Philippines because it exemplifies the splendor of our national identity. I believe that the Western countries had an influence on the Philippines' ancient culture. This dance, in my opinion, ought to serve as our national anthem because it beautifully displays our heritage.
Galing! sabay sabay sila. Very proud pinoy here. I think they could improve their costume. Example yung payong, parang payong ng pang kindergarten. Haha. But, I can't complain with the dance skill.
MASSIVE CONGRATUATIONS TO ALL THE PERFORMERS! MANY THANKS, TERIMAH KASI FOR SHOWCASING OUR MARANAO SINGKIL DANCE!
I dropped a like at this video because we followed these steps for our project and we won we had the highest score because of this dance thank you very much!
Always impressed with this dance ❤️
Beautiful dancing. My friends wife is from the Philippines. Very best wishes from Ireland.
Omygosh- i just remember that ma and my classmate dance this and it really went perfect
And im the girl holding a umbrella. We actually got the 1 place. Imiss going to school
Love the perfection of the dance
It is so beautiful that at school my classroom and I did it
Pangarap ko tlga to sayawin huhu .
I just want to correct some of the comments as to not cause confusion.
Yes, Precolonial Philippines were Indianized or Islamized but not the entirety. The powerful more advanced kingdoms were majority Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. However, the rest of the archipelago were Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw. This Animistic belief was more prominent when tattooing was a thing in the archipelago. However, due to Hindu-Buddhism and Islam influencing some ethnolinguistic tribes tattooing was declining within some tribes (Tagalog and Maranao). When Europeans arrived a lot of the religions and beliefs got replaced with Catholicism.
the best i ever seen performance singkil in youtube. very good remember my field trip in elementary :) powerful !
🇵🇭🎉 Singkil-LANAO DEL SUR 🎊🇵🇭
Ang ganda! 😍
Greatful ako na nexperience ko namagrakepart sa sayaw na ito kahit na taga hawak lang ako sa flag. Sasaywin namin to ng kaklase ko bukas(08/29/19). Naapriciate ko at sobra ko nang Rene respeto ang ganitong sayaw dahil mahirap itong sayawin lalo na na mayroon kawayan na kailangan mo I was an na Hindi masaran ang paa at binubuhat na appreciate ko Ang sayaw na ito.English translation: I'mgreatful to be able to take part in this dance even if my part is only to hold the flag.I was able to appreciate and respect this dance even more because it is difficult carrying the princess. People dancing to the beat and they have to get the timing right so that they don't get injured if the bamboo closes.
ang gagaling talaga ng mga Muslim sa pag sayaw ng ❤️✝️☪️
PLEASE THIS IS SO BEAUTIFUL
Bro the fan spinning of the princess and sword spinning of the prince is just so smooth and insane. Im thankful of being filipino
Ang Ganda😍
i feel regal watching this. the princess
WOW!👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Perfect Singkil I ever seen.
Thank you for this video.
Breathtaking
This was our video reference for our singkil dance way back 2019. I miss doing performances in school.
Woaaah so amazing.
Wow... Resembles Malay dance and costume quite a lot there
anak bangsa melayu muslim asal dari borneo dan tanah melayu yang migrate semasa kesultanan melayu melaka dan brunei
This dance was from pre-colonial Philippines, which meant no Europeans have touched Southeast Asia yet. Back then, Philippines often traded with Asia and had close ties with Indonesia and Malaysia, which meant that Philippines shared some culture with Malaysia and Indonesia. This dance is what's left of Philippines' shared culture with Indonesia and Malaysia.
@@barrybbenson9968 what you say is true about trade and this representing Precolonial Philippines BUT only a part of it. These mainly represents the south. The other powerful kingdoms Precolonial were Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic. The rest of the archipelago were Animistic, they believed in Anito or Dayaw
The Princess has no golden shoes? Why?
it's the point of the dance, the princess NEEDS to be barefooted
Maganda din ang Singkil ng Maguindanao Tribe. It is a faster version. Really entertaining to watch :)
Jeremy Ceniza walang singkil ang manguindanao ang sa kanila ay ung manok sa maranao lang nag mula ang singkil and singkil ay panahon pa ni princess lawaiin at mga kawayan na din siya ngtatago kaya ginawang dance
Jeremy Ceniza ang singkil maranao royal dance hindi ng maguindanao manga mangagaya
ang singkil ai maranao royal dance maraminang uma angkin ng singkil sa maranao lang yan hnd maguindanao hnd rin taosug ok
ganda ang tugtog at sayaw
Singkil is the Filipino version of the Ramayana, the story of God Ram (Hindu, Indian god). The reason for it being from India is because prior to the Spanish colonialistion, philippines was heavily Indianised and used to have Hinduism mixed with folk religion as its religion
What you say is true but not entirely. The Philippines wasn't "Heavily" Indianized. The powerful kingdoms of Precolonial Philippines were Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic but the rest of the archipelago were Animistic. They believed in Anito or Dayaw.
ang galing
Oo nga!😍
Very nicely done. Exquisite and precise.
Nasayaw ko na to dati sa school namin
I want to be part this kind of Traditional Dance.
I hope that we've perform like this greatly.. We will copy these dance, so i hope we copy it as they do it
Believe ako sa pag wave ng mga pamaypay nila
Have you performed this in your Hist3?
I think princess were not allowed to step on the ground. They were carried by the alipins when they are outside. I have read it somewhere. Their feet were sacread. Must have been the reason why they have kawayans as means of transportation.
Nope...
Panu sya mag singkil sa bamboo?
We’re going to perform this dance at school but less complicated steps and my friend Elaiza is going to be the princess sitting on the bamboo sticks at 2:10 and they can’t even carry her 🤣🤣🤣
did you ever find the song?
Pwede ba upload yung audio please.
I remember doing this in 3rd grade then yung best friend ko yung Princess tapos ako yung taga payong
Singkil is the Filipino version of the Ramayana, the story of God Ram (Hindu, Indian god). The reason for it being from India is because prior to the Spanish colonialistion, philippines was heavily Indianised and used to have Hinduism mixed with folk religion as its religion. There were also 2 prominent hindu kingdoms 700 years ago, Rajahnate of butuan and Cebu. And the word rajah(and also rani) is a sanskrit word (Indian).
I believe in u my brother.. The maranao their blood mixed because they are also descendants of indian brunie and indonesia so u can see ther culture like TOROGAN which is similar traditional house of indonesian and the singkil dance and Malong which is similar in indian and brunie was the first one they originated from mussel man dayak tribe, one of the most native people living in BRUNIE.. And when islam came to them, their blood was mixed in malaysia, so their language is deffirent from the indonesian malysian indian brunie and tausug, but their language are a little similar
There ain't no Hindu or Buddhist religions or influences here in the Philippines but animism and Islam came as the 1st monotheistic religion by the Indonesians Malaysians and brunein traders they're first became Muslim before us and they spread Islam and there rajahnate or sultanate and culture here that's why there is a kingdom of "amanillah" by rajah sulayman and as a maranao Ramayana has no connections or influences to us even in our traditional dance singkil. Singkil is a original maranao traditional dance and the word rajah means " king " to us is in our language and we still using it but we prefer using sultan or datu and Indo and Malay language has so many similarities to our language.
no thts the tradistion of maranap tribe not indian we maranao nver part of indian culture
@@salmanmai1203funny we are marano blood of brunie and indian we call my tribe people.of the ranao maranao
@indianisraelusapig153 katawan akn akie Aya pag mean naming guwani Ko da pn so Islam Gianan e kupit mianga oona a mga loks
St. Dominic Savio College Cultural Dance Troupe and Ramon Obusan Folkloric Group- are the best Folkloric Dance troupe performing SINGKIL that I ever watched. ^_^
But for this one? madami akong napansing mali at kulang. Mahalagang hindi makaligtaan ang mga importanteng detalye.
1.) Walang anklet and Shoes ang Prince & Princess
2.) Dapat Sarimanok ang suot na Headdress ng Princess
3.) Walang Chants. Dapat may kanta
well done guys
Nice one!
may music po ba nyan dito sa youtube???
ang galing nyo guys..ngayon ko lang napanood to ha...jan ba c joy (MDJ Madolid) namin?
Before the built of Clark Disneyland in Angeles City, Pampanga on January 2016.
I want to know how to use the bamboo.
Parang tinikling rin pero dalawang pares ng kawayan yung ginagamit.
Yeah but singkil is the hardest compared to tinikling and the music was different too and singkil was oldest since pre-colonial era of Philippines compared to tinikling during spanish era.
So similar with Malay and Nusantara dances. The male dancer wears Songkok ( traditional malay hat) and also hold a Keris. This dance is truly a Muslim dance.
Not muslim but pre-muslim or Pre-Islam. Malaysia, Philippines, and other Southeast Asian and East Asian countries were influenced by India. This dance is like the Maranao version of India's Ramayana. Also, dancing is haram in Islam so this is definitely a pre-Islam dance.
There's no such thing as Muslim dance. There are dances done by Muslim people, but Islam is a religion, one that forbids dancing and even music. The roots of this dance is a mix of native Austronesian and wider Asian bamboo dances (the Magunatip dance of Borneo, the Bamboo dance of Thailand, and the Mizoram bamboo dance of Nagaland India are examples of similar bamboo dances) with motifs from the Ramayana (Hindu culture, the religion these people were before Islam went there). Indonesian and Malaysians seem to forget Filipinos are their northern older kin. Austronesians moved south from the Philippines into Indonesia and the Malay archipelago to populate those islands. Maybe they can spread the word so Filipinos are not alienated or "othered" in their worldview.
so nice
look at that Princess So Beautiful
Pwede po ba hingin yung audio lang po neto? I mean yung instrumental lang po neto?
I think this dance has influences by Malay culture from Indonesia and Malaysia
Music sounds awesome at 1.5x
hi po pwede po malaman kung anong music po ginamit yung audio lang po. thanks
mary rose degala agung po at kulintang
live instruments yan dre
Does anyone have the audio file for this choreography? we want to do the dance without having the clicks of the sticks in the background. Thank you po!!
At 8 min. 26 sec. you see the group picture with the musicians. The entire music was played live and there is no recording without a impact of the bamboo sticks. We're sorry, but we can't help.
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I believe that your only begotten Son Jesus Christ shed His precious blood on the cross at Calvary and died for my sins, and I am now willing to turn from my sin.
You said in the bible that if we confess the Lord our God and believe in our hearts that God raised Jesus from the dead, we shall be saved.
Right now I confess Jesus as my Lord. With my heart, I believe that God raised Jesus from the dead. This very moment I accept Jesus Christ as my own personal Savior and according to His Word, right now I am saved. Amen.
San Po pwede kunin yung music nito ?
Kailangan Lang Po
youtube lang mahahanap
Naalala ko grade 9 kami nag ganyan,, ang hirap pero na execute ng ayos HAHAHAHA
Yun ang mahirap walang costume available, mahirap mag hanap saan meron. Sasayaw rin kami nito pero medyo modern na sya.
Good Day po. I would like to ask permission po to use this video in our event in school for our National Culture and Arts Month Celebration. Hoping for your reply po. Thank you so much po.
Ano po yung exact music para madownload po?
did you find it?
pwedi po makahingi music nyo po. Thanks
I srsly also need it too lol
fernandcabailo23@gmail.com
Hello po. Humihingi po ako ng pahintulot na gamitin ang video na it sa aming group assignment po. Salamat po
Oh Shiz. Why is the princess barefooted?
+Maideshuuu_19 Lol. Ang tunay na Prinsesa ay nakasapatos.
+Maideshuuu you're wrong. I study Philippine dances. Maranao princesses even almost all Maranao people of different classes wore shoes. Get your facts straight.
+Maideshuuu No I am not focusing on just a certain time frame I'm talking about the entirety and the rules of the Maranaos. It is Haram for a Putri (Princess) to step on the ground barefooted. I mean, what royalty would? The prince and the princess wore shoes. The rest don't. I would know because I learned it firsthand. I'm a dancer AND from Lanao. So I repeat, get your facts straight. Disappointing if you're truly studying Philippine dances like me. :)
mai stans legends bruh Nigga the dance the princess is supposed to wear shows and bells idiot
Sana mapreserve ito
0:00 - 1:40
i like it
salamat poh :)
Im sorry but your asik Music is wrong...
i'll be the princess in this dance
it will be difficult for the boys who are doing the bamboo's
since im heavy hihi
hope they get used to it
Jeon Junookie where you scared when you rode the bamboo and when are you going to do the dance because I will be doing it tomorrow(08/29/19)
wow!
Gosh, I remember dancing tinikling (a similar dance to singkil but different) and those bamboos hurt your ankles a lot if you're not in sync with the beat.
pwede po ba makuha ano title ng song?
Singkil
I can't find the audio without any commenters in the background. Can someone help me find the link and reply the link to me pls
You have shown your creativity and your skills in this dance but you have one mistake, the princess should not be barefooted. She should have wear golden shoes. But overall this was nicely done! 💕
MashaAllah 🇵🇭
i did this dance(except i was both the umbrella lady and the one the wearing gold dress)
that was cool
The Gospel of salvation of our souls: 💜💕💜💖💞💜💕For what I received I passed on to you as of [first importance]: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Peter, and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers and sisters at the same time,
bongga
Mag perform kay mi ug Itik Itik. ☺
4:17
Its not a muslim dance. Its a maranao singkil dance ... Muslim are the people who religion is Islam.. Don't tell me Arabs people dancing singkil... Hahaha
Well it's still a Muslim dance. Since its dance by Muslims FROM the Philippines.
+finn's baby Actually the origin of singkil is not Muslim or Islam. It is based on Darangen, the Maranao interpretation of Ramayana which is Hindu.
finn's baby magkaiba po ang tunatawag na muslim sa maranao ang ibg sabhin ng muslim ay tumatalima at sumosonod sa nagiisang diyos un po ang muslim ang maranao nanaman ang ibg sabihin ay people of the lake
A lil similar to tinikling
NSA Sucky lol your hilarious.. know the Filipino cultural dance history first...besides we have lots of different traditional dances from different Philipline regions. That singkil dance is a muslim dance from Lanao almost the same as indonesian and malaysian dance..
+SavageSwan25 mabe it's true that your ancestor were original from our country...like our ppl said Tagalog Ethnics were original come from ppl of Vaie Segan (Melanau Bintulu, Sarawak) and a lot of our words are similar
+Tuty Imerz yeah we have many many cultural similarities. Even, Tagalog borrows many words, from Malaysia and Indonesia.
gtfo outta here with borrowed.....I think you mean shared
Tuty Imerz but, according to new archeological findings, some filipinos originated from Southern Taiwan.