Wonderful for me! I remember dancing to this melody many times when I was in my teens and twenties. .
@jazbogutz13 жыл бұрын
Music is music, in all forms and in all nationalities. Ive been to afairs where Ive seen dancing and playing to music of all colors and nations. The the one common boundry to all peoples. We need to just open our minds and our hearts to all people. As a society we all should learn to appreciate all customs of all people. This is a great song and its done well here. Ive played this song with a band and enjoyed it every time. Best wishes to you people. JB
@acorduende14 жыл бұрын
Rebetika, Klezmer and Armenian Kef are three of my favourite styles of music. :)
@ Noren1260 It probably sounds so exotic and nostalgic to you because of its "oriental" scale. If you know music, you understand what I mean. As for your serious question, it's hard to answer. This tune comes from Greece, possibly from the time when Greece was part of the Ottoman empire. Or at least, the oldest known versions of it are greek. Songs travel a lot, Jews travel a lot, so... check watch?v=1Qd2Nb-oh4I&feature=related
@exilefromthefireland14 жыл бұрын
@Noren1260 "μισιρλού""misirlou",is the greek nickname given to egyptian muslim girls before ww2.if you copy paste "μισιρλού γλυκερία" you could listen a modern greek cover and read some info in english below the video at the info. i dont know how it ended up in jewish weddings though.. :/ nice cover though... ;)
@xRetroismx13 жыл бұрын
I love Klezmer music. Is it weird for a black teenager to listen to this type of music ? lol