im not native american, in fact, im asian, a pure one but ever since i was a child, i have been fascinated with this culture. i have a longing in my soul to one day walk to places where the native americans walked. i cant explain it but there's something thats drawing me to this culture.. its spiritual and magical at the same time. its like my soul can fly as high as an eagle whenever i listen to songs like these. i am at peace somehow.. thank you for posting this.
@annc77395 жыл бұрын
I’m Chinese and I love my Native American cousins and their ways of living and survival in the wild. Would trade the cancerous city life for them to teach me how to live their pre-colonial lives.
@kimimilarollingthunder9597 Жыл бұрын
That’s beautiful
@heikeaurora53086 ай бұрын
Du hast dort schön gelebt deshalb zieht es deine Seele immer wieder dahin . Geht mir genauso ich habe viel dort gelebt bei den Siuox/ Lakota 💗
@TinaUrbina-j3d5 ай бұрын
My bother you were once one of my people in a past life. Never forget what was told to u, I,m not pulling your chain either.
@mparedes78415 ай бұрын
Have you been able to travel where the Native Americans were, yet?
@SCGhostHunter12 жыл бұрын
I come from the Cherokee nation, my mother was half. But I love all Native American traditions, histories, legends, and stories. They are fascinating. They are beautiful, gentle, loving people. Not at all the monsters they were made out to be. Thank you for this video, it is breathtaking.
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Carla Crane...Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@aaronbullock3620 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for saying that for everyone to hear/see. I am part Lakota and I'm tired of people thinking we were mindless savages. I'm/we are highly intelligent and loving people who have been BADLY abused. I am not from a reservation, but I implore everyone to look into the state of the reservations. They are despicable. Our people just wish to be free.
@SimoneBendix-q7e10 ай бұрын
~{◇}~,❤❤❤❤❤10❤❤❤❤`
@SEe-x8z3r8 ай бұрын
I'm Lakota lol u think huh?
@CEvalley5 ай бұрын
❤
@designfabio10 жыл бұрын
The feeling of longing for something I do not remember, hitting as deep as a journey through time.
@helanisantana1765Ай бұрын
É isso que sinto, uma saudade, e uma dor no coração ❤️. Não sei de onde ou quando.
@atedinahalf6288Ай бұрын
@@helanisantana1765Its because we were all indigenous at one point.
@sillywetrat4 ай бұрын
I'm white, but ever since learning about how these beautiful people were attacked by the U.S. government, I've gained a deep respect for them, especially those who are old enough to remember going through such pain. Peace to my Native American friends. ❤
@christinebluerirish2 ай бұрын
If anyone deserves reparations, it's certainly our beloved indigenous people ❤
@manuelarodriguez57064 жыл бұрын
Native American music is very breathtaking and I respect and love all Native Americans
@winterstorm84127 жыл бұрын
My heart belongs to the Native American people who to me are the most beautiful and wonderful people on this earth. Forever...
@kathymorris70284 жыл бұрын
I have grandma that is full bloody, Cherokee Indian ... and my granddad is Indian as well that's on both sides family of my, mom.. and my dad family.... and I"m talking to Indian guy right now well he 90% Indian I like him so much only if he see what right in front of him...
@UNbowed624 жыл бұрын
Forever Children Of the Earth ❤️🙌🏽⛰🌎
@rosepetals8181 Жыл бұрын
🌈🌎👁️❤️💛🤍🖤❤️💛💚💙👣💜
@HBB-eh3jr9 ай бұрын
a´ho
@cynthiajackson50704 ай бұрын
Im not native American but I am deeply Cornish a county in the UK. Im proud to be recognised as an ethnic minority. I'm grateful to my ancestors who enabled me to be here. So grateful to my grandfather who taught me to read the sky, the ground and plant by the moon phases. So grateful for the love and respect that native cultures have for our mother Earth. May our love heal all ❤
@yukonnahanni9 жыл бұрын
Never take more than you need ,,,, from anything in life .... Try to give back , more than you need ......
@davidbrown10977 жыл бұрын
Like like like like like like
@sanjuanaperez48037 жыл бұрын
Nahanni-Yukon I 100 agree with you.
@AllenEnriquezAlberto5 жыл бұрын
The laws of nature always was naturally from birth that’s how life works. We are part of life and goes full cycle. As we become food for nature’s nurture .
@sillywetrat4 ай бұрын
Give more than you take, amen.
@MGC3294 ай бұрын
🙏
@jadebrownbull48737 жыл бұрын
I'd love listening to this. Proud to be Oglala Lakota.
@cherokeerunner41356 жыл бұрын
Im happy to be half cherokee
@IdealSilver62244 жыл бұрын
hey good hearted brother
@ХТ-034 жыл бұрын
@@IdealSilver6224 I've just watched this video and listened to this amazing song! Since childhood i have wanted to visit the country across the ocean, see and meet real Native Americans! It's because i liked and like westerns. And today i go on watching these types of movies but only with true Native actors. We watched westerns with the non Native actors. My dreams came true, i visited this beautiful country but i didn't go to any reservation. I had to return to my home country because of my limited trip. The place i live in (it's close to the biggest lake on earth) there are also indigenous peoples whose cultures are like Native American or First Nations. They also love nature and pray their spirits. I love these proud and noble peoples. With great respect from Russia!
@elinikolai74934 жыл бұрын
Look white.
@UNbowed623 жыл бұрын
Hello Earth Brother 🥰
@NguyenPhuong-sr3rh8 жыл бұрын
I feel like as if I back to my origin when I listened this song
@AnnCrago13 жыл бұрын
Beautiful....My heart hurts knowing the history of these amazing peoples...... God Bless.....
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Ann Crago...Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@elizabethturieo5 күн бұрын
This music and experience IS my heart... crying 5:36 out from all the meanest i justices to a most other worldly man.
@denisesatterfield79418 жыл бұрын
Beautiful words and beautiful music! White settlers took away so much land from my Native Ancestors it makes me cry! I'm not much Native, but it only takes one drop of blood! You can still be Native by just being part of the Earth!
@warisbs9 жыл бұрын
May the sun bring you new energy by day, may the moon softly restore you by night, may the rain wash away your worries, may the breeze blow new strength into your being, may you walk gently through the world and know it's beauty all the days of your life.
@elizabethallweiss9 жыл бұрын
This song won my heart! Why does it make me weep? How can I miss in my soul something I've never known, as a woman in just another barren city? Thank you Ahneemah, for your beautiful music and the passion of it which I understood without knowing a single word. what does it mean? Are you still living? I hope so and pray for you great health and love and rewards for your gift to us... to me. Thank you.
@bobbiwolfgang6 жыл бұрын
Elizabeth Allweiss It is the same for me! How does this music find its way to the depths of my being? I feel like I am THERE, so long ago. I miss it so very much!
@shirleyhardt27012 ай бұрын
Their music touches the soul that longs for Paradise Lost.
@shelleywaldron4520Ай бұрын
❤😢I feel emotionally connected to this kind of music and have always felt connected somehow even though I have no connection through family I feel more love and understanding listening it's intriguing and I hope I learn one day how and why I feel such emotions through your lovely people
@ronniepressley76148 жыл бұрын
Oh so beautiful. No words can express what I feel in my heart when I hear this music. It's like this music came from this mother earth. The natives felt it in their soul and played what came from their heart.
@Royal_Mistress273 жыл бұрын
Such a beautiful song I've always loved the native American language songs they are beautiful
@catladyoftroyn.y.87134 жыл бұрын
I am Lakota, registered at Ft Yates, and, Yes, Sitting Bull was a great Uncle. I have many Great Uncles, Fathers, Mothers, Aunties, sisters, and brothers. As I watch this video, I look at the faces of all my relations.... S/ Rosalee Gabe
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
CatLadyotroy..Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@nekaneetxebeste Жыл бұрын
thank you for this beautiful music
@vasilepopa59923 ай бұрын
What a beautiful song, i was sad because I listened to a another native about mothers. But my sadness turned to joy in an instant. Feeling and knowing that my ancestors are here, by my side❤❤
@taniasoaresramos7184Ай бұрын
Eu, também, não sou norte-americano, mas amo as músicas indígenas, a Sioux é uma delas.❤😊
@stigy6110 жыл бұрын
This song is a MASTERPIECE ! Great video too !
@psicomarko6 жыл бұрын
Hermoso video y la música también. Que la nación Lakota resurja de sus cenizas y vuela a caminar por el camino de la belleza.
@terrysimpson36816 жыл бұрын
The air is hot. But the smell of sweet grass is filling my nostrils. Hoka Hey Blessings
@chilligut781515 жыл бұрын
This is one of the better videos on Native American that I have seen.A great combination of music and relevant images.Not only do I respect the American heritage but also the insightful photographers that captured these images for us to view many generations later.They realized they were witnessing something important that we would need to learn from many years later. These vast herds of Buffalo will never be what the once were but the spirit can remain alive inside of us.
@rivrfox914011 жыл бұрын
Our blood runs the same color. You are me. When I draw my breath, I sing songs of ancestors. Every breath is sacred...my soul yearns to go back to another time. May our future be now. Solidarity over charity. Aho~
@marcdelente24562 күн бұрын
peuple divin je vous rend hommage depuis 60 ans Pro Amérindiens je connai vôtre histoire et souffre en silence j écoute votre musique pour m appaisez. Seule vos peuples sont les seules qui me touchent.
@Armandinog8 жыл бұрын
If the Europeans Lived the Indigenous Way. Our Great Grandmother Earth would Not be Poisoned To Death.
@zeph64398 жыл бұрын
Yes indeed. People from Europe (Aur-Ob, or the Land of the Golden Dragon) should remember their roots and honor their Ancestors. This music is so amazing....we are all interconnected.
@zelenplav17018 жыл бұрын
Northern Europeans
@zeph64398 жыл бұрын
zelen plav That's the whole of Europe, and Aethi-oph-ia, the Americas, Asia and everywhere in-between actually. I mean, where people once venerated the serpent or Dragon of Nature-based pagan spirituality. The Dragon is Mother Earth and so the ancients, knowing they were part of Mother Earth, tended to have respect for all life, which is sacred. They also tended to be non-racist and treated woman with respect.
@attysthoughts32537 жыл бұрын
native americans caused humanities first man made disaster. Also, i would not want to live in a culture in which people die by the age of 30 and there are human sacrifices in which actual people are tortured and have their hearts ripped out to placate some fairytale sun spirit.
@YyYy-uh2sv7 жыл бұрын
Where is the proof? Of human sacrifice they havent even find a skeleton of being sacrificed........ Only because of some drawings they think human sacrifice that was made up by the spaniards conquistadors........
@blackwolf98938 жыл бұрын
This music comes from the heart!
@jstanthrdaynparadise8 жыл бұрын
It comes , from the soul. Peace to you.
@olly88 ай бұрын
It is music from the Spirits...🦬🪶🦅 that touches the Heart & the Soul.
@daniellelarivee62923 ай бұрын
So beautiful ❤❤
@ХТ-034 жыл бұрын
I've just listened it. The music of the Earth! The music of one of the beautiful and noble nations! Great respect from the biggest country!
@denisesatterfield79418 жыл бұрын
Our bison are in trouble! Because of man and having to close Yellowstone, there's too much pollution! Bison drink water from Yellowstone River! I cried when I found out. Do they really know what it's doing too the Animals who depend on it? I pray this will become a wake up call for MAN!
@rosenti8 жыл бұрын
They are like children, who wait until the last day before the exam to do their homework.
@zipcode339087 жыл бұрын
I AM OF CHEROKEE BLACK FOOT BORN NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN AND BLESS YOU AND SERVE MY SPIRIT IN THE GREAT SKY AND HIS PEOPLE II AM BLESSED
@ectorres-broad56164 жыл бұрын
Hello patricia , pleased to meet a Cherokee. I totally admire your culture and would like to learn more.
@jocelynechretien442110 жыл бұрын
I'm honor to walk behind your footsteps in respect and the blessings you've shared.I have been blessed in my paths by your teaching many times ..your in my prayers always
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Jocelyne..Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@IvanCucchi5 ай бұрын
Io sono italiano,dov'è il rispetto per la natura è poco,sin da bambino ho sempre amato e ammirato gli indiani,e spesso ho sognato di essere uno di loro, appartenere al popolo più magico del mondo, vivere come loro, onore e rispetto a questo popolo immenso ❤
@josette62148 жыл бұрын
A great tribute to the First Nations! A wonderful outstanding performance! Very beautiful video! Meegwetch for this sharing! Many blessings to you!
@virginianemith5 жыл бұрын
They have not been infected with greed and their hearts are strong and pure so I would say they have the 'happy' path - all sorrows were a blessing in disguise for they never lost their humanity. Now they share it with us- a gift - one that i accept with respect and honor of them.
@johnnielawson9 жыл бұрын
Very nice Katy, straight into my 'Native American Music' playlist. Thanks for making this lovely video
@L.I.M.E.LighTnTwilightTarot4 ай бұрын
Thanking you with gratitude and blessing this Day💚
@julieking351710 жыл бұрын
all that is lost.....how the heart breaks....a beautiful peoples
@victoriacumings91668 жыл бұрын
beautiful pics! native girl.
@HiramSanchez-fl4wmАй бұрын
Danza.greafader❤que.ermosadansa
@Mineretta201213 жыл бұрын
The sound of the drums awaken so much passion in me. It is so hard to watch the Ocean dying. They would not listen to our wisdom. Oh the tears that are in my heart,Oh how much it weeps. The earth she is angry. We warned but they did not listen. The trees have lost their luster. The flowers are sad. It makes me weep so. Chemtrails in the sky. I call out to my spirit guide. I call to my teacher guide. White Buffalo please help me. I fly to you. The radiation is coming. Please guide me.
@Samandrosajonesar10 жыл бұрын
Thomoscow you are one of a kind that's for sure. Enjoyed your reply to this video.
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Samandrosa..Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@canibeanymorecute13 жыл бұрын
Every time I listen to tribal music, no matter which type of Tribal, Native American, African, etc. I always feel closer to the spirits of the Earth. Beautiful :) Thank you for sharing :)
@joycejeffries746511 жыл бұрын
Wonderful, beautiful, scenes and music speak to my heart and soul, thank you for posting this.
@godffud10 жыл бұрын
we are all native and belonge to a tribe...wheather it is in ancient england, scotland, alaska, auastrilia, africa....we all are native somewhere...we all are proud to be human and treat all humans as tribal members...
@purplemoonflower1810 жыл бұрын
Beautifully said!
@brodyhill14496 жыл бұрын
Took you asswipes long enough to acknowledge the wrong path you are on and find the Red path to harmony.
@sandydandy92558 жыл бұрын
Very beautiful song love and peace from Sweden
@Akusomcpeith_Felix13 жыл бұрын
A Noble People off the Nobility of Humankind: a touching Music worthy of this People.
@patricialouise73113 ай бұрын
Always liked this amazing music 🎶❤
@blackcrow7774 жыл бұрын
Crow Indian and very proud of all ancestors of all tribes , to me we are all one family , mind , body and spirit . Native lives matter !
@igorst.georgesbutler67834 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Moving compilation..good way 2 greet a morning like today. 🌲
@jackiewilliams470310 жыл бұрын
It wouldn't be a complete fantastic Saturday or any day if I didn't play this. Have the best weekend that you can as I am. Peace & be well to all. Thank you for sharing such beautiful music that goes directly to recharging my soul as well as spirit. Much respect as well.
@LAV3EDEN15 жыл бұрын
I love the sound and the feeling that this music gives to my spirit, it takes me to a different world right away, and it just makes me want to stay there all the time, you are awesome, the Great Spirit bless you!
@maryettashabazz84768 жыл бұрын
I SAY NEVER AGAIN, I TEACH NEVER AGAIN. NEVER MUST WE FORGET
@jamesbowker25338 жыл бұрын
I LOVE listening to THESE songs they make my heart and soul happy and gives me peace when. I'm felling lonely and depressed thank you all who gave these songs for all of us.
@user-gv6rs3yt8p9 жыл бұрын
i live in a place where the roads of today were first buffalo trails, and from what i know the beautiful shawnee lived here. ive found many of their tools and weapons while roaming the woods, and i know this place is sacred ground. i dont need to read it from a book or have a history museum guide tell me what it is or isnt. its essence speaks for itself. and i love this place.
@stonecaf9 жыл бұрын
Yshi Tida Wherever you place your foot, I have stepped before........ the past and future touch.
@DrShawneelazoreDOHHDPhDML9 жыл бұрын
+Yshi Tida Where are you speaking of? I would love to know...our people were from Georgia all the way up through Canada at one time. Thank you for the compliment also by the way. :)
@user-gv6rs3yt8p9 жыл бұрын
+Shawnee Love I'm in Frankfort ky, on the Kentucky river. I wish I knew what your people called this place before it was "Frankfort" I hate that name lol supposedly named after Stephen Frank who was apparently killed in a battle with the natives upon the settlers arriving via the river. so it was called Frank's fort in memory of him. I would rather remember what this beautiful place was before it was plowed and cemented over. many blessings my friend.
@bluffball9 жыл бұрын
+Yshi Tida Do you know of any buffalo trails that I might be able to walk on that were created initially? I'm in Rochester, not too far away from Buffalo and would love to know where I can visit these paths for myself...
@booboojohnson11568 жыл бұрын
I personally know of no trails you can explore you might what to do a search online for one...or call a tourist office to see if they can help you. Hope this is useful. Enjoy the muisic while you can, its relaxing and full of beauty.
@faithhiddenshoes9 жыл бұрын
Nice mix of traditional sounds with a contemporary twist :). Its a beautiful way to pay homage to the first nation peoples.
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Susan...Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@jackiewilliams470310 жыл бұрын
Happy Tuesday although it is gray on the outside it is sunny as well as beautiful on my inside as I reenergize my spirit and once again with a first the pride I feel when ever I go to play this listing of Native American songs that the list continues to grow as does the list of people who love this music as I do . It's healing of the spirit as well as the wisdom from some of the songs that are sung as well as the beautiful scenery that goes with some of the music. With much respect for those who make this beautiful music. as well as those who share it with us. Peace & be well.
@lorriehillier605210 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I to love native American music. My great grandpa used to take more to the powwows when I was a child. I just loved them. So calming and serene.
@damienroberts54010 жыл бұрын
the power and gift of my people
@blackout.X5 жыл бұрын
We thank you and your people for this and your beautiful spirits
@lonemaimburg77847 жыл бұрын
Beautiful Katy Morton. Thank you. Bless you.
@gracefitzgerald32869 жыл бұрын
I'm so grateful for all your sharing you all have inspired me by your truths,your culture,your faith and ability to live in the now,I'm very open to learning all you can share,thank you, grace
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Grace Fitzgerald...Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@ri_jahnesco25565 жыл бұрын
Native music make me feel blessed inside of me. I love the music of you all 💞💖🍷👌💯
@TaskMaster20067 жыл бұрын
Happy Ending We are Still Here !
@robertahorner7597 жыл бұрын
yes we and here we will remain
@bobbiwolfgang6 жыл бұрын
So accurately stated, Katy! My heart bleeds for the lost freedoms of these most beautiful people! They lost their religion, language, and right to live in peace! I can only imagine the difference there would be on this continent if the settlers and Indians would be ONE people together!! A'Ho!🐢
@BoudiccaBlanc15 жыл бұрын
katydidscorner....Thank you for posting this beautiful song and video. :-) It makes me happy to know that I'll be home soon. How I miss my family and the open spaces!
@TheGreyfeather15 жыл бұрын
I fully agree with you, Katydidscorner!! I am also of Cherokee descent and very proud of it, I believe the Lakota Sioux prayer sums it up beautifully...Mitakuye Oyasin...We Are All Related
@fretwellflutes16 жыл бұрын
Very well presented. Good Music and Visual combination. Lisa Fretwell Fretwell Flutes
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@jackiewilliams470310 жыл бұрын
I do indeed consider this a happy Wednesday when I 1st started listening to this play list I believe that there where 179 songs on it& now there are 195 tracks on it I believe that is absolutely fantastic. this is what I listen to mostly but do enjoy all kinds of music. Pace & be well & please keep them coming. Absolutely beautiful.
@rebeccageske939710 жыл бұрын
Wonderfully relaxing and resonates with my spirit.
@petetwells87759 жыл бұрын
This is a beautiful song.I listen to this and other Native American music before i go to bed as it takes away the stress of the day.This is a far better medicine than any pills or potions.
@13musicsks14 жыл бұрын
I love this music... It definately touches the soul.
@esthersaltzman37895 ай бұрын
What a beautiful music I love Native American music flute that is beautiful❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@xxx28585 жыл бұрын
Soy Mexicano, probablemente tengo sangre azteca... pero siento una gran hermandad con esta musica que me estremezco al saber lo grande que aún puede ser toda norteamérica... si reconocemos a los verdaderos hombres y mujeres... a los que se les fue arrebatada la razón, la tierra y la existencia PERO JAMÁS EL AUTENTICO ESPÍRITU...
@hawklady121615 жыл бұрын
As always excellent job!!!!!!!!!! These always make me want to cry. I believe i was Native American in a past life because i just LOVE your people SO MUCH. I try VERY HARD to follow your ways,and i get SO EMOTIONAL when i hear the music.
@DNAblues14 жыл бұрын
Katy, you spend so much time preparing and sharing the wonderful Native American culture. Thank you so much for all you do. I just love this.
@jackiewilliams470310 жыл бұрын
Happy Sunday all. It is so beautiful on my inside so much that I know when I step outside I can already feel it's beauty. As my spirit is in the healing process as I work harder on my cause as well as justice and the human rights. That the perception of who has them and to what extent is really messed up. No matter what we look like nor what we have to experience as either Elderly nor Disabled people are treated as though we are second to third class citizen's. Right here in the USA where people generally treat us this way on a daily basis. I draw a lot of positive healing for my spirit as well i my heart and soul. As I prepare to help educate those who believe that other's are just as important as they are. We are all equal's even when people decide that it is OK to mistreat us. Do't forget when we loose one ability the other's become stronger. I'm so proud to see that every time I come to this selection of Native American music it has grown. Peace & be well to all. Much respect to those who both make this beautiful music as well as those who listen and respect this wonderful music.
@kevinmnich15109 жыл бұрын
Sacred and beautiful and so very real. Our proud Lakota and Comanche heritage as well as all of the Plains Tribes and Nations. Buffalo is a sacred creature bestowed upon the People from The Great Spirit. Thank God that we still have small corner remnants of the once endless prairie and plains where echoes of the great herds of the past can still be heard in the wind and the grasses. Thank Creator that we can still hear the songs of The People, the meadowlark, and Old Man Coyote. Preserve our prairies! Remember the Buffalo! Wado!
@sheilamccormick90227 жыл бұрын
although I don't have enough Indian in me to even fill a thimble the music calls to me and the Rhythm and the meaning and hopefully one day I will be reborn as a Native American not just someone who enjoys the music and the songs in the words but actually become a Native American for those of you who are Native Americans you should be proud you have survived so much you have done so much for this country and I pray that when it's time for the human race to come to an end I hope that God will allow you and your peoples to survive the rest of us don't deserve it but you do that is my true wish my only prayer
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Sheila..McCormick..Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@BoudiccaBlanc14 жыл бұрын
Katydidscorner, You've made many beautiful and inspiring videos! I thank you for all of them. This one is my favorite of my favorites! Thank you for posting it! May the Great Spirit bless you for being so generous with your time and talent!
@breffnipark14 жыл бұрын
Excellent piece as always Katie ! x
@JaniceCarter-ws7lu5 ай бұрын
Making eye contact with someone who sees things the way that you see them and feels the same way about certain situations.. The rhythm of your hearts will block out everything around you Keep God first🦅
@inbigfootsbackyard14 жыл бұрын
Osiyo, May the warm winds of heaven blow softly on your home. And the Great Spirit bless all who enter there. May your moccasins make happy tracks in many snows. And may the rainbow always touch your shoulder. Peace, Love, and Respect.
@luvlylady5515 жыл бұрын
I love all native american music..i have a bit of indian blood from my great grandparents..and i always feel so relaxed when i hear this type of music..its great..hope u bring more
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Linda.H....Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@MagdaSantos99912 жыл бұрын
My love and gratitude. I share nature meditations, including the drum, as well as storytelling and other goodies on my blog/website. It was a pleasure to find this video and listen to its heart. Even a moment with the ancestors' music can feed the spirit. Thank you!
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Magda Santos...Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@narartes30005 ай бұрын
Música linda! 🥁🔥🎵
@boasnovas604710 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Katy, for share.
@GoodMusics20138 жыл бұрын
Wow the music is so powerful put its the picture that speak volumes to my soul and my heart. Thank you
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@afzkhokha15 жыл бұрын
sooooooooooooper you did a great job. please apply some more
@bobbiwolfgang6 жыл бұрын
Your comments are right on target! The most poorly treated of ALL the races and yet the most peaceful. I will cry out for justice for them all of my days!! 🐂🦅🐢
@cassandramitch87938 жыл бұрын
Awesome song and video! I love and respect all Native American tribes. Natives rule!
@attysthoughts32536 жыл бұрын
natives suck. they segregated themselves to pray to some imaginary tree god and put feathers in their hair. and as a result they're the least successfull people in the americas.
@Janellnativegirl182814 жыл бұрын
I love it!! Beautiful!! You definitely captured the full essences of Native American culture and it is expressed with amazing passion!!
@dobritaalmasi15 жыл бұрын
Wonderful! Is the rhythm of my heart too! Thank you my friend!
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Dobrita Almasi...Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@jlawahp710 жыл бұрын
yearning for the return of times past.
@ekennye10 жыл бұрын
Me Too, Sometimes I feel my ancestors all around me..That is such an awesome feeling
@jlawahp710 жыл бұрын
:(...but they live on in us....and in our children...it was my ancestors and you and those of one spirit ...made me realize ...all the religion that controlled me...no longer had me...I let it go...and returned unto myself...us....and what was taken from them by religion....I hold no hatred in my heart towards it....well I did always since I was a child....I will never understand why it happened and grieve over what was or could have been....some say you we cant look back...but how can we not...mourn...and long for the way of life that calls out to us by spirit and blood....only an Indian would understand....I love you sister
@ekennye10 жыл бұрын
Jerrae Lyn I love you, i see more and more people finding that spirit that unites us and shaking the shackles of control off and that is a good thing
@IAMUNUAMI10 жыл бұрын
Jerrae Lyn I understand all so well, and I'm not a Indian. Namasté, peacefully my sisters with love.
@scottflint42693 жыл бұрын
Hi, the figures better than you can imagine .
@janeymitchell98982 жыл бұрын
I loved this. I always listen to the music and dances the Natives share.
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Janey Mitchell..Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@early3632 ай бұрын
Im one with the land, animals, sky and spirits ❤
@USA1BODYSHOP14 жыл бұрын
this is a beautiful video, well done Katy!
@searats2011 жыл бұрын
I am a white man and I believe in indigenous philosophies, and I am trying my best heal myself, as you say... I truly admire the traditional indigenous ways of life - such respect for nature and our Mother (Earth)...and respect for eachother too. This is the way of the future! On another note, let us hope that one day your people are treated the same as mine...I am truly sorry for the injustices that our governments and my people have inflicted upon you and your people. Cheers my friend!
@SuperJcrane13 жыл бұрын
need soothing cd like this thank jo crane
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊
@ChristopherLambXFiles9 жыл бұрын
LEGEND OF THE BEGINNING Chewing Black Bones, a respected Blackfeet elder, told Ella E. Clark the following creation myth in 1953. Clark later published the account in her book, Indian Legends from the Northern Rockies. Old Man came from the south, making the mountains, the prairies, and the forests as he passed along, making the birds and the animals also. He traveled northward making things as he went, putting red paint in the ground here and there --arranging the world as we see it today. He made the Milk River and crossed it; being tired, he went up on a little hill and lay down to rest. As he lay on his back, stretched out on the grass with his arms extended, he marked his figure with stones. You can see those rocks today, they show the shape of his body, legs, arms and hair. Going on north after he had rested, he stumbled over a knoll and fell down on his knees. He said aloud, "You are a bad thing to make me stumble so." Then he raised up two large buttes there and named them the Knees. They are called the Knees to this day. He went on farther north, and with some of the rocks he carried with him he built the Sweet Grass Hills. Old Man covered the plains with grass for the animals to feed on. He marked off a piece of ground and in it made all kinds of roots and berries to grow: camas, carrots, turnips, bitterroot, sarvisberries, bull-berries, cherries, plums, and rosebuds. He planted trees, and he put all kinds of animals on the ground. When he created the bighorn sheep with its big head and horns, he made it out on the prairie. But it did not travel easily on the prairie; it was awkward and could not go fast. So Old Man took it by its horns, led it up into the mountain, and turned it loose. There the bighorn skipped about among the rocks and went up fearful places with ease. So Old Man said to it, "This is the kind of place that suits you; this is what you are fitted for, the rocks, and the mountains." While he was in the mountains, he made the antelope out of dirt and turned it loose to see how it would do. It ran so fast that it fell over some rocks and hurt itself. Seeing that the mountains were not the place for it, Old Man took the antelope down to the prairie and turned it loose. When he saw it running away fast and gracefully, he said, "This is what you are suited to, the broad prairie." One day Old Man decided that he would make a woman and a child. So he formed them both of clay, the woman and the child, her son. After he had molded the clay in human shape, he said to it,"You must be people." And then he covered it up and went away. The next morning he went to the place, took off the covering, looked at the images, and said "Arise and walk." They did so. They walked down to the river with their maker, and then he told them that his name was NAPI, Old Man. This is how we came to be people. It is he who made us. The first people were poor and naked, and they did not know how to do anything for themselves. Old Man showed them the roots and berries and said "You can eat these." Then he pointed to certain trees, "When the bark of these trees is young and tender, it is good. Then you can peel it off and eat it." He told the people that the animals also should be their food. "These are your herds," he said. "All these little animals that live on the ground -- squirrels, rabbits, skunks, beavers, are good to eat. You need not fear to eat their flesh. All the birds that fly, these too, I have made for you, so that you can eat of their flesh." Old Man took the first people over the prairies and through the forests, then the swamps to show them the different plants he had created. He told them what herbs were good for sicknesses, saying often, "The root of this herb or the leaf of this herb, if gathered in a certain month of the year, is good for certain sickness." In that way the people learned the power of all herbs. Then he showed them how to make weapons with which to kill the animals for their food. First, he went out and cut some sarvisberry shoots, brought them in, and peeled the bark off them. He took one of the larger shoots, flattened it, tied a string to it, and thus made a bow. Then he caught one of the birds he had made, took feathers from its wing, split them, and tied them to a shaft of wood. At first he tied four feathers along the shaft, and with this bow sent the arrow toward its mark. But he found that it did not fly well. When he used only three feathers, it went straight to the mark. Then he went out and began to break sharp pieces off the stones. When he tied them at the ends of his arrows, he found that the black flint stones, and some white flint, made the best arrow points. When the people had learned to make bow and arrows, Old Man taught them how to shoot animals and birds. Because it is not healthful to eat animals' flesh raw, he showed the first people how to make fire. He gathered soft, dry rotten driftwood and made a punk of it. Then he found a piece of hard wood and drilled a hole in it with an arrow point. He gave the first man a pointed piece of hard wood and showed him how to roll it between his hands until sparks came out and the punk caught fire. Then he showed the people how to cook the meat of the animals they had killed and how to eat it. He told them to get a certain kind of stone that was on the land, while he found a harder stone. With the hard stone he had them hollow out the softer one and so make a kettle. Thus, they made their dishes. Old Man told the first people how to get spirit power: "Go away by yourself and go to sleep. Something will come to you in your dream that will help you. It may be some animal. Whatever this animal tells you in your sleep, you must do. Obey it. Be guided by it. If later you want help, if you are traveling alone and cry aloud for help, your prayer will be answered. It may be by an eagle, perhaps by a buffalo, perhaps by a bear. Whatever animal hears your prayer you must listen to it." That was how the first people got along in the world, by the power given to them in their dreams. After this, Old Man kept on traveling north. Many of the animals that he had created followed him. They understood when he spoke to them, and they were his servants. When he got to the north point of the Porcupine Mountains, he made some more mud images of people, blew his breath upon them, and they became people, men and women. They asked him, "What are we to eat?" By way of answer, Old Man made many images of clay in the form of buffalo. Then he blew breath upon them and they stood up. When he made signs to them, they started to run. Then he said to the people, "Those animals--buffalo--are your food." "But how can we kill them?" the people asked. "I will show you," he answered. He took them to a cliff and told them to build rock piles: "Now hide behind these piles of rocks," he said. "I will lead the buffalo this way. When they are opposite you, rise up." After telling them what to do, he started toward the herd of buffalo. When he called the animals, they started to run toward him, and they followed him until they were inside the piles of rock. Then Old Man dropped back. As the people rose up, the buffalo ran in a straight line and jumped over the cliff. "Go down and take the flesh of those animals," said Old Man. The people tried to tear the limbs apart, but they could not. Old Man went to the edge of the cliff, broke off some pieces with sharp edges, and told the people to cut the flesh with these rocks. They obeyed him. When they had skinned the buffalo, they set up some poles and put the hides on them. Thus they made a shelter to sleep under. After Old Man had taught the people all these things, he started off again, traveling north until he came to where the Bow and Elbow Rivers meet. There he made some more people and taught them the same things. From there he went farther north. When he had gone almost to the Red Deer River, he was so tired that he lay down on a hill. The form of his body can be seen there yet, on the top of the hill where he rested. When he awoke from his sleep, he traveled farther north until he came to a high hill. He climbed to the top of it and there he sat down to rest. As he gazed over the country, he was greatly pleased by it. Looking at the steep hill below him, he said to himself, "This is a fine place for sliding. I will have some fun." And he began to slide down the hill. The marks where he slid are to be seen yet, and the place is known to all the Blackfeet tribes as "Old ManÕs Sliding Ground." Old Man can never die. Long ago he left the Blackfeet and went away toward the west, disappearing in the mountains. Before he started, he said to the people, "I will always take care of you, and some day I will return." Even today some people think that he spoke the truth and that when he comes back he will bring with him the buffalo, which they believe the white men have hidden. Others remember that before he left them he said that when he returned he would find them a different people. They would be living in a different world, he said, from that which he had created for them and had taught them to live in. Jack Crow ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^
@user-gv6rs3yt8p9 жыл бұрын
cool thank you for sharing
@vinyl887820 күн бұрын
This is so Beautiful makes me so proud to be part Native American. Cherokee and Choctaw on my paternal Grandma's side
@TheNavajo8810 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I listen to this music at least once a month so that I may listen within my mind while I run. Again Thank You.
@OrangeFenix199611 жыл бұрын
i´m white , red hair and blue eyes ,born in south america....but .i´m sure that my feet walked in those lands long long ago...this music and all the native american culture is in my inner heart....i agree with you ...receive a peace wishes from the , the "condor" nations of the south
@elainebsanches15 жыл бұрын
It is unbelieveble how things are changing. I feel that Earth is going through a changing process. Now we listen to indian songs and we respect them. I really hope that the power of love can dominate the world.
@marcusgorski32852 жыл бұрын
Elaine Benetti...Hello 👋 how are you doing? Hope you’re having a good day I was dropping a comment when I come across your profile.I must say you are a very beautiful woman,I liked what you shared , Although we are not friends on here. .May the lord be with you and your family 🙏🕊🕊