Serdar, quit projecting an identity that was consolidated in Yugoslavia after 1945 at the expence of the Bulgarian one on others. They are not interested, dear Turkish propagandist.
This is pure Greek Macedonian dance; even the headresses the dancers wear dates back to Alexander the Great and has nothing to do with western Bulgarians.
@@velesiljanoski8565 you slow or something? I said it's a Macedonian dance, an ancient Greek one. But thank you for responding in Bulgarian written on a Serbian typewriter.
No exactly. music style is of turkish origin probably. Such music (and dances) is in eastern thrace and it's made/danced by turks, which surprisingly are more similar to gheg albanian ones. Albanians arent the only ones in the balkans and certainly not the ones who have pure traditions, because like every culture, there are foreign influences. Though, to be fair, maybe you are somewhat right, if this dance is borrowed from North Macedonia then theres definitely albanian elements, but it's far from "pure" albanian.
@@Dinosaur315 your whole Thrace has bulgarian influences, your Macedonia has slavic-Macedonian influences and the Rest of Greece has turkish & aromanian influences. When I hear typical Greek music it sounds very ottoman like;) so your country is the best example for that „No culture is pure“ statement:)
ΕΝΔΟΞΟ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΟ ΡΟΥΜΛΟΥΚΙ !!!! ΕΥΓΕ !!!! ΠΟΛΥ ΩΡΑΙΑ ΠΑΡΟΥΣΙΑ ΚΑΙ ΕΝΔΥΜΑΤΟΛΟΓΙΚΑ ΚΑΙ ΧΟΡΕΥΤΙΚΑ !!!!!
This is pure ethnic Macedonian dance!!!
Serdar, quit projecting an identity that was consolidated in Yugoslavia after 1945 at the expence of the Bulgarian one on others. They are not interested, dear Turkish propagandist.
This is pure Greek Macedonian dance; even the headresses the dancers wear dates back to Alexander the Great and has nothing to do with western Bulgarians.
@@Paulynycда македонско оро.
Can you read? I said pure Greek Macedonian, not western Bulgarian@@velesiljanoski8565
@@velesiljanoski8565 you slow or something? I said it's a Macedonian dance, an ancient Greek one. But thank you for responding in Bulgarian written on a Serbian typewriter.
This is pure ethnic Albanian music,dance !
No exactly. music style is of turkish origin probably. Such music (and dances) is in eastern thrace and it's made/danced by turks, which surprisingly are more similar to gheg albanian ones. Albanians arent the only ones in the balkans and certainly not the ones who have pure traditions, because like every culture, there are foreign influences.
Though, to be fair, maybe you are somewhat right, if this dance is borrowed from North Macedonia then theres definitely albanian elements, but it's far from "pure" albanian.
@@Dinosaur315this is pure slavic Macedonian dance
@@Dinosaur315 th-cam.com/video/1j9hGmPMDzg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=LwNnTQ6qAfrCHCNr
It is greek dance from imathia greece
@@prodrommoskafetzis639 but this is „dopion“ music. I can‘t believe that this is pure Greek
Original Macedonian Dance 🇲🇰 greeks have their sirtaki and nothing else
No culture is pure, and thats even more true in your case 😂 you literally have a cultural amalgamation of albanian, turkish and bulgarian influences.
Keto Jane valle kufi maqedoni edhe kisava musiken e Ka keshtu me daulle
@@Dinosaur315 your whole Thrace has bulgarian influences, your Macedonia has slavic-Macedonian influences and the Rest of Greece has turkish & aromanian influences. When I hear typical Greek music it sounds very ottoman like;) so your country is the best example for that „No culture is pure“ statement:)
@@nekeljonaluli3768 I don‘t undertstand shiptarian language
@@vasilmirmidonski2740
You better learn it, esp when your artificial country falls apart and half of it goes to Albania.