Swedish born and bred child to immigrant parents here :-) Karpe's lyrics and this particular song really touch a cord with me. Growing up in the Bronx of Stockholm to a highly educated single mother of six, both Magdi and Chirag (the two band members of Karpe) feel like old classmates to me. So proud of them. What they mention in their lyrics is so true to so many of us. My mum who was highly educated was once asked to give her thumbprint as the swedish nurses assumed she could not write. These and countless other stories make up our reality as children to immigrants. My swedish may be better than native Swedes but to this day, people take me as being an immigrant, due to my looks and chosen appearance :-) Apart from Outlandish and Karpe, we have really not had such a high calibre Scandinavian group for decades, who speak the word of the common masses. Otroligt bra gjort och valdigt emotionellt, Karpe.
Thank you, Jeff for being brave enough to put this on your channel💚Og godt forslag, Andreas! My parents are not immigrants, but Karpe means a lot for children of immigrants in Norway, and I have grown to discover and appreciate them. Karpe are experimental. Their previous album sound very different (SAS/PLUS). In this album “Omar Sheriff” they mix Norwegian lyrics with Arab, Hindi, English, French, Gujarati and “kebab-Norwegian”, and ended up calling it diaspora pop. In an interview they comment on how their songs connect ethnic Norwegians with those with a immigrant background, because to understand their entire lyrics one have to ask each other to get the cultural references behind words and expressions. In October 2020 100 people of their hard core fans were invited to a un unique experience in a big house they bought in the city of Skien. Press not invited. One girl said “it’s the first time in Norway anyone has pronounced my name correctly.” Another said “They actually traced up my grandmother’s recipe to my favorite meal, and that is what they served me.” Would highly appreciate it if you would react to more of their songs from the same concert and album, and their previous.
These concerts will for sure go down in the history books as the most important cultural event for young Norwegians in the last 10 years, if not longer.
I love this too, tears every time. Both the message and the performance are touching. If you like Emilie Nicolas, the singer, you should listen to her performing her own song, Feel fine, a live session. She is something else!
My fav reaction. I came to Norway as a refugee, Karpe is not just my voice, they are the guardians, the protectors of my kids right to be Norwegian and to belong. Thanks Jeff.
As a "pure bread" Norwegian from the extreme north part of the country; yes. This is still what we all feel. We love Karpe, we love the somalians, the newly embedded ukranians, the indians (that has the only good restaurant in town), the afghans, the ethiopians, whatever. Karpe is a great band left leaning band, love their lyrics, their messages. Lets all unite, but let the children of immigrants still be able to bring some customs and family values to us. It will enrichen us in the end
w👀w! This really turned the mirror on me being a "true" Norwegian, with all our quirks. 😢 I felt how it would be if I were "them"... Music/sound is one of the most powerful there is. So much healing, yet so 💔
I guess it may be understood as political. The rappers often are. To me it is, in e deeper level, as much a love song. A love song to their parents that came to create a better life. Even in last part when Magdi raps/reads all the whys regarding parents in part remaining in the country and culture they came from. I believe this aspect is what makes it appeal to so many. I love the way they play with Norwegian, English, arabic and i think karata (may be wrong there). It is also often, especially in later years, a mix of rap, pop, almost classical, arab and indian traditions which I find very interesting and unique.
He is singing about his father who probably never felt at home in Norway and didn`t have the ability or didn`t get the chance to integrate with our culture. I ama 54 year old Norwegian and I remember when Norway was 99% white people. The change happened relatively quickly and I believe the politicians could have done more for the immigrants to make us Norwegians understand the culture of the immigrants rather than expect they would just suddenly become Norwegian after a while in our country. It was naive and it was ignorant. We have had our share of conflicts because of that but with time, we have slowly gotten to love their cultures and have more or less abandoned the old principal that immigrants has to leave their culture behind to assimilate. To me, that`s very much what this song is about. It`s most likely about many other things but as a white Norwegian, I understand how difficult it must have been for these first generation of immigrants, coming to a foreign country who basically didn`t care about their culture.
You rule! You and everone on that stage! Beautiful music and lyrics! Make love not war has never been been more relevant and important and this song and performance is all about love and peaceful strife. 👏👏👏🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼❤️
To me, they write about life, strife, rewards, current issues … I just love when artists write lyrics worth listening to. When done eell, I dont have to agree with everything said. I enjoy democracy and freedom of speech, and when written as well as this it is pure bliss to me. Have a great day, whatever each and every one of you believe in. 😊
i love that genuine reaction to another language and cultures and music haha its even emotional to watch you see what we see from the perspective im viewing you from. i would love to see more from karpe from this album they even have a playlistt on their channel with the whole album i also believe its english sub titles because they want the world to know and see. in norway we dont tend to be on internationall jimmy show or you name it i know this is theyr dream to make their parents rpoud and speak for them self and the others and specially with the western cutlure that have been very harsh on imigrants for this decade and still changing narratives. i loved it thanks again
im pretty sure the female vocal is emilie nicholas. check her out. listen to Melancholia. Edit: Im sure it was Emilie now, as they said so at the end. :)
Hi, I love your reactions. You should watch their latest colaboration with coke studio pakistan, piya piya calling, both the official video and the magical journey part 1
I speak the language and this group just spit out randoms words that acctualy don't mean much. It kind of works because poeple will put a meaning to it that fits them
No, they don't. Arguably, they don't sing well-formed and grammatically correct sentences, but the meaning of their "random" words is quite clear. The text is about class/social mobility, the inner conflict of trying to be a good son/daughter to someone who comes from a different culture while at the same time wanting to be like the other kids on the street, and so on. Jeff got the gist of it in his summary!
No they dont, it makes perfect sense - they are just multilingual, using words from other languages. For example, baraf means snow in Hindi/urdu, which are the dialects of India and Pakistan respectively. “Brown feet in the snow” is their way of saying “immigrants in Norway”.
@@aqad thats the same interpitation as me, but also heard someone say it mean that the feet are dirty since in norway they used to wash in snow. what about "put the heart in coldwater like salmalaks?"
Swedish born and bred child to immigrant parents here :-) Karpe's lyrics and this particular song really touch a cord with me. Growing up in the Bronx of Stockholm to a highly educated single mother of six, both Magdi and Chirag (the two band members of Karpe) feel like old classmates to me. So proud of them. What they mention in their lyrics is so true to so many of us. My mum who was highly educated was once asked to give her thumbprint as the swedish nurses assumed she could not write. These and countless other stories make up our reality as children to immigrants. My swedish may be better than native Swedes but to this day, people take me as being an immigrant, due to my looks and chosen appearance :-) Apart from Outlandish and Karpe, we have really not had such a high calibre Scandinavian group for decades, who speak the word of the common masses. Otroligt bra gjort och valdigt emotionellt, Karpe.
Thank you, Jeff for being brave enough to put this on your channel💚Og godt forslag, Andreas! My parents are not immigrants, but Karpe means a lot for children of immigrants in Norway, and I have grown to discover and appreciate them. Karpe are experimental. Their previous album sound very different (SAS/PLUS). In this album “Omar Sheriff” they mix Norwegian lyrics with Arab, Hindi, English, French, Gujarati and “kebab-Norwegian”, and ended up calling it diaspora pop. In an interview they comment on how their songs connect ethnic Norwegians with those with a immigrant background, because to understand their entire lyrics one have to ask each other to get the cultural references behind words and expressions. In October 2020 100 people of their hard core fans were invited to a un unique experience in a big house they bought in the city of Skien. Press not invited. One girl said “it’s the first time in Norway anyone has pronounced my name correctly.” Another said “They actually traced up my grandmother’s recipe to my favorite meal, and that is what they served me.” Would highly appreciate it if you would react to more of their songs from the same concert and album, and their previous.
Wow. Fantastisk 🙏
These concerts will for sure go down in the history books as the most important cultural event for young Norwegians in the last 10 years, if not longer.
What a voice on that female singer. Wow! So so beautiful .
I’m glad it was subtitled so everyone can understand the lyrics
Emilie Nicolas :)
Hope to see more of Karpe from you. They are truly a treasure, yes.
I love this too, tears every time. Both the message and the performance are touching. If you like Emilie Nicolas, the singer, you should listen to her performing her own song, Feel fine, a live session. She is something else!
Oh my heart…this performance always, always touches me and gets me teary-eyed. Beautiful on so many levels. Great to see you experience it Jeff. ❤
My fav reaction. I came to Norway as a refugee, Karpe is not just my voice, they are the guardians, the protectors of my kids right to be Norwegian and to belong. Thanks Jeff.
@@fadlabi738 thank you brother 🫶
As a "pure bread" Norwegian from the extreme north part of the country; yes. This is still what we all feel. We love Karpe, we love the somalians, the newly embedded ukranians, the indians (that has the only good restaurant in town), the afghans, the ethiopians, whatever. Karpe is a great band left leaning band, love their lyrics, their messages. Lets all unite, but let the children of immigrants still be able to bring some customs and family values to us. It will enrichen us in the end
Thank you Jeff! Glad you liked it!:-) Not sure that you saw it, but it was Emilie Nicolas that sang.🙏🏼👌😊
Oh wow I didn’t see that!
Thank you as mentioned. I am 100% Norwegian, but this brings tears
Yess finally emilie deserves more recognition she's fantastic 😍
w👀w!
This really turned the mirror on me being a "true" Norwegian, with all our quirks. 😢
I felt how it would be if I were "them"...
Music/sound is one of the most powerful there is.
So much healing, yet so 💔
I guess it may be understood as political. The rappers often are. To me it is, in e deeper level, as much a love song. A love song to their parents that came to create a better life. Even in last part when Magdi raps/reads all the whys regarding parents in part remaining in the country and culture they came from. I believe this aspect is what makes it appeal to so many.
I love the way they play with Norwegian, English, arabic and i think karata (may be wrong there). It is also often, especially in later years, a mix of rap, pop, almost classical, arab and indian traditions which I find very interesting and unique.
I love that you did this,and with such joy.They should be moore seen and heard througout this world.!❤
He is singing about his father who probably never felt at home in Norway and didn`t have the ability or didn`t get the chance to integrate with our culture. I ama 54 year old Norwegian and I remember when Norway was 99% white people. The change happened relatively quickly and I believe the politicians could have done more for the immigrants to make us Norwegians understand the culture of the immigrants rather than expect they would just suddenly become Norwegian after a while in our country. It was naive and it was ignorant. We have had our share of conflicts because of that but with time, we have slowly gotten to love their cultures and have more or less abandoned the old principal that immigrants has to leave their culture behind to assimilate. To me, that`s very much what this song is about. It`s most likely about many other things but as a white Norwegian, I understand how difficult it must have been for these first generation of immigrants, coming to a foreign country who basically didn`t care about their culture.
❤❤
You rule! You and everone on that stage! Beautiful music and lyrics! Make love not war has never been been more relevant and important and this song and performance is all about love and peaceful strife. 👏👏👏🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼❤️
Thank you for your work jonas
Wonderful song, wonderful reaction! Thank you! One of my favourite groups ❤
To me, they write about life, strife, rewards, current issues … I just love when artists write lyrics worth listening to. When done eell, I dont have to agree with everything said. I enjoy democracy and freedom of speech, and when written as well as this it is pure bliss to me. Have a great day, whatever each and every one of you believe in. 😊
i love that genuine reaction to another language and cultures and music haha its even emotional to watch you see what we see from the perspective im viewing you from. i would love to see more from karpe from this album they even have a playlistt on their channel with the whole album i also believe its english sub titles because they want the world to know and see. in norway we dont tend to be on internationall jimmy show or you name it i know this is theyr dream to make their parents rpoud and speak for them self and the others and specially with the western cutlure that have been very harsh on imigrants for this decade and still changing narratives. i loved it thanks again
Thank you ….. just thank you🙏🏼💜❤️💚💛🤍🌈🕯️🥹🥹
As a etnic Norwegian. I reacted the same way at the consert. Growned up with forenrs and got to know all of thies cultures.
im pretty sure the female vocal is emilie nicholas. check her out. listen to Melancholia. Edit: Im sure it was Emilie now, as they said so at the end. :)
Karpe❤❤
Hi, I love your reactions. You should watch their latest colaboration with coke studio pakistan, piya piya calling, both the official video and the magical journey part 1
Thank you ❤❤❤
❤
Such a touching reaction to a most wonderful and heartfelt song, brilliant. Please check out piya calling, coke studio Pakistan
If you watch their other song, ya baba, you will see all of the audience going crazy
Thanks🙏❤️
react to more karpe i beg u! react to "spis min syvende sans" or "salmalaks"
Could you consider making a reaction video to the song «Her» by Karpe? Much love and support from Norway ☺️☺️
Please react coke studio Pakistan season 15 song Piya piya calling ft karpe❤
I speak the language and this group just spit out randoms words that acctualy don't mean much. It kind of works because poeple will put a meaning to it that fits them
No, they don't. Arguably, they don't sing well-formed and grammatically correct sentences, but the meaning of their "random" words is quite clear. The text is about class/social mobility, the inner conflict of trying to be a good son/daughter to someone who comes from a different culture while at the same time wanting to be like the other kids on the street, and so on. Jeff got the gist of it in his summary!
No they dont, it makes perfect sense - they are just multilingual, using words from other languages. For example, baraf means snow in Hindi/urdu, which are the dialects of India and Pakistan respectively. “Brown feet in the snow” is their way of saying “immigrants in Norway”.
@@aqad thats the same interpitation as me, but also heard someone say it mean that the feet are dirty since in norway they used to wash in snow.
what about "put the heart in coldwater like salmalaks?"
would love to you see dabble in some south asian music via Coke Studio Pakistan. Think your audience and you will enjoy the reactions.