This was a lovely video... If you intend to make a follow-up video (or maybe you already have) regarding the extraordinary muscial creativity that has come out of Portugal, then you will no doubt soon be mentioning Madredeus. You may have already heard their exquisite musicianship coupling unparalleled compositional genius with superbe singing talent without being traditional Fado ( I choose my words carefully). I won't mention names, there are other bands and individuals of immense talent, but most would agree Madredeus really occupies a special place in Portuguese music since the 80's.
Thank you for recognizing and appreciating our existence, history and culture. You are special and I am truly honored that you have choosen to live thru music, amongst us.
Dom Dinis was also known as "O Lavrador" (The Farmer) for ordering the plantation of pine trees near the coast, to protect it of erosion, then used later in ship construction. Dom Duarte Pio is the current heir to the throne, married with Isabel de Herédia. their descendants are Afonso, Maria and Dinis. they still are very respected and loved by all portuguese, yet very wise in keeping themselves outside media focus and thus not widely known by foreigners.
Thank you! What a journey through time: architecture, music, musicians, and the spirit of the people, so exuberant, creative, reaching toward freedom. Love this awesome collage of events and architecture, and musical inspiration.
Thanks for the presentation. Im first generation of Portuguese and Italian. I was surprised you touched the subject of Hawaii...very few people knows about. Obrigadinho!
The very best video that I already has seen. I am a portuguese guy and I think this is not a five stars video but 10 or 20 stars video. Congratulations. I'm so proud about what you mentioned in this presentation...
I love your videos, the way you show and share the culture and history of Portugal is amazing. Btw, a band called Petrus Castrus is one of the most underrated bands of the country, it was censored during the dictatorship and has been forgotten to this day.
Thank for talking about music and linking it to the culture of my country. I think it is an excelent way to represent a part of the people's soul. It would be great if you take the oportunity to do the same with all the cultures that portugual was in contact with. There are so many and all over the world. Throwing random chaotic labels that are only related by their history with portugal, and the mutual cultural influence, like Spain, europe, Moors, africa, india, ottoman, indonesia, china, japan, america, etc So many music and people to discover.
Lovely video. You seem to truly understand Portugal's soul. Look into Canção do Mar (Song of the Sea) arranged by Guilherme Inês (my father) sung by Dulce Pontes. It was the main title song in the movie Primal Fear with Richard Gere. It's now one of the 6 portuguese songs chosen to be part of Cancioneiro da União Europeia. I would love to know your thoughts on the song. All the best ❤
@musicianslife360 I should have posted the link 🙂 th-cam.com/video/v_2fyB4dj4U/w-d-xo.htmlsi=n8O9cv451X_MUU-f I am currently shooting a documentary film about my father's music. He played with Zeca Afonso, Paulo de Carvalho and Júlio Pereira, all featured in your video. This was a groundbreaking moment for his career and portuguese music as well. It's our unofficial anthem. I hope you enjoy it.
Thank you for this delightful history. Part of my heritage is Portuguese. My great grandparents moved to California from the Azores. My dad and his father were born in California. Dad's stepmother insisted on Portuguese being spoken in the home, so Dad always had a bit of an accent. I never learned the language, but our family did attend Our Lady of Fatima celebrations. I have an MHz subscription, which allows me to "travel" to many places. One series I watched not too long ago was Hidden Theories, taking place in Lisbon. ⤵️ A note: the captions and then transcript don't capture some of the terms you use, such as the term for the blue tiles. I have a severe hearing loss, so I couldn't make it out.
Love the video and how you connect history to the music culture. So glad we found you channel. We moving to Lisbon in January and your insights are helpful. Thanks.
😎😎😎 DON'T FORGET THAT PORTUGAL IS THE ONLY COUNTRY WITH THE MOST GREAT NUMBER OF DIFFERENT CLASSICAL MUSIC COMPOSERS SUCH AS : * Francisco Antonio DE ALMEIDA (born before Amadeus MOZART), * João DE SOUSA CARVALHO, * Marcos PORTUGAL who composed about forty operas, * BRAGA SANTOS, * Antonio TEIXEIRA, * Francisco DE LACERDA, * Luis DE FREITAS BRANCO, * Fernando LOPES GRAÇA, * Rui COELHO, * José VIANA DA MOTA, * Luis COSTA, * Antonio FRAGOSO, * João Lourenço REBELO, * Domingos BOMTEMPO, * Carlos SEIXAS, * LEAL MOREIRA, * ...
Well you may not know but there is another important genre of music in Portugal which "Vila Morena" shares. It is "Cante Alentejano" and is a Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO
Congratulations on this brief history of Portuguese music. I don't know what the themes of the next videos that you will be, but I would like to highlight Marta Pereira da Costa in two videos one in "Tiny Desk Concert" and another in "Millenium stage" at Kennedy Center and in this particulary concert at 23 minutes timeline you can listen to portuguese music (that make my skin blow up) followed by a song that you will reconize and than she explain the razon, also I would like to indicate Gisela João in "Sr. Extraterrestre" and this is a fado music but not melancolic and the lyrics are intuitive with the cartoons. Again thks for the video
I would like remember also Ana Moura in "Dia de Folga" also a fado but not melancolic and with humor. you coming from Nashville, I would recommend "Quinta do Bill in no trilho do Sol" or "Quinta do Bill in Voa".
So.. Willie Nelson is the modern day equivilant of Dom Dinis? 😉 I saw you put him in there in the row of pictures of minstrals (2:31). Beautiful made video! Looking at the way things go in several countries around the world, revolutionary songs will be of major importance the coming years.....
Beautiful! Sad to see our country being destroyed by corrupt politicians and people that just forgot where we came from who made us and what we are. Thanks for reminding us.
Thank you for watching! No country is perfect, as we know, but hopefully when greatness is highlighted, it can inspire and encourage those kinds of moments to flourish.
4:25 - The first wave of migration from the Azores and Madeira to Hawaii was only in the 19th century, so it could never have been in one of the early ships from the Age of Discoveries.
We knew that we were jumping ahead chronologically at that point, but we wanted to make the connection--that it was due to Portugal's discovery and habitation of Madeira that the ukelele came to be!
@@musicianslife360 - I understand but just as the wording confused me, it might have confused others who don't know about Portugal's history as well as I do. 🙂
We are referring to the settlements of the Celts, Lusitanians, Romans, etc.,-- those who left structures that we can still see today. They occupied the land that is now known as Portugal and contributed to its culture, landscape, and architecture. In the U.S., we have no structures like these that are thousands of years old.
Well, Portugal is old even by European country standards but not 2000 years old. It is about 840 years old. I don't really know what Alliance with England you are referring to, but the Treaty of Windsor had already been established in 1386, give or take. However, I did enjoy the video .
We're not talking about Portugal as an established nation, but as a settled place, which occurred even before the Roman Empire. The Celts, Pre-Celts, Lusitanians, and so on, had some of the oldest settlements in Europe. Sorry for any confusion!
@musicianslife360 well, fair enough, although that starts to become a bit too vague for my personal taste. For many reasons, including current political ones, I like to make these distinctions as clear as possible (as much as history can allow).
@@musicianslife360 - Also, the moors never took over Portugal because Portugal didn't even exist at that time. What they took over was what's now the Iberian Peninsula. If anything, it was us who took over a part of it from them.😉
The theory of making everything arab, is a lisbon jewish thing. In the north nothing is arab or jewish, it is celtic, roman and North Portuguese. When the Arabs appeared, already greeks and romans wrote about us for many centuries before. The Ukalele was the little Braga guitar, called Braguinha. Great video.
Look as Fado de Coimbra, very diferent, and the Coimbra Guitar, very diferent...the story an traditions are very diferent.. (sorry for the poor English)
We're doing our best! We might have gotten a couple of things a little off in the timeline, but we just wanted to point out a few of the cool things that we've come across in Portugal's history.
Fernando Lopes Graça it's not barroque but a very famous composer from the early 1900's, here's a video performance by a netherland's choir singing in portuguese: th-cam.com/video/TedX_kY0yVo/w-d-xo.html
Loved it! Not so long ago I discovered Vicente Lusitano (c. 1520 - c. 1561). He was a Portuguese composer and music theorist of the late Renaissance. Some of his works on musical theory and a small number of compositions survive. Lusitano was for a time a Catholic priest and taught in several Italian cities, but later converted to Protestantism. He is believed to have been of mixed race. Since the 1980s, he has been described as the first published black composer. As a composer, Lusitano is known for his vocal works, including Latin motets and a madrigal. Musicologist Philippe Canguilhem stated that "the significance of Lusitano’s writings is that they show how central improvised counterpoint was to everyday musical life during the Renaissance.
For us, it's not about when the nation of Portugal began, but about the heritage of this country, as can still be seen in the ancient structures of the peoples who lived here--the ruins, bridges, roads, castles, etc.,, from the Romans, Celts, Moors, and so on. They contributed to the rich heritage that is Portugal. In comparison, the U.S. has no structures like this.
Your genuine display of affection and respect for Portugal is truly heart-warming! Welcome to our little corner of the globe!
Thank you! It's great to be here.
You talked of the portuguese guitar... you should have mention the great Carlos Paredes, he was a genius!
@@MiaJoaoSilva we need to discover Carlos Paredes, thanks for the tip!
@@musicianslife360 You will be amazed, check the music "Verdes anos"
This was a lovely video... If you intend to make a follow-up video (or maybe you already have) regarding the extraordinary muscial creativity that has come out of Portugal, then you will no doubt soon be mentioning Madredeus. You may have already heard their exquisite musicianship coupling unparalleled compositional genius with superbe singing talent without being traditional Fado ( I choose my words carefully). I won't mention names, there are other bands and individuals of immense talent, but most would agree Madredeus really occupies a special place in Portuguese music since the 80's.
I love the way you perceive and describe Portugal.... Thank you! Very informative and enjoyable video ❤️🌼
Thank you! 🙏🏼
Fantastic, so well done! Brought tears to my eyes 🥹✨
@@SarahTaylor-ko8gu ❤️❤️
Muito obrigado por seu amor do querido Portugal 🇵🇹… e a música dela!
Thank you for recognizing and appreciating our existence, history and culture. You are special and I am truly honored that you have choosen to live thru music, amongst us.
Thank you for sharing your culture with us!
Dom Dinis was also known as "O Lavrador" (The Farmer) for ordering the plantation of pine trees near the coast, to protect it of erosion, then used later in ship construction.
Dom Duarte Pio is the current heir to the throne, married with Isabel de Herédia. their descendants are Afonso, Maria and Dinis.
they still are very respected and loved by all portuguese, yet very wise in keeping themselves outside media focus and thus not widely known by foreigners.
There was so much to say about Dinis that we couldn't include it all! He was quite remarkable.
Amazing vídeo in short frames you describe Portugal 🇵🇹
Muito bonito. Obrigada.
Thank you! What a journey through time: architecture, music, musicians, and the spirit of the people, so exuberant, creative, reaching toward freedom. Love this awesome collage of events and architecture, and musical inspiration.
EXCELLENT WORK. CONGRATULATIONS.
Love my country 🇵🇹! Tanks ❤️🤩
Obrigado!the world without music would be grey!
@@hermanosoares3860 completely agree, well said!
Thanks for the presentation. Im first generation of Portuguese and Italian. I was surprised you touched the subject of Hawaii...very few people knows about. Obrigadinho!
@@spharion7988it’s a great story!
The very best video that I already has seen. I am a portuguese guy and I think this is not a five stars video but 10 or 20 stars video. Congratulations. I'm so proud about what you mentioned in this presentation...
@@fernandofidalgo2057 Thank you so much! ❤️❤️
La plus belle vidéo du Portugal et de la musique que j'ai vu sur TH-cam. Merci .👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🇲🇫🇵🇹
Thank you! 🙏🏼❤
I love your videos, the way you show and share the culture and history of Portugal is amazing.
Btw, a band called Petrus Castrus is one of the most underrated bands of the country, it was censored during the dictatorship and has been forgotten to this day.
@@_diogo_limaThanks for letting us know about them!
another great video - thank you for sharing the cultural richness and history of this very special country through your lens of music
Thank for talking about music and linking it to the culture of my country. I think it is an excelent way to represent a part of the people's soul.
It would be great if you take the oportunity to do the same with all the cultures that portugual was in contact with.
There are so many and all over the world. Throwing random chaotic labels that are only related by their history with portugal, and the mutual cultural influence, like Spain, europe, Moors, africa, india, ottoman, indonesia, china, japan, america, etc
So many music and people to discover.
Yes, there are so many cultures to explore!
Interesting stuff! well done
Bravo!...👏👏
Thank you for this fantastic video.
Your work is fascinating, congrats ;)
@@serodiob Thank you!
Excelent video, thank you!
Obrigada 🙏🏻
hi again, thanks for another very interesting video, on our History , small in size but huge in History.
Obrigado ❤
Lovely video. You seem to truly understand Portugal's soul. Look into Canção do Mar (Song of the Sea) arranged by Guilherme Inês (my father) sung by Dulce Pontes. It was the main title song in the movie Primal Fear with Richard Gere. It's now one of the 6 portuguese songs chosen to be part of Cancioneiro da União Europeia. I would love to know your thoughts on the song. All the best ❤
We will listen to this song--thank you!
@musicianslife360 I should have posted the link 🙂
th-cam.com/video/v_2fyB4dj4U/w-d-xo.htmlsi=n8O9cv451X_MUU-f
I am currently shooting a documentary film about my father's music. He played with Zeca Afonso, Paulo de Carvalho and Júlio Pereira, all featured in your video. This was a groundbreaking moment for his career and portuguese music as well. It's our unofficial anthem.
I hope you enjoy it.
What to say about you guy's! Your just fantastic. Enjoy Portugal and is culture. Long life to your channel!
Thank you! 🙏🏼
🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹🇵🇹 ❤️😊
Thank you for this delightful history. Part of my heritage is Portuguese. My great grandparents moved to California from the Azores. My dad and his father were born in California. Dad's stepmother insisted on Portuguese being spoken in the home, so Dad always had a bit of an accent. I never learned the language, but our family did attend Our Lady of Fatima celebrations. I have an MHz subscription, which allows me to "travel" to many places. One series I watched not too long ago was Hidden Theories, taking place in Lisbon. ⤵️
A note: the captions and then transcript don't capture some of the terms you use, such as the term for the blue tiles. I have a severe hearing loss, so I couldn't make it out.
You may check for Carlos Paredes work on the portuguese guitar.
Thank you for the tip!
Love the video and how you connect history to the music culture. So glad we found you channel. We moving to Lisbon in January and your insights are helpful. Thanks.
Thanks, and boa sorte in your new adventure!
😎😎😎 DON'T FORGET THAT PORTUGAL IS THE ONLY COUNTRY WITH THE MOST GREAT NUMBER OF DIFFERENT CLASSICAL MUSIC COMPOSERS SUCH AS :
* Francisco Antonio DE ALMEIDA (born before Amadeus MOZART),
* João DE SOUSA CARVALHO,
* Marcos PORTUGAL who composed about forty operas,
* BRAGA SANTOS,
* Antonio TEIXEIRA,
* Francisco DE LACERDA,
* Luis DE FREITAS BRANCO,
* Fernando LOPES GRAÇA,
* Rui COELHO,
* José VIANA DA MOTA,
* Luis COSTA,
* Antonio FRAGOSO,
* João Lourenço REBELO,
* Domingos BOMTEMPO,
* Carlos SEIXAS,
* LEAL MOREIRA,
* ...
Thank you for sharing these!
❤❤ Awesome❤❤
Well you may not know but there is another important genre of music in Portugal which "Vila Morena" shares. It is "Cante Alentejano" and is a Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO
Thank you for sharing this!
Show ❤🇵🇹
Congratulations on this brief history of Portuguese music.
I don't know what the themes of the next videos that you will be, but I would like to highlight Marta Pereira da Costa in two videos one in "Tiny Desk Concert" and another in "Millenium stage" at Kennedy Center and in this particulary concert at 23 minutes timeline you can listen to portuguese music (that make my skin blow up) followed by a song that you will reconize and than she explain the razon, also I would like to indicate Gisela João in "Sr. Extraterrestre" and this is a fado music but not melancolic and the lyrics are intuitive with the cartoons. Again thks for the video
I would like remember also Ana Moura in "Dia de Folga" also a fado but not melancolic and with humor.
you coming from Nashville, I would recommend "Quinta do Bill in no trilho do Sol" or "Quinta do Bill in Voa".
Dom Dinis was one of best kings ever, not only of Portugal, but everywhere. He basically made the foundations for all the greatness that follow.
We're very impressed by him!
❤
So.. Willie Nelson is the modern day equivilant of Dom Dinis? 😉 I saw you put him in there in the row of pictures of minstrals (2:31). Beautiful made video! Looking at the way things go in several countries around the world, revolutionary songs will be of major importance the coming years.....
Haha--he was in the troubadour montage, right before the shot of the Troubadour Club in L.A.--we were wondering when someone would mention that! 😂
Beautiful! Sad to see our country being destroyed by corrupt politicians and people that just forgot where we came from who made us and what we are. Thanks for reminding us.
Thank you for watching! No country is perfect, as we know, but hopefully when greatness is highlighted, it can inspire and encourage those kinds of moments to flourish.
Stravinsky once said he did not find any music in all Iberia.
He must not have looked hard enough!
4:25 - The first wave of migration from the Azores and Madeira to Hawaii was only in the 19th century, so it could never have been in one of the early ships from the Age of Discoveries.
We knew that we were jumping ahead chronologically at that point, but we wanted to make the connection--that it was due to Portugal's discovery and habitation of Madeira that the ukelele came to be!
@@musicianslife360 - I understand but just as the wording confused me, it might have confused others who don't know about Portugal's history as well as I do. 🙂
Great job. Although we're old but ,not with thousands of years YET 😊 the Independence came officially in 1142. Thanks anyway ❤
We are referring to the settlements of the Celts, Lusitanians, Romans, etc.,-- those who left structures that we can still see today. They occupied the land that is now known as Portugal and contributed to its culture, landscape, and architecture. In the U.S., we have no structures like these that are thousands of years old.
Well, Portugal is old even by European country standards but not 2000 years old. It is about 840 years old.
I don't really know what Alliance with England you are referring to, but the Treaty of Windsor had already been established in 1386, give or take.
However, I did enjoy the video .
We're not talking about Portugal as an established nation, but as a settled place, which occurred even before the Roman Empire. The Celts, Pre-Celts, Lusitanians, and so on, had some of the oldest settlements in Europe. Sorry for any confusion!
@musicianslife360 well, fair enough, although that starts to become a bit too vague for my personal taste. For many reasons, including current political ones, I like to make these distinctions as clear as possible (as much as history can allow).
@@musicianslife360 - Also, the moors never took over Portugal because Portugal didn't even exist at that time. What they took over was what's now the Iberian Peninsula. If anything, it was us who took over a part of it from them.😉
❤️❤️❤️❤️
"Grândola Vila Morena" wasn't banned, actually.
If that is the case, then our source was wrong. Either way, it was barely tolerated!
The theory of making everything arab, is a lisbon jewish thing. In the north nothing is arab or jewish, it is celtic, roman and North Portuguese. When the Arabs appeared, already greeks and romans wrote about us for many centuries before. The Ukalele was the little Braga guitar, called Braguinha. Great video.
Look as Fado de Coimbra, very diferent, and the Coimbra Guitar, very diferent...the story an traditions are very diferent.. (sorry for the poor English)
Nice video. As a Portuguese, I am really grateful for it. Sadly, it isn't particularly historically accurate. But thank you nevertheless.
We're doing our best! We might have gotten a couple of things a little off in the timeline, but we just wanted to point out a few of the cool things that we've come across in Portugal's history.
Do a research about musica barroca portuguesa and Carlos Seixas. Not very well known, unfortunately.
Thanks for the tip!
Fernando Lopes Graça it's not barroque but a very famous composer from the early 1900's, here's a video performance by a netherland's choir singing in portuguese:
th-cam.com/video/TedX_kY0yVo/w-d-xo.html
Loved it! Not so long ago I discovered Vicente Lusitano (c. 1520 - c. 1561). He was a Portuguese composer and music theorist of the late Renaissance. Some of his works on musical theory and a small number of compositions survive. Lusitano was for a time a Catholic priest and taught in several Italian cities, but later converted to Protestantism.
He is believed to have been of mixed race. Since the 1980s, he has been described as the first published black composer.
As a composer, Lusitano is known for his vocal works, including Latin motets and a madrigal.
Musicologist Philippe Canguilhem stated that "the significance of Lusitano’s writings is that they show how central improvised counterpoint was to everyday musical life during the Renaissance.
Thank you for sharing about Lusitano!
Hope u trying to make a eford to talk portuguese in a while.
We're learning!
@@musicianslife360your pronunciation sounds great!! Keep it up❤
Excelente vídeo! Mas Portugal tem 885 anos e não 2000.
For us, it's not about when the nation of Portugal began, but about the heritage of this country, as can still be seen in the ancient structures of the peoples who lived here--the ruins, bridges, roads, castles, etc.,, from the Romans, Celts, Moors, and so on. They contributed to the rich heritage that is Portugal. In comparison, the U.S. has no structures like this.