Fantastic version of the Finnish traditional music group Värttinä: "Kylä vuotti uutta kuuta". Thank you! Warm greeting from the arctic circle from Finland!
Despite originally being performed by few women at once, the song has dynamics to it that can make a choir shine - and this choir has the strength to make the song shine at its brightest. I love it when a rather straightforward, meditative melody reverberates in one's soul, growing beyond itself, filling a heart until it nearly bursts. Thank you for a moment like this.
When I was taught this song we listen to how the words were supposed to be pronounced and I heard two errors in this performance. The first one being the character “ä” make an “e” sound not the regular “a” sound. Second the words with “ty” in them make a “do” sound instead of the “ty” sound that was heard in this performance. Besides the mispronunciations, my version of the song has a line under the “m” most of the time in “hjom” meaning that the “m” is held, not the “o” which was held every time in the performance.
Nice!
Fantastic version of the Finnish traditional music group Värttinä: "Kylä vuotti uutta kuuta". Thank you! Warm greeting from the arctic circle from Finland!
Despite originally being performed by few women at once, the song has dynamics to it that can make a choir shine - and this choir has the strength to make the song shine at its brightest. I love it when a rather straightforward, meditative melody reverberates in one's soul, growing beyond itself, filling a heart until it nearly bursts. Thank you for a moment like this.
When I was taught this song we listen to how the words were supposed to be pronounced and I heard two errors in this performance. The first one being the character “ä” make an “e” sound not the regular “a” sound. Second the words with “ty” in them make a “do” sound instead of the “ty” sound that was heard in this performance. Besides the mispronunciations, my version of the song has a line under the “m” most of the time in “hjom” meaning that the “m” is held, not the “o” which was held every time in the performance.