Vocals by Ibrahim Charaf, arrangement by Farya Faraji. The main melody sung by Ibrahim is not my own composition, and is instead a simple recitation of the poem commonly found in the Arab world based on the first jins (tetrachord) of Maqam Bayati, one of the main modes of Arabic music. This is another composition I based on the principles of music from the Arab world, namely mixing elements of Arabic Classical Music and folk music from the region of Iraq. The instruments used are local folk drums, the oud, the ney, qanun, and a modern orchestral ensemble played in the distinctive oriental style. The poem sung here is by Saffidin al-Hilli, a 14th century warrior poet of the Abbasid Caliphate. This specific poem, often known by its incipit "Ask the Long Spears," was written by him following the Muslim victory in Zawraa, Iraq, against the Mongol armies. Lyrics in Classical Arabic: سَلي الرِماحَ العَوالي عَن مَعالينا وَاِستَشهِدي البيضَ هَل خابَ الرَجا فينا وَسائِلي العُربَ وَالأَتراكَ ما فَعَلَت في أَرضِ قَبرِ عُبَيدِ اللَهِ أَيدينا لَمّا سَعَينا فَما رَقَّت عَزائِمُنا عَمّا نَرومُ وَلا خابَت مَساعينا يا يَومَ وَقعَةِ زَوراءِ العِراقِ وَقَد دِنّا الأَعادي كَما كانوا يَدينونا بِضُمَّرٍ ما رَبَطناها مُسَوَّمَةً إِلّا لِنَغزو بِها مَن باتَ يَغزونا وَفِتيَةٍ إِن نَقُل أَصغَوا مَسامِعَهُم لِقَولِنا أَو دَعَوناهُم أَجابونا قَومٌ إِذا اِستُخصِموا كانوا فَراعِنَةً يَوماً وَإِن حُكِّموا كانوا مَوازينا تَدَرَّعوا العَقلَ جِلباباً فَإِن حَمِيَت نارُ الوَغى خِلتَهُم فيها مَجانينا English translation: Ask the long spears about our highness, And let the shiny swords reveal our worth, Ask Arabs and Turks what we accomplished, In the land of Obaid-Ullah, When we walk, we never lose determination, Nor face failure, Remember Zawraa, when we conquered the enemy, As they once used to conquer us, We conquered them with the horses of war, And young boys heard our instructions, and heeded the call of duty, They were brutes like Pharaoh with his opponents, Sanity runs in their blood, But in battle, they were mad.
I’m a Greek American. Greek&Japanese but I look Greek and heavily identify with it. I love Near Eastern Music be it Turkish, Iranian, Greek, Arabic etc. It all speaks to my soul. Thank you for making it and also, thank you for stepping out of your own Cultural & Ethnic box and making this music for other cultures. But doing it authentically. Not making your peoples music A+ Grade Quality and everyone else C or B Grade.
@@masterjunky863 Greece was the gateway to the east ever since ancient times. So much so that the Greeks were very heavily inspired by many eastern traditions throughout history. Greece should be considered eastern Europe not southern because there is no "south Europe".If there was then Sicily and Spain should also be considered part of it and that doesnt make sense because of how far apart they are.
@@kur0sh1South Europe 100% does exist, and there are strong cultural ties between Spain, Italy, and even Greece, along with other southern European countries. Southern Europe is the European side of the Mediterranean world, and the Mediterranean has been the centre of a large group of cultures since before the Romans. I won’t deny that Greek culture may have some near-eastern influence.
@@g1u2y345 sumarians is from Iraq and influenced the culture of that region. Including the people of Akkad, and the language of Akkadian is part of the Semitic family of languages. Which Arabic is also a part of.
@@dylanbarnes9195 Yea I know they’re from Iraq, that doesn’t mean they have anything to do with Arabic. Also being part of the same language family doesn’t mean much, English, French, Greek, Iranian, and Hindi, are all part of the same language family, that doesn’t mean they can claim each other’s history
@@g1u2y345 the DNA of Akkadian is and Sumerian is in the people of modern day Iraq DNA, as well as Persian DNA in the modern people of Iran. People don't go extinct, culture, and languages do.
Your music is always top quality !! I would love to see once music on medieval Egypt if possible and it would be Eid if I ever see one day you compose one of your masterpiece symphonies on the Mamluks or the Fatmids, since they were both multicultural in their essence
@furkan7344 No, the oldest known presence of agriculture in China is 8 thousand years ago, the same has been found in Mesopotamia from 9 thousand years ago.
Thousands of soldiers who believed in Allah in the deserts, The Romans had never seen people fighting like this... Javelins and camels were dancing, And there Khalid taught them a lesson they will never forget... I'm sure these verses come to mind in all of us.
People almost always only remember Khalid as if he was the only General, nobody remembers Amr bin Al-'As, Sa'ad bin Abi-Waqas, Abu 'Ubaidha, Shureibil, Abu 'Ubaidh, Qaqa bin Amr, Abu Tayluha and many more great early Muslim generals
@@abdibgm5748yes, though Khalid is the greatest of all time...we should also remember Al-Qa'aqa,Saad ibn waqas, Dhiraar ibn al Azwar who killed 160 enemies in the seige of oxxyrynchs bahnasa
Likely he needs some more practice before he attempts such massive project... I think its Farya's first try with Arabic music if I recall correctly (might be wrong)
I believe it would be better for him to begin with an Abbasid caliph like Harun al-Rashid, considering the Persian influence prevalent in the court. I would greatly appreciate it if he could curate a symphony exploring Harun al-Rashid's era, along with the rise and fall of the Persian Barmakids family and the conflicts between his two sons
Awesome song! I was wondering if you ever considered Chinese music before? I know your main focus is Iran and the Mediterranean world and that Chinese music is part of a completely different musical tradition, but I think it would still be interesting. Maybe something like a song about the Battle of Talas between the Arabs and Tang Dynasty, combining elements of both Arab and Chinese music. The Tang Dynasty also had a lot of cultural influences from the Iranian world (such as the famous Sogdian dances for example), so maybe Chinese music from that particular era would match your field of expertise more? Anyways, just a thought. Keep up the amazing work!
It's absolutely part of my plan as I'm fascinated by Chinese music, but it's such a different musical system as you said that I need to learn it first, I don't like representing other cultures unless I'm certain I can do justice to their authenticity
@@faryafarajiSoutheast Asian here! I am waiting for your Southeast Asian theme music, especially Indonesian and Thai, and will wait for the rest of my life!! Southeast Asia is the connector between South and East Asian culture, it will be soo fascinating hearing gamelan or Thai's traditional instruments on your channel ❤️
Awesome! Another music tradition I'd be interested to see is Mexican. I'm not sure how similar Mexican folk music is to other Spanish & Western music and how much indigenous influence there is on it, but I'm sure there's a range with some being more similar to Eurasian musical traditions. The Mexican song La Llorona is one of my favourite folk songs from any culture-would love to see a rendition by you if you ever got around to it!
Yeah I mean as I Chinese I can't even see much accurate Chinese traditional music in my country, many and MANY of scripts are lost or cannot be reproduct anymore, most wellkept pieces are Taoism music today and we haven't fully understand the system since there are just toooo many different sect, which supposed to be a good thingexcept for learning it.
Very lovely song fan from Egypt❤ can you please do an Egyptian epic music song on qutuz or the battle of Ain Jalut where the myth of mongol invincibility was shattered it could also have an Armenian part as there was Armenian knights on the side of the mongols again beautiful song❤
صَفِيِّ الدينِ الحِلِّي هو أبو المحاسن عبد العزيز بن سرايا بن نصر الطائي السنبسي نسبة إلى سنبس، بطن من طيء. ولد ونشأ في الحلة، بين الكوفة وبغداد، واشتغل بالتجارة فكان يرحل إلى الشام ومصر وماردين وغيرها في تجارته ويعود إلى العراق. وأنقطع مدة إلى أصحاب ماردين فَتَقَّرب من ملوك الدولة الأرتقية ومدحهم وأجزلوا له عطاياهم. ورحل إلى القاهرة، فمدح السلطان الملك الناصر وتوفي ببغداد. وكان شيعيا قحاً، وشيعيّته شديدة البروز في شعره. ولكن تشيعه لم يمنعه من مدح الصحابة وتوقيرهم؛ إذ كان من الشيعة المفضلة. وهو شاعر عربي نظم بالعامية والفصحى، ينسب إلى مدينة الحلة العراقية التي ولد فيها. وعاش في الفترة التي تلت مباشرة دخول المغول لبغداد وتدميرهم الخلافة العباسية مما أثر على شعرهِ، ولقد نظم بيتا لكل بحر سميت مفاتيح البحور ليسهل حفظها. وله العديد من دواوين الشعر المعروفة ومن أشعاره الشهيرة التي لا تزال تتداول حتى أيامنا هذه التي نشدها صاحب القناة. جزاك الله خيراً ان كنت مسلم و هداك ان كنت غير ذلك يا صاحب القناة على نشرك الشعر الفصيح.
Enchanting, well done once again, and congratulations on sorting out business with that leeching company. Glad that no one save yourself will profit from your hard work now. Will you consider composing some muwashahat in the future?
Hey Farya I love this song, I was wondering if you could do a piece reconstruction relating to the Bengal Sultanate or possibly something representing Bengali culture. The Bengal province was known as the jewel of the Mughal Empire, the most prized portion of the Mughals, the British, and was often the house of the subcontinent’s academic/artistic intellectuals.
@@jacqueks1782Using modern Nations to describe musical traditions can be quite misleading, for example music of the Hejaz is quite distinct from this type music which is mostly associated with Hassa. Both Hassa and Hejaz are regions of Saudi Arabia. This type of music is best described as Gulf Arab music
The Poem is actually quite old written about 700 years ago by Saffidin al-Hilli. I'll assume that you're an Arab you'll understand that how a Poem is recited and sang can be very subjective so it seems that the author of the video decided to use the melodies of Basra/Kuwait/Hasa/Ahwas and Fars to present and sing the Poem
@@haideraliikram-mv9xzsafi aldeen was an iraqi poeter who wrote this poet agenst the mongols when al zaura battle happend bitwen mongols and arabs of iraq
@@EM-tx3ly Richard the lionheart and Saladin agreed to be at peace if their siblings would marry and rule Jerusalem. But Safadin, Saladins brother that was to marry Richards sister, refused to convert to christianity, and Richards sister (sorry but can't remember name) refused to convert to Islam, so there was no marriage and no peace
But Mongols kicked their as.es in Baghdad. Abbasids never gained any victory against Mongols. Mamluk Turks did. If i am not wrong, in Baybars's leadership
Well the Abbasids didn't even fight a single battle to really lose, the fall of Baghdad was realistically just a massacre. By this point though they were pretty much a puppet of the Khwarazmids whom the Mongols of course conquered and slaughtered, but not without some defeats such as at Parwan and Damaghan. Even if the Abbasids (and the ayyubid for that matter) fought they would have had Mamluke commanders as well that was the common practice through all of the middle east, not exclusive to Egypt which as you said did defeat the Mongols under Baibars. As for this poem, to be clear it is an error on Farya's part to describe Safi Al Din as an Abbasid poet, he was born decades after the fall of Baghdad. I am curious to what battle this was intended as an ode to, it is likely we will never know, it is perfectly possible it was a relatively small battle/skirmish.
Vocals by Ibrahim Charaf, arrangement by Farya Faraji. The main melody sung by Ibrahim is not my own composition, and is instead a simple recitation of the poem commonly found in the Arab world based on the first jins (tetrachord) of Maqam Bayati, one of the main modes of Arabic music.
This is another composition I based on the principles of music from the Arab world, namely mixing elements of Arabic Classical Music and folk music from the region of Iraq. The instruments used are local folk drums, the oud, the ney, qanun, and a modern orchestral ensemble played in the distinctive oriental style.
The poem sung here is by Saffidin al-Hilli, a 14th century warrior poet of the Abbasid Caliphate. This specific poem, often known by its incipit "Ask the Long Spears," was written by him following the Muslim victory in Zawraa, Iraq, against the Mongol armies.
Lyrics in Classical Arabic:
سَلي الرِماحَ العَوالي عَن مَعالينا
وَاِستَشهِدي البيضَ هَل خابَ الرَجا فينا
وَسائِلي العُربَ وَالأَتراكَ ما فَعَلَت
في أَرضِ قَبرِ عُبَيدِ اللَهِ أَيدينا
لَمّا سَعَينا فَما رَقَّت عَزائِمُنا
عَمّا نَرومُ وَلا خابَت مَساعينا
يا يَومَ وَقعَةِ زَوراءِ العِراقِ وَقَد
دِنّا الأَعادي كَما كانوا يَدينونا
بِضُمَّرٍ ما رَبَطناها مُسَوَّمَةً
إِلّا لِنَغزو بِها مَن باتَ يَغزونا
وَفِتيَةٍ إِن نَقُل أَصغَوا مَسامِعَهُم
لِقَولِنا أَو دَعَوناهُم أَجابونا
قَومٌ إِذا اِستُخصِموا كانوا فَراعِنَةً
يَوماً وَإِن حُكِّموا كانوا مَوازينا
تَدَرَّعوا العَقلَ جِلباباً فَإِن حَمِيَت
نارُ الوَغى خِلتَهُم فيها مَجانينا
English translation:
Ask the long spears about our highness,
And let the shiny swords reveal our worth,
Ask Arabs and Turks what we accomplished,
In the land of Obaid-Ullah,
When we walk, we never lose determination,
Nor face failure,
Remember Zawraa, when we conquered the enemy,
As they once used to conquer us,
We conquered them with the horses of war,
And young boys heard our instructions, and heeded the call of duty,
They were brutes like Pharaoh with his opponents,
Sanity runs in their blood,
But in battle, they were mad.
just FYI the singular of ajnas (أجناس) is not ajna, but rather jins (جنس). This is because ajnas is a "broken plural," which Arabic has a lot of.
@@ThatBernieThanks, I'll correct it!
Hey Farya can you do a Ain Jalut symphony
@@faryafaraji Farya KURDISH EPIC MUSIC too pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeee !
@@aramokurdothe only way to SEE a epic Kurdish music, would be with Saladdin
Love the Arabic content! Please post more!! Love from Iraq
I’m a Greek American. Greek&Japanese but I look Greek and heavily identify with it. I love Near Eastern Music be it Turkish, Iranian, Greek, Arabic etc. It all speaks to my soul. Thank you for making it and also, thank you for stepping out of your own Cultural & Ethnic box and making this music for other cultures. But doing it authentically. Not making your peoples music A+ Grade Quality and everyone else C or B Grade.
Greeks aren't Near Easterners but southern Europeans
@@masterjunky863 We Greeks Now Don't Deserve To Call Ourselves Greeks We Have Being Shamed Our Ancient Ancestors
@@masterjunky863Greeks are near easterners
@@masterjunky863 Greece was the gateway to the east ever since ancient times. So much so that the Greeks were very heavily inspired by many eastern traditions throughout history. Greece should be considered eastern Europe not southern because there is no "south Europe".If there was then Sicily and Spain should also be considered part of it and that doesnt make sense because of how far apart they are.
@@kur0sh1South Europe 100% does exist, and there are strong cultural ties between Spain, Italy, and even Greece, along with other southern European countries. Southern Europe is the European side of the Mediterranean world, and the Mediterranean has been the centre of a large group of cultures since before the Romans. I won’t deny that Greek culture may have some near-eastern influence.
انا من نفس قبيلة صفي الدين قبيلة طيء التي انتصرت على المغول
تحية معطرة بالرماح من الحدود السورية التركية
MashAllah. May you uphold the legacy of your forefathers.
كفو منك ومن قبيلتك
من الباب أخي؟
ولكن سيف الدين قطز كان من الأتراك ودليل على ذلك انو خوارزميين كانو أقرباء سيف الدين قطز ابحث في التأريخ لعلك تجد الحقيقة
@@araskurt1516 أنا أتحدث عن معركة شقحب
"السلام الداخلي يتحقق بإنهاء الحرب بين قلبك وعقلك."
رائع
بل يتحقق بتقشير البطاطس 🥔
Tes musiques me transportent toujours dans d’autres époques et me font tellement rêver ! ♥️
si seulement il faisait aussi une musique aztèque :D
@@louischvs9395 oh oui c’est une très bonne idée ça j’adorerais !
I have been waiting for an arabic banger for ages, thank you ya farya
I got to know a lot of new things. Learning about Jalaluddin Khwarzmshah and the analogy of pharoah to describe bruteness.
This one's already playing on repeat 😂, would love some more awesome arabic music
Thank you for this, excellent Farya. Bravo 👏🏼!
Bro this might be your best one yet.
@@loop4569 Saladin Epic Music, the Kurdish and Arabic one is also really good.
More Arabic music, awesome!
I am proud to be a muslim, our rich history and our bright future.
You should be proud of being an Arabian, who history dates back to the first written language.
@@dylanbarnes9195 First written language? Isn't that Sumerian? That doesn't have anything to do with Arabian, not really.
@@g1u2y345 sumarians is from Iraq and influenced the culture of that region. Including the people of Akkad, and the language of Akkadian is part of the Semitic family of languages. Which Arabic is also a part of.
@@dylanbarnes9195 Yea I know they’re from Iraq, that doesn’t mean they have anything to do with Arabic. Also being part of the same language family doesn’t mean much, English, French, Greek, Iranian, and Hindi, are all part of the same language family, that doesn’t mean they can claim each other’s history
@@g1u2y345 the DNA of Akkadian is and Sumerian is in the people of modern day Iraq DNA, as well as Persian DNA in the modern people of Iran. People don't go extinct, culture, and languages do.
Beautiful! Inspires one to dance...
wonderful, genuinely can't praise this enough, great work Farya and Ibrahim, would love to see more collaborative work from you two
Beautiful. I hope next time you will do the song of Abu Al-Tayeb Al-Mutanabbi’s poetry
Love the work, keep going Farya
Ohhh nice! I really enjoyed the antarrahs wisdom song so this is a pleasant suprise
Awesome!!! Thank you both for this slice of Arabian culture!
This was really good, Keep up the great work.
I love this type of music .
Your music is always top quality !!
I would love to see once music on medieval Egypt if possible and it would be Eid if I ever see one day you compose one of your masterpiece symphonies on the Mamluks or the Fatmids, since they were both multicultural in their essence
damn man loved this composition, middle eastern poems are quite different from the others i've read here, can't put my finger on why exactly
I've been looking around the channel wondering if I can find something I can relate to, and I did! You've really covered the best of every culture ❤
Amazing as always
العراق اقدم حضاره بتاريخ
🇮🇶☪️
China is the oldest civilization that is still here you are giving wrong information
@furkan7344 No, the oldest known presence of agriculture in China is 8 thousand years ago, the same has been found in Mesopotamia from 9 thousand years ago.
😂😂Only IAM the oldest cuz IAM the union univers
Awesome as always
Thousands of soldiers who believed in Allah in the deserts,
The Romans had never seen people fighting like this...
Javelins and camels were dancing,
And there Khalid taught them a lesson they will never forget...
I'm sure these verses come to mind in all of us.
People almost always only remember Khalid as if he was the only General, nobody remembers Amr bin Al-'As, Sa'ad bin Abi-Waqas, Abu 'Ubaidha, Shureibil, Abu 'Ubaidh, Qaqa bin Amr, Abu Tayluha and many more great early Muslim generals
@@abdibgm5748yes, though Khalid is the greatest of all time...we should also remember Al-Qa'aqa,Saad ibn waqas, Dhiraar ibn al Azwar who killed 160 enemies in the seige of oxxyrynchs bahnasa
Love this Arab poetry content please keep it coming. From a Circassian Jordanian Fan ❤
Very beautiful!
That was lovely ❤Please do almutanabi next❤❤
Amazing!! Please more Arabic songs!! Thank you
10/10 video
I hope you make an epic symphony about islamic world, the wars, Eminent personalities And military leaders like Khalid Ibn al-Walid
Likely he needs some more practice before he attempts such massive project... I think its Farya's first try with Arabic music if I recall correctly (might be wrong)
@@bobafett9348 yes thats right
I believe it would be better for him to begin with an Abbasid caliph like Harun al-Rashid, considering the Persian influence prevalent in the court. I would greatly appreciate it if he could curate a symphony exploring Harun al-Rashid's era, along with the rise and fall of the Persian Barmakids family and the conflicts between his two sons
Rashidhuns Symphony
who else wish Farya Faraji made an aztec music?😄
American culture that sounds great!
yay finally more arabic music
Great music, keep it up!
More Arabic songs please❤️
Absolutely stunning!
Would you do some old hungarian music like militaris congratulatio, or nosza hajdú?
Awesome song!
I was wondering if you ever considered Chinese music before? I know your main focus is Iran and the Mediterranean world and that Chinese music is part of a completely different musical tradition, but I think it would still be interesting. Maybe something like a song about the Battle of Talas between the Arabs and Tang Dynasty, combining elements of both Arab and Chinese music. The Tang Dynasty also had a lot of cultural influences from the Iranian world (such as the famous Sogdian dances for example), so maybe Chinese music from that particular era would match your field of expertise more?
Anyways, just a thought. Keep up the amazing work!
It's absolutely part of my plan as I'm fascinated by Chinese music, but it's such a different musical system as you said that I need to learn it first, I don't like representing other cultures unless I'm certain I can do justice to their authenticity
@@faryafarajiSoutheast Asian here! I am waiting for your Southeast Asian theme music, especially Indonesian and Thai, and will wait for the rest of my life!! Southeast Asia is the connector between South and East Asian culture, it will be soo fascinating hearing gamelan or Thai's traditional instruments on your channel ❤️
@@faryafarajiand please explore Gameln music while you're on it.
Awesome! Another music tradition I'd be interested to see is Mexican. I'm not sure how similar Mexican folk music is to other Spanish & Western music and how much indigenous influence there is on it, but I'm sure there's a range with some being more similar to Eurasian musical traditions.
The Mexican song La Llorona is one of my favourite folk songs from any culture-would love to see a rendition by you if you ever got around to it!
Yeah I mean as I Chinese I can't even see much accurate Chinese traditional music in my country, many and MANY of scripts are lost or cannot be reproduct anymore, most wellkept pieces are Taoism music today and we haven't fully understand the system since there are just toooo many different sect, which supposed to be a good thingexcept for learning it.
Incroyable
Wonderful as always! ❤
Very lovely song fan from Egypt❤ can you please do an Egyptian epic music song on qutuz or the battle of Ain Jalut where the myth of mongol invincibility was shattered it could also have an Armenian part as there was Armenian knights on the side of the mongols again beautiful song❤
Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn epic symphony when?... Please.
Fary amazing!❤
Amazing love this
Muhammad Sumbul 👍🏼
Please, don't stop.
Walla walla ya Salam hey
Ah yes, another Song by Farya to listen to in the gym.
Next Epic Roman Music - Legio X Equestris
@faryafargi I would appreciate it if you made a song on Avrelian or a sol Invictvs chant
Love this! Please more arabic contents
Nice one.
So inspiring
صَفِيِّ الدينِ الحِلِّي هو أبو المحاسن عبد العزيز بن سرايا بن نصر الطائي السنبسي نسبة إلى سنبس، بطن من طيء. ولد ونشأ في الحلة، بين الكوفة وبغداد، واشتغل بالتجارة فكان يرحل إلى الشام ومصر وماردين وغيرها في تجارته ويعود إلى العراق. وأنقطع مدة إلى أصحاب ماردين فَتَقَّرب من ملوك الدولة الأرتقية ومدحهم وأجزلوا له عطاياهم. ورحل إلى القاهرة، فمدح السلطان الملك الناصر وتوفي ببغداد. وكان شيعيا قحاً، وشيعيّته شديدة البروز في شعره. ولكن تشيعه لم يمنعه من مدح الصحابة وتوقيرهم؛ إذ كان من الشيعة المفضلة. وهو شاعر عربي نظم بالعامية والفصحى، ينسب إلى مدينة الحلة العراقية التي ولد فيها. وعاش في الفترة التي تلت مباشرة دخول المغول لبغداد وتدميرهم الخلافة العباسية مما أثر على شعرهِ، ولقد نظم بيتا لكل بحر سميت مفاتيح البحور ليسهل حفظها. وله العديد من دواوين الشعر المعروفة ومن أشعاره الشهيرة التي لا تزال تتداول حتى أيامنا هذه التي نشدها صاحب القناة. جزاك الله خيراً ان كنت مسلم و هداك ان كنت غير ذلك يا صاحب القناة على نشرك الشعر الفصيح.
Enchanting, well done once again, and congratulations on sorting out business with that leeching company. Glad that no one save yourself will profit from your hard work now.
Will you consider composing some muwashahat in the future?
❤😍
Hey Farya I love this song, I was wondering if you could do a piece reconstruction relating to the Bengal Sultanate or possibly something representing Bengali culture. The Bengal province was known as the jewel of the Mughal Empire, the most prized portion of the Mughals, the British, and was often the house of the subcontinent’s academic/artistic intellectuals.
Nice work 👍
We need some Lavantine tunes! This was great btw
Yea this sounds more of a Yemeni tone to me IDK
@@nabatean180 I would rather say saudi cuz its mostly saudi songs that utilize instruments like this
@@jacqueks1782Using modern Nations to describe musical traditions can be quite misleading, for example music of the Hejaz is quite distinct from this type music which is mostly associated with Hassa. Both Hassa and Hejaz are regions of Saudi Arabia. This type of music is best described as Gulf Arab music
@@abdibgm5748 I agree 👍
*Allahu Akbar intensifies*
Farya senin yüzünden youtube premium kullanıyorum bu şarkıyı ve antarahs wisdom u artık spotify a yükle dostum.
This music gives me absolute enthusiasm😈
nice
Please make a symphony on islamic wars❤
Symphony from battle of qadisia please 😅❤
He should also combine that with the Arab siege of Ctesiphon.
I don’t know how old is this song or the melody but it’s definitely very similar to a famous Kuwaiti song by ليلى عبد العزيز called الاسمرانية
The Poem is actually quite old written about 700 years ago by Saffidin al-Hilli. I'll assume that you're an Arab you'll understand that how a Poem is recited and sang can be very subjective so it seems that the author of the video decided to use the melodies of Basra/Kuwait/Hasa/Ahwas and Fars to present and sing the Poem
Nice tunes. Have you considered playing Afghan music before? Seems like a no-brainer.
My transliteration, with correction of two grammatical mistakes:
Salī r-rimāḥa l-ʿawālī ʿan maʿālīnā
Wa stašhidī l-bīḍa hal ḫāba r-rajā fīnā
Wa sāʾilī l-ʿurba wa l-ʾatrāka mā faʿalat
Fī arḍi qabri ʿubaydillahi ʾaydīnā
Lammā saʿaynā famā raqqat ʿazāʾimunā
ʿammā narūmu walā ḫābat masāʿīnā
Yā yawma waqʿati zawrāʾi l-ʿirāqi waqad
Dinnā l-ʾaʿādī kamā kānū yudīnūnā
Wa fityatin ʾin naqul ʾaṣġaw masāmiʿahum
Liqawlinā ʾaw daʿawnāhum ajābūnā
Qawmun ʾiḏā stuḫṣimū kānū farāʿinatan
Yawman wa ʾin ḥukkimū kānū mawāzīna
Tadarraʿū l-ʿaqla jilbābān faʾin ḥamiyat
Nāru l-waġā ḫiltahum fīhā majānīna
Long and short vowels strictly follow the Arabic transcription. Thus, it doesn't match the pronunciation 100%.
Another possible transliteration (my preference):
Sali r-rimāḥa l-ʿawāli ʿan maʿālīna
Wa stašhidi l-bīẓ́a hal ḫāba r-raǧā fīnā
Wa sāʾili l-ʿurba wa l-atrāka mā faʿalat
Fī arẓ́i qabri ʿubaydillahi aydīna
Lammā saʿaynā famā raqqat ʿazāʾimuna
ʿammā narūmu wa lā ḫābat masāʿīna
Yā yawma waqʿati zawrāʾi l-ʿirāqi waqad
Dinna l-aʿādī kamā kānū yadīnūna
Wa fityatin in naqul aṣġaw masāmiʿahum
Liqawlinā aw daʿawnāhum aǧābūna
Qawmun iḏa stuḫṣimū kānū farāʿinatan
Yawman wa in ḥukkimū kānū mawāzīna
Tadarraʿu l-ʿaqla ǧilbābān fa in ḥamiyat
Nāru l-waġā ḫiltahum fīhā maǧānīna
first comment
More turkic war music please..
我喜欢,我喜欢,我喜欢,来自中国❤
Farya KURDISH EPIC MUSIC too pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeee !
هذه القصيدة ألقاها إبن تيمية بعد انتصار العرب على المغول في معركة شقحب
كلا ، هذه قصيدة الشاعر العراقي صفي الدين الحلي ، و مناسبتها كانت المعارك التي جرت بين التتر و قبيلة طيء العربية
قصيدة سل الرماح العوالي للشاعر صفي الدين الحلي الشاعر العراقي
اي ابن تيمية هذا
@@عليالسلطان-س9ج مش عارف ابن تيمية😂😂😂
@@DjdhhdHdhdhd-hc2ps عرب شنو حبيبي
كان جيش مشترك بقيادة المماليك الذين هم من البلقان والاناضول والترك
@@mahmouttalip7634 the battle was between the tribe of tai and the mongols
Hi farya ı am turk Can you make a song about mukan khagan, I want it very much
Pls make a Khaled b. Valid song
يوجد نشيد بصوت افضل من هذا الشخص.
Мир арабам і євреям.
Is the artwork AI generated? Who is artist.
Who was he?
A dude probably
@@ziphy_6471 -_-
@@haideraliikram-mv9xzsafi aldeen was an iraqi poeter who wrote this poet agenst the mongols when al zaura battle happend bitwen mongols and arabs of iraq
@@j3em0r oh, thnx bro
He was to convert to christianity and his wife-to-be to islam so that a kingdom of christians and muslims would emerge...
What are you talking about
@@EM-tx3ly Richard the lionheart and Saladin agreed to be at peace if their siblings would marry and rule Jerusalem. But Safadin, Saladins brother that was to marry Richards sister, refused to convert to christianity, and Richards sister (sorry but can't remember name) refused to convert to Islam, so there was no marriage and no peace
saracens rise
Another anti-Mongol banger🤭
Whole lyrics of the poem th-cam.com/video/mZFfdjPC3Bg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=JZVeNE3kmYZJWmzg
But Mongols kicked their as.es in Baghdad. Abbasids never gained any victory against Mongols.
Mamluk Turks did. If i am not wrong, in Baybars's leadership
Well the Abbasids didn't even fight a single battle to really lose, the fall of Baghdad was realistically just a massacre. By this point though they were pretty much a puppet of the Khwarazmids whom the Mongols of course conquered and slaughtered, but not without some defeats such as at Parwan and Damaghan. Even if the Abbasids (and the ayyubid for that matter) fought they would have had Mamluke commanders as well that was the common practice through all of the middle east, not exclusive to Egypt which as you said did defeat the Mongols under Baibars.
As for this poem, to be clear it is an error on Farya's part to describe Safi Al Din as an Abbasid poet, he was born decades after the fall of Baghdad. I am curious to what battle this was intended as an ode to, it is likely we will never know, it is perfectly possible it was a relatively small battle/skirmish.
This poem has nothing with abbasids mate
This is about arab tribes and bedouins and mujahideen who grouped and defeated mongols in zawra battle
t*rk🪳🪳🪳🪳🪳
This poem is about the Banu Tayy clan and turks allied together and defeated a mongol army