Y'all don't have babes but if you spent less time larping in TH-cam comments like this you might practice and develop enough game to be able to pull one 🙄
Right?? And the album "dropping" would just be some dude rolling through your town/village like "ya'll heard this one yet? Meet me around the fire tonight it'll blow your minds." Between that, and the collective songs you knew together as a clan was "music." That and what you wrote yourself. We are able to share a genuine piece of ourselves through art with others on the other side of the planet and that's an amazing thing
@Ezullof I don't believe it. We tend to be horribly conceited and believe that anything older than 100 (or even 50) years must be stupid or primitive... We are so sure about it that if anything produced in the past seems "too good to be true", we tend to think it was made by aliens... The truth is, while technology needed time to develop, those people of the past were very skilled and had lots of profound expertise on things they did know; if not for other reasons, it was because they did it for centuries in ways not changed too much, just honed. Scientists are amazed to discover how functional and highly considered historical weapons or tools used to be; maybe lacking some theoretical background, but instead taking advantage of years and centuries of practical experience. We are now learning to appreciate again the idea of "slow food", they had "slow lifes". And music has been with the human kind roughly speaking forever...
I love this part of the story. Gilgamesh was out to get his freak on, then a quasi-animalman walks in and starts mauling him and Gilgamesh just goes "That screams best friend material."
It was the first time Gilgamesh found an equal, someone who would not only oppose him, but equal him in strenght. We all need a friend we can compete with, be it in strenght, wits, or art, and when one bests the other and they congratulate "that was a great match, and we have both grown from it", that is true friendship. Gilgamesh needed a friend to tell him "no, don't do that, you're being a jerk" and slap him over the head. We all do, from time to time.
Hesitate to call him a villain. He was a tyrant king for sure, but not a villain. He's the protagonist and hero of the story. That being said, he is a tyrant king at the start of it and Enkidu humbles him. His status is similar to Hancock at the start of his movie. He's a hero but he isn't a good person yet.
Since those ancient days when all things had been created? In ancient time when all things were given their place? When bread was first tasted in the sacred shrines of the land? When the ovens had been lighted? When the Heavens had been separated from the Earth? When the Earth had been separated from the Heavens? When mankind had been established? Those were the days.
Without law? How did U come with that? Who told U that man is the creator of law? Manmade authority is wrong and it shouldn't be. It's the reason of all fighting. Natural law is the only law, and we learn it from nature. It's the only truth.
@@urzathehappy72 It sounds reminiscent on how the tonbak drum is played, with that finger tapping technique. It's very appropriate as goblet drums are some of the oldest known instruments.
I love how we as a species love the concept of "When two heroes meet for the first time, they have to fight" so much that it's been recorded as far back as our literary records hold.
My first born child was conceived to this song as it played opposite us a tavern wall, the notes filled our chamber with not only the sweet amber of love, but the fiery passion of Gilgamesh's fury. Our child came into this world strong, and he grew to be tall. We are grateful for him and our large house.
Fun fact: part of the reason he's doing that is because the only surviving tablet of this part of the Epic is quite literally broken. As best can be told, they start fighting, and then suddenly the fight's over and they're best friends. Truly interesting
That's how many goblet drums are played (such as the tombak), with that quick finger tapping style. It's highly likely such goblet drums would have accompanied the long-necked lute he is playing in those most ancient days. Goblet drums count among the oldest known instruments.
As a person who knew nothing of the pre-classic era before taking classes on it in college, I am still taken aback by the relatability of such a old tale from such a far gone time. The epic of Gilgamesh is, to me, a story about the necessity of friends, of equals, the struggle with our own mortality and of our place in the world. To think that the people of Mesopotamia were thinking of these things, feeling these emotions with the same complexity and care that we do, it is something that makes us feel connected with a people who are so far away from us but also so close in other regards. Mr. Pringle is doing some amazing history work by trying to also preserve the singing/playing of this beautiful epic and utilizing instruments that might have been used back then and with a beautiful improvisation. As a fellow enthusiast of Ancient Mesopotamia, I thank Mr. Pringle for showing that no matter the gap, both in time or culture, bridges can always be built and we could imagine ourselves talking about life with a Sumerian fellow on the bank of the Tigris.
This is so odd. I looked at your channel for the first time in a while today and noticed you hadn’t uploaded in 7 months. I hoped everything was alright. About an hour later you uploaded a new video! How lucky!
The episode of Star Trek The Next Generation, titled "Darmok and Jalad" is what first got me interested in Gilgamesh and Enkidu in the first place. That led me to Peter Pringle and his amazing works about the subject. This channel is what got me interested in the era of about 3000-6000 years ago, which led me to History Time From there I just started subscribing to a few of channels about early human history. It's some fascinating stuff, and not only will you find a ton of abrahamic religion is stolen from the Epic of Gilgamesh, but a ton of folklore and myths are rooted in things from before we knew about agriculture, just passed down through stories and warped over countless generations.
It's not stolen, rather both Babylonian and Hebrew texts talked about the same historical subjects. Know that Abram and his family came from the city of Ur.
Wow. It's so wild to think on the way that something written so long ago still has the power to move us, especially when interpreted through a gifted artist. Incredible.
Big fan of your songs about Gilgamesh. This one is particularly breathtaking in use multiple instruments and different voices for each character. I hope you keep making songs and smiling ❤
There's really no way to tell whether the way you sang it is historically accurate or not, but I really enjoyed your performance. The steps you took to try to make it sound authentic, improvising the melody and using a particular singing style, make your version interesting in its own right.
Because he sees that the law isn't really divine, it's corruption of the law. I might miss remembering but enkidu was created to be as strong as gilgamesh to humble him before the people and the gods, and even tho he was a wild animal, a lawless man created in the wild he knew the law of the gods.
I feel this is in the sense of the ancient originals. Well done. We drummed our bellies, and sang to our love, for men, and women. High knees, tap the belly, two to the side, two to the other side.
IT IS AMAZING! Thank you Peter and all of them who support to you in this work. People of antiquity praised the man-made world and were incredibly wise. Because even time had no power over the great power of art. Oh, may the gods hear and grant you the strength and time to give humanity the entire epic of Gilgamesh.
Aww, ❤, Peter the Bard is back! How fortunate are we to be blessed by the immortal story of the friendship of the legendary hero king and the mighty man of the forest, made to find their respective equal and soulmate in each other, sung by our silver-tongued Peter. ❤
that was beautiful! thanks yt for the recomendation, and thanks Peter for you invaluable work and musicianship! this is my first video and I'm staying!
In those crazy ever changing times, I love to be probably first of all my ancestors ever (rather not related to sumerians) to hear such an old piece of human culture. It truly gives me inner peace, also by the way how simple yet warm and familiar this story can be... from different people in different times. Thank you all that are making it for us to hear ^-^
The fight between the two reminds me of Jacob wrestling with the angel. A fight which happened right after Jacob sent his wives and children away and he was alone, with the angel standing in the path of their reunion. The stories are not identical, of course, but they seem related.
Good catch! I think you're onto something there. I have to think about the struggle in the context of both narratives, but I don't think this is just a coincidence.
I think you'd like at least perusing through Hidden Riches by Christopher Hayes. It's filled with different sources and material for comparative studies of ancient Near Eastern literature.
Possibly your best yet, Peter. Highly expressive; does what it says on the tin. I'm greatly inspired to do more practice on my darbuka. I missed out recently on a chance to play my whistles, flutes, recorders and darbuka with a saz player, because I was unfortunately ill on that day. Thanks for giving me my belated saz fix! 😁🎶
Your interpretations have made me interested in Mesopotamia and I’m very glad to have the experience of enjoying the culture and stories of the oldest civilization on earth!
Thank you so much for the amazing performance, I enjoyed every second of it. It was as if I was transported to ancient Uruk and witnessed the meeting of Gilgamesh and Enkidu.
The is inxredib🎉 i really hope you perform the full epic and put it all together. Thank you for keeping history alive. Alot can be learned about the soul and human condition from this performance of the epic
Peter - you are a treasure! Thank you for bringing to life such an ancient but important piece of culture! I am waiting for the full version of Epic of Gilgamesh!
This was absolutely amazing, and truly beautiful. I can only fathom how much study you have had to put in in order to be able to perform such a rendering of this classic. Thank you very much, I am deeply grateful
This is so beautifully amazing. There is a new translation out of Gilgamesh and the book has been published very recently. I is apparently excellent according to a review in the NYRB. Gilgamesh translated by Sopha Helle. Apparently the prose is very poetic and easy to read.
NEW GILGALORE DROPPED
Gilgalore!? 😳😂
New?🤨
@@diegonieto2897 Dropped?!
???
@@DrunkenCoward1 slang for new post/upload
Babe wake up, new Peter Pringle dropped!
That's how I feel every time!
Upvote! Upvote! Upvote!
No joke, I just woke up for work and this was the comment TH-cam was displaying.
Bang Bang Bang (on the door), neighbor wake up, NEW Peter Pringle DROPPED!!!!!
Y'all don't have babes but if you spent less time larping in TH-cam comments like this you might practice and develop enough game to be able to pull one 🙄
imagine living 4000 years ago and this drops
"Yo I just got some wack-ass copper from that Ea-nāṣir bitch but this track really brightened up my day after dealing with all that."
They'd likely think it's some mad man singing, because there's no way anyone at the time could appreciate such bold harmonic combinations.
@@EzullofI don't know what historical snobery copium are you huffin, but please put it down. Historians lose their will to live from people like you.
Right?? And the album "dropping" would just be some dude rolling through your town/village like "ya'll heard this one yet? Meet me around the fire tonight it'll blow your minds."
Between that, and the collective songs you knew together as a clan was "music." That and what you wrote yourself. We are able to share a genuine piece of ourselves through art with others on the other side of the planet and that's an amazing thing
@Ezullof I don't believe it. We tend to be horribly conceited and believe that anything older than 100 (or even 50) years must be stupid or primitive... We are so sure about it that if anything produced in the past seems "too good to be true", we tend to think it was made by aliens...
The truth is, while technology needed time to develop, those people of the past were very skilled and had lots of profound expertise on things they did know; if not for other reasons, it was because they did it for centuries in ways not changed too much, just honed. Scientists are amazed to discover how functional and highly considered historical weapons or tools used to be; maybe lacking some theoretical background, but instead taking advantage of years and centuries of practical experience. We are now learning to appreciate again the idea of "slow food", they had "slow lifes". And music has been with the human kind roughly speaking forever...
I love this part of the story.
Gilgamesh was out to get his freak on, then a quasi-animalman walks in and starts mauling him and Gilgamesh just goes "That screams best friend material."
Some times it’s the friends you make along the way
It was the first time Gilgamesh found an equal, someone who would not only oppose him, but equal him in strenght. We all need a friend we can compete with, be it in strenght, wits, or art, and when one bests the other and they congratulate "that was a great match, and we have both grown from it", that is true friendship.
Gilgamesh needed a friend to tell him "no, don't do that, you're being a jerk" and slap him over the head. We all do, from time to time.
"get his freak on" is a very polite way to say what evil he was going to do
@@razorknight92 "Every saint has a past and every sinner has a future" -Oscar Wilde
Breed the snake wife
Gilgamesh was the first villain to be defeated by the power of friendship.
Underrated comment
Hesitate to call him a villain. He was a tyrant king for sure, but not a villain. He's the protagonist and hero of the story. That being said, he is a tyrant king at the start of it and Enkidu humbles him. His status is similar to Hancock at the start of his movie. He's a hero but he isn't a good person yet.
first shounen antagonist
@@xaayer underrated reply
Talk no Jutsu 😁
Been waiting for a Pringle drop since those ancient days
Since those ancient days when all things had been created? In ancient time when all things were given their place? When bread was first tasted in the sacred shrines of the land? When the ovens had been lighted? When the Heavens had been separated from the Earth? When the Earth had been separated from the Heavens? When mankind had been established?
Those were the days.
@@ramasirama8251❤
Ud reaaaah...!
Best. Comment.
Is it wrong that I got ......well..."excited" like a virgin on wedding night
Enkidu despite being a wild man who grew up without law knew Gilgamesh was in the wrong! A universal tale of a greater justice beyond laws.
You might enjoy the "Dawn of Everything" and the tale of how Indians from the Great Lakes were the leading thinkers behind the European Enlightenment.
@@philipocarroll OMG, I love that book! Especially the part where the indians yelled "wakanda forever" just before enlightening all over the place
Without law? How did U come with that? Who told U that man is the creator of law? Manmade authority is wrong and it shouldn't be. It's the reason of all fighting. Natural law is the only law, and we learn it from nature. It's the only truth.
@@philipocarroll that sounds pretty racist, lol
@@flydutchmen1754nonsense
The attention to detail, when Peter raises an octave when speaking Shamkat's part 👌
He knew he ate when he finished that part, too
Fr. Loved how he grins after it. Good fun
I am in love with this performance. Such incredible talent in every detail
The drumming part is so cool too i usualy hate drumming on guitars but on his lute it works perfectly
@@urzathehappy72 It sounds reminiscent on how the tonbak drum is played, with that finger tapping technique. It's very appropriate as goblet drums are some of the oldest known instruments.
I bet the British museum wasn't expecting one of the figures on the wall to start singing!
It is enough that they seem to look on from behind.
Lol
Imagine making a song that makes people excited 4000 years later
not too hard to do since there were no notes as the poster said, and he imagined the whole thing to begin with, it being not too bad not withstanding
@@curtrod you -----------
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the point |
------>
I love how we as a species love the concept of "When two heroes meet for the first time, they have to fight" so much that it's been recorded as far back as our literary records hold.
The MCU before it was a thing
As someone from Mesopotamia, this was the #1 jam all summer long
Dont you Mean All Sumer Long ? ;)
@@rdl3290 🤣🤣🤣 okay, you win the comments contest!!
@@hurdygurdyguy1 hehe i really dont know how the original commenter missed that 1 :p
So you're a jam from Mesopotamia?
Funny how kindergarden grade grammar makes you look.
@@rdl3290I've been on vacation all week...didn't cross my mind
My offerings to Marduk have been rewarded. This banger will surely rock the ziggurat
🗿🎧
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Raise the centermost, and therefore smallest, roof! 😂
Amen oh wait amen was not even a concept back then
𐎼𐎤 𐎮𐎸𐏂 𐎧𐎤𐎱𐎤
We need an album of the entire Gilgamesh being sung like this
Billy Carson would be elated!
My first born child was conceived to this song as it played opposite us a tavern wall, the notes filled our chamber with not only the sweet amber of love, but the fiery passion of Gilgamesh's fury.
Our child came into this world strong, and he grew to be tall. We are grateful for him and our large house.
3:28
Last time i was this early, bread wasn't invented
5:40 goes really hard when the tempo suddenly picks up, sounds almost like blast beat in an extreme metal song
Double bassdrum in early days
Nile vibes no doubts!
It goes really good at portraying the fight!
Fun fact: part of the reason he's doing that is because the only surviving tablet of this part of the Epic is quite literally broken. As best can be told, they start fighting, and then suddenly the fight's over and they're best friends. Truly interesting
That's how many goblet drums are played (such as the tombak), with that quick finger tapping style. It's highly likely such goblet drums would have accompanied the long-necked lute he is playing in those most ancient days. Goblet drums count among the oldest known instruments.
We all know at least one GILGACHAD that always brings his gishgudi at the Ziggurat celebration
5:40
the beat starts, Peter looks left and right to confirm the fact that absolute fire is about to drop
Bro was calling Gilgamesh and Enkidu themselves,to witness this fire being dropped.
So nostalgic! I remember when I first heard this in a brothel in Uruk... Feels like it was yesterday.
İt was yesterday. Time flies so fast.
We makin' it out of Uruk with this one boys!
We learnin' horseback riding before pottery with this one!
@@peterslaby9782 𐎼𐎤 𐎮𐎸𐏂 𐎧𐎤𐎱𐎤 !!💪
@@Supahdave1000Steppe by Steppe!
And that's how one of the greatest bromances in history began
When the world needed him the most, he returned
Gilgamesh : rape women
Enkidu : hey don't do that
Gilgamesh : okay
**become best friends**
This man is a treasure
GILGAMESH MENTIONED RAHHHHHHH 🔥🔥🔥WHAT THE FUCK IS IRONNNNN 🗣🗣🗣‼️‼️‼️🔥🔥🔥🦅🦅🦅
BEST QUALITY COPPER
@@lepinjalmao I have some doubts about that, sir
@@lepinjalmaoea nasir is that you?
@@ingkknswn6275 yes
sick pfp i loved half life
Been waiting 4000 years for this one
As a person who knew nothing of the pre-classic era before taking classes on it in college, I am still taken aback by the relatability of such a old tale from such a far gone time. The epic of Gilgamesh is, to me, a story about the necessity of friends, of equals, the struggle with our own mortality and of our place in the world. To think that the people of Mesopotamia were thinking of these things, feeling these emotions with the same complexity and care that we do, it is something that makes us feel connected with a people who are so far away from us but also so close in other regards. Mr. Pringle is doing some amazing history work by trying to also preserve the singing/playing of this beautiful epic and utilizing instruments that might have been used back then and with a beautiful improvisation.
As a fellow enthusiast of Ancient Mesopotamia, I thank Mr. Pringle for showing that no matter the gap, both in time or culture, bridges can always be built and we could imagine ourselves talking about life with a Sumerian fellow on the bank of the Tigris.
This is so odd. I looked at your channel for the first time in a while today and noticed you hadn’t uploaded in 7 months. I hoped everything was alright. About an hour later you uploaded a new video! How lucky!
Gilgamesh works in mysteries ways
Peter doesn't sit down for sure, he's active with instrument stuff too
International treasure, Mr Peter Pringle! 🎉 We love you, Peter. Thank you so much for your art
Eminem would not have dropped today if he knew Pring was with the stylus out chea slangin tablets.
You are a time machine
Hey hey can't believe I'm catching this live. I love your work Mr Pringle, thank you.
What a beautiful thing to wake up to! Thank you, Peter! Stunning & moving as always!
The episode of Star Trek The Next Generation, titled "Darmok and Jalad" is what first got me interested in Gilgamesh and Enkidu in the first place.
That led me to Peter Pringle and his amazing works about the subject.
This channel is what got me interested in the era of about 3000-6000 years ago, which led me to History Time
From there I just started subscribing to a few of channels about early human history.
It's some fascinating stuff, and not only will you find a ton of abrahamic religion is stolen from the Epic of Gilgamesh, but a ton of folklore and myths are rooted in things from before we knew about agriculture, just passed down through stories and warped over countless generations.
Gilgamesh and Enkidu at Uruk
@@iltonnotattico6231 Picard and Dathon, at El-Adrel
The Epic of Gilgamesh is what freed my 19 year old mind from Christianity. Copy of a copy
It's not stolen, rather both Babylonian and Hebrew texts talked about the same historical subjects.
Know that Abram and his family came from the city of Ur.
@@kffire12 so does assassin's creed.
You don't see me starting any crusades over it.
These videos are what got me fascinated by the Epic of Gilgamesh in the first place. Thank you once again, Peter.
Wow. It's so wild to think on the way that something written so long ago still has the power to move us, especially when interpreted through a gifted artist. Incredible.
I love the lighthearted theatrical delivery. You're an excellent performer.
Really happy to have you back my friend! I have never used the term "transporting" in any other context than your music. Incredible.
The king is backkk🔥🔥🔥
Watching from MESOPOTAMIA🇮🇶🇮🇶🫶
You always look so happy when making these, a treasure as always Peter
I fell in love with my Gilgamesh and even though he is now with his "girl destined for him" I will love him until the end of his days-enkiduC
Big fan of your songs about Gilgamesh. This one is particularly breathtaking in use multiple instruments and different voices for each character. I hope you keep making songs and smiling ❤
There's really no way to tell whether the way you sang it is historically accurate or not, but I really enjoyed your performance. The steps you took to try to make it sound authentic, improvising the melody and using a particular singing style, make your version interesting in its own right.
One of your best performances, Mr. Pringle. The ending was on another level of being confident and satisified with your work. Excellent!
Peter, we love your work! Please post more frequently!
Damn, what a powerful song. A wild man stands against a king because a divine law is inherently wrong.
Because he sees that the law isn't really divine, it's corruption of the law. I might miss remembering but enkidu was created to be as strong as gilgamesh to humble him before the people and the gods, and even tho he was a wild animal, a lawless man created in the wild he knew the law of the gods.
Enkidu is an inspiration. Wild and Infantile, free of Original Sin.
@@Jorgee-Exactly! He's the embodiment of the old ways.
Then they immediately become friends, according to the whole poem
Always a delight when you share new songs with us, Mr. Pringle!
Heyyy this rules! Gotta love those ancient cultures. Your effort with these recreations really is commendable.
Amazing video! Please, never stop making your songs
Please make a full version of the Epic,🥺🥺😭
I feel this is in the sense of the ancient originals. Well done. We drummed our bellies, and sang to our love, for men, and women. High knees, tap the belly, two to the side, two to the other side.
Оживший голос тысячелетий. Браво!
IT IS AMAZING! Thank you Peter and all of them who support to you in this work. People of antiquity praised the man-made world and were incredibly wise. Because even time had no power over the great power of art.
Oh, may the gods hear and grant you the strength and time to give humanity the entire epic of Gilgamesh.
Incredible as always. Thank you!
Aww, ❤, Peter the Bard is back! How fortunate are we to be blessed by the immortal story of the friendship of the legendary hero king and the mighty man of the forest, made to find their respective equal and soulmate in each other, sung by our silver-tongued Peter. ❤
Ура, новые чудеса, благодарю!!! Ждем еще больше новых музыкальных видео! С любовью, из Сибири
This was wonderful to listen to, and what a beautiful instrument:) Thank you for the description as well. I had to grab that downloadable file
Was doing some Sumerian reading and this appears. Divine timing by the gods 🙌
I wake up to a new Peter Pringle video, best day ever!
that was beautiful! thanks yt for the recomendation, and thanks Peter for you invaluable work and musicianship! this is my first video and I'm staying!
Love and Respect for amazing mister Pringles ❤. He teleported us back 5000 years in ancient sumer with his fanciful piece of composition.
A true delight as usual Mr Pringle!! I always love your takes on the epic 😊
The legend is back
Performed in such a rich and passionate way. Thank you for sharing this masterpiece.
My favorite ancient bromance sung by my favorite ancient singer!
It was really good. Especially description of their fight. Thank you.
when the day comes, Peter Pringle will not die, he simply will turn into beautiful music for eternity.
Fabulous performance !!!
I stopped everything just to watch. 👍✌️
Expert delivery. Can easily imagine people listening to this narrative by firelight a thousand years ago
In those crazy ever changing times, I love to be probably first of all my ancestors ever (rather not related to sumerians) to hear such an old piece of human culture. It truly gives me inner peace, also by the way how simple yet warm and familiar this story can be... from different people in different times. Thank you all that are making it for us to hear ^-^
Dude. Real. We are literally the first in our lines of centuries to hear this since the fall of mesopotamian culture.
Holy TH-cam algorithms! So glad I’ve found you channel! Amazing content, absolutely beautiful vocals. Keep rocking, Peter!
The fight between the two reminds me of Jacob wrestling with the angel. A fight which happened right after Jacob sent his wives and children away and he was alone, with the angel standing in the path of their reunion. The stories are not identical, of course, but they seem related.
Good catch! I think you're onto something there. I have to think about the struggle in the context of both narratives, but I don't think this is just a coincidence.
It wouldn’t be the first instance of a bible story being inspired by Gilgamesh
I think you'd like at least perusing through Hidden Riches by Christopher Hayes. It's filled with different sources and material for comparative studies of ancient Near Eastern literature.
@@NephilaClavata Nice suggestion, thanks.
Some days, the algorithm says hold my beer and I couldn’t be happier. You are incredible. I’m so thankful this popped up in my feed
Much love and many blessings to you and yours, Peter! Thank you for singing to my soul!
0%drugs
0%guns
50%Gilgamesh
50%Enkidu
Possibly your best yet, Peter. Highly expressive; does what it says on the tin. I'm greatly inspired to do more practice on my darbuka. I missed out recently on a chance to play my whistles, flutes, recorders and darbuka with a saz player, because I was unfortunately ill on that day. Thanks for giving me my belated saz fix! 😁🎶
Bravo! So beautiful. I'm always ecstatic to see new videos of yours!
What a time to be alive.
You sir are a treasure.
Thank you.
Always so awesome! Thank you! ❤❤
Welcome back, with another timeless classic!
Your interpretations have made me interested in Mesopotamia and I’m very glad to have the experience of enjoying the culture and stories of the oldest civilization on earth!
ugh im obsessed with this guy. he's a talented musician AND awesome historian. jack of all trades, master of all fr
very well sung. really enjoyed listening, and could feel the emotion in the music
you're a legend peter and the song was beautiful your passion is spoken in volumes
Thank you so much for the amazing performance, I enjoyed every second of it. It was as if I was transported to ancient Uruk and witnessed the meeting of Gilgamesh and Enkidu.
BRO THEY DROPPED A NEW CHAPTER YOU GOTTA SING IT
The is inxredib🎉 i really hope you perform the full epic and put it all together. Thank you for keeping history alive. Alot can be learned about the soul and human condition from this performance of the epic
Peter - you are a treasure! Thank you for bringing to life such an ancient but important piece of culture!
I am waiting for the full version of Epic of Gilgamesh!
This was absolutely amazing, and truly beautiful. I can only fathom how much study you have had to put in in order to be able to perform such a rendering of this classic. Thank you very much, I am deeply grateful
This stuff inspires me so much. Thank you for the quality art.
OMGGGGG!!!!!!!!! need your stuff on spotify so bad please!
What a voice! Very cool to hear to babylonian being sung. Thank You Mr. Pringle
Peter you are such a blessing!
This is so beautifully amazing. There is a new translation out of Gilgamesh and the book has been published very recently. I is apparently excellent according to a review in the NYRB. Gilgamesh translated by Sopha Helle. Apparently the prose is very poetic and easy to read.
Nunca imaginei que veria algum post seu novamente. Seu trabalho é incrivel!
Amazing! Just close my eyes and float through centuries...
beautiful ! le son et la voix sont poignants, merci beaucoup ! Thanks a lot, just beautiful
YES!!!! I love the epic of gilgamesh and now this banger is out
Trascendantly beautiful, deeply moving, extremely metal