[APH] Germanics - Wilde Rose / by gangsta gf

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 25 ต.ค. 2024
  • ___(open me)_____
    I own nothing but this AMV/the video editing/the picture editing; and the translation to English.
    I do NOT support racism. I do NOT support antisemitism.
    This video was simply made for entertainment. Hetalia is an anime I used to watch back in 2009. This video was a present for a friend of mine. I speak German.
    ___(what are Germanic tripes?)___
    en.wikipedia.o...
    en.wikipedia.o...
    ___(what is Hetalia?)__
    Hetalia: Axis Powers is a Japanese webcomic, later adapted as a manga and an anime series, by Hidekaz Himaruya. The series' main presentation is as an often over-the-top allegory of political and historic events as well as more general cultural comparisons.
    (wikipedia 2019) en.wikipedia.o...
    __(credit)___
    Do not reupload without credit. I won't delete this video regardless if I continue to make any amv in the future or not.
    Anime: Hetalia, 2009-present.
    music: Wilde Rose - FAUN
    program used: iMovie
    Faun combines ancient Perso-Arab melodies with the Swedish nyckelharpa and Middle High German lyrics. Equally distinguishing are Pawelke's and Rüggeberg's singing, mostly in two voices and, on newer recordings, the driving beat by Niel Mitra.
    The lyrics originate from very different languages, Standard German, Middle High German, Old Icelandic, Low German, Old Norse, Latin, Hungarian, Finnish, and Ladino among them. Among lyrics of their own, the group uses or writes lyrics inspired by classical texts such as the Carmina Burana ("Satyros", "Renaissance"), the Cantigas de Santa Maria ("Da que Deus", "Renaissance"), Jenaer Liederhandschrift from Vitslav III, Prince of Rügen ("Loibere Risen", "Renaissance"), Egils Saga ("Licht"), the Poetic Edda ("Sigurdlied", "Buch der Balladen"), Heinrich von Morungen ("Von den Elben", "Licht"), the ballad King Henry, as well as from romantic and modern authors such as John Keats ("Der Wilde Wasermann", "Buch der Balladen"), Baron Munchausen ("2 Falken", "Totem" and "Jahrtausendalt", "Buch der Balladen"), José Melchor Gomis ("Tinta", "Totem"), Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff ("Der stille Grund", "Totem"), Felicitas Kukuck ("Tanz über die Brücke", Buch der Balladen") and others.

ความคิดเห็น •