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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 12:58:42 GMT -5
ANNA VISSI in Serbia - PINK TV ('YU' singers singing in Greek) *Zeljko Joksimovic (Se) and Haris Dzinovic (Bo) Zeljko Joksimovic - mi mou thimonis matia mou Jelena Tomasevic - Oro & Ela agapi mix *verse in serbian and then in greek Jelena Tomašević singing in Greek
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Post by danceswithpoodles on Jul 11, 2008 13:59:31 GMT -5
They all look Greek to me.
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Kanaris
Amicus
This just in>>>> Nobody gives a crap!
Posts: 9,587
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Post by Kanaris on Jul 11, 2008 14:41:59 GMT -5
Good music..good singing...
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Post by panagiotopoulos on Jul 11, 2008 14:50:54 GMT -5
Great songs good to see friends singing in Greek!!! Now if we could only get some Greeks to sing in Serbian??? Where are you Pyrros?
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 14:57:14 GMT -5
"They all look Greek to me."That is because Greeks are slav by origin. Just kidding. ;D Singers are www.zeljkojoksimovic.com/Zeljko Joksimovic is born in Belgrade although that is surname of Montenegrin origin (majority of Serbs are by close/distant origin from Montenegro or Hercegovina) and he looks Montenegrin. * Montenegrins in majority of cases look closest to Greek appearance (especially as comparing to Epirus and Greek Macedonia) do to the fact that they are slavized Balkan natives. Similarities between Montenegrins and I would say ancient Dorian Greeks (who lived in Epirus and Greek Macedonia as well as western Greece) is staggering (race, culture, code of honor and warrior cult and that each had rulers who were both spiritual and warrior leaders). Also influence of greek language in local montenegrin speech (also in countless Montenegrin surnames like Joksimovic, Lubarda, Kilibarda, Stamatovic, Petrovic, etc) is rather strong especially as it pertains to things in the house or on the village. Montenegrins are also somewhat similar in culture and race to archaic greek people in western Greece called Sarakatsani. Haris Dzinovic is from Sarajevo although his surnames origins are from Mostar which is central and biggest city in Hercegovina (region in Bosnia, especially its eastern area, which is closest in culture and race with Montenegrins). Jelena Tomasevic is from Kragujevac which is central and biggest city of region in Serbia (which is south of Belgrade) called Sumadi(j)a (means "Land of Forests"). Her surname is also Montenegrin in origin and this region is primarily populated by people who came from Montenegro (and lesser extent Hercegovina) 100-200 years ago.
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Post by panagiotopoulos on Jul 11, 2008 15:42:17 GMT -5
I actually listen to a ton of Serbian music. Milos Bojanic, Ummmm.... haven't found much lately but how about Sinan Sakic and uhhhh.... Jelena Karelusa is very pretty. In any matter Serbian music is great.
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 15:45:29 GMT -5
ANNA VISSI in Serbia - PINK TV ('YU' singers singing in Greek) *Zeljko Joksimovic (Se) and Haris Dzinovic (Bo) * Notice in the middle when Haris (Guy with mustache) takes the song over from Zeljko and puts more intensity in it (sounded amazing) that in turn gets Anna to approach him. First she tries singing gently but he resumes with his loud intensity. Then she pauses for a sec and starts the same as him as if competing who will be louder (which doesn't exactly succeed even though she was closer to the mike at that point). lol (I love it). Haris has one amazing and powerful voice as does many Bosnian and Serbian singers (one of my favorites Marinko Rokvic comes to mind). Marinko Rokvic - "Ti za ljubav nisi rodjena"(means: " You are not born (=deserve) to be loved") Ti za ljubav nisi rodjena*You are not born to be loved. Koliko ti malo treba* how much little do you need da pokazes svakom ko si* to show all how you are ko od tebe ljubav izprosi*one who seeks love from you Koliko ti malo treba* how much little do you need da pogazis ono sveto*to step over the 'sacred' neka ti je svetom prokleto*let your ('sacred') be cursed by world Ti za ljubav nisi rodjena* You are not born to be loved pogresnom si zvezdom vodjena*guided by false star I zato ti nije dato*and that is why it is not given da na ruci nosis zlato*for your hand to carry gold ni moje ni boljeg od mene*neither by me or from (a man) one better then me Koliko ti malo treba* How much little do you need da ostvaris svoje snove* To make your dreams reality oteras mi stare drugove*To chase away my friends Koliko ti malo treba* How much little do you need rekli su mi davno mnogi* I was told by many long before da se spasim nisu pomogli*to be saved but it didn't help
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 17:03:22 GMT -5
Grčki HIT Sagapao Remix Partije Mladih *Greek Hit Sagapao Remix "Party of the Young People" (Yes, I know, it is the original song but remixed I guess) LUNA - Esena thelo mono* All the 'Yugos' (as you guys call us ) who speak Greek have the accent that is displayed by Luna above. I am just curious as far as does it has some similarities to specific Greek dialects in pronunciation and rhythm (especially Epirotic, Macedonian, Tsakonian etc as I am especially aiming at north western Greek dialects)?
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Post by PrijesDardanian on Jul 11, 2008 17:14:32 GMT -5
Great songs good to see friends singing in Greek!!! Now if we could only get some Greeks to sing in Serbian??? Where are you Pyrros? why you dont mention and bosnaks? ahh i forget that greeks generally hate Bosnaks cus are muslim and enemy of serbs
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 17:22:32 GMT -5
Haris is Bosniak and Bosniaks are not enemies of Serbs as each person is different from another and have a brain to think for themselves. No nation is an enemy of another, only individuals or groups of individuals can be. Serbs and Bosniaks in Diaspora and elsewhere get along just fine from what I can see and listen to the same music. In fact they are far more similar mutually then they are different. Also Greeks (like most of Albanians) just lump my language as Serbian versus differentiating between Bosnian, Serbian and Croatian and why shouldn't they as there is no real difference between these language anyway (in fact I am sure there is far more differences Tosk and Gheg or between Cypriot and Continental Greek). I already wrote Bosnian and didn't mean to differentiate between Bosniaks and Serbs from Bosnia as you did on a whim.
Now enough of these psychotic Balkanoid political issues at least in this kind of musical thread.
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 17:34:22 GMT -5
LUNA - Esena thelo mono* All the 'Yugos' (as you guys call us ) who speak Greek have the accent that is displayed by Luna above. I am just curious as far as does it has some similarities to specific Greek dialects in pronunciation and rhythm (especially Epirotic, Macedonian, Tsakonian etc as I am especially aiming at north western Greek dialects)?PS: Just wanted to repost this and bypass the last segment as I do not want this thread to diverted in a Balkanoid direction.
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Post by Novi Pazar on Jul 11, 2008 20:26:36 GMT -5
"Montenegrins in majority of cases look closest to Greek appearance (especially as comparing to Epirus and Greek Macedonia) do to the fact that they are slavized Balkan natives. Similarities between Montenegrins and I would say ancient Dorian Greeks (who lived in Epirus and Greek Macedonia as well as western Greece) is staggering (race, culture, code of honor and warrior cult and that each had rulers who were both spiritual and warrior leaders). Also influence of greek language in local montenegrin speech (also in countless Montenegrin surnames like Joksimovic, Lubarda, Kilibarda, Stamatovic, Petrovic, etc) is rather strong especially as it pertains to things in the house or on the village. Montenegrins are also somewhat similar in culture and race to archaic greek people in western Greece called Sarakatsani."
Aadmin, l don't want to ruin a topic that is about singers singing in Greek, but the general Pontid race isn't as strong as in sth eastern serbia?....I thought the Atlanto-med race is more stronger in montenegro?
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 21:38:08 GMT -5
" Aadmin, l don't want to ruin a topic that is about singers singing in Greek, but the general Pontid race isn't as strong as in sth eastern serbia?....I thought the Atlanto-med race is more stronger in montenegro?"Northwestern Greeks are Epirotic (basically Dinaric meaning same race goes across much of Western Balkans including western Greece) by race with ample of Atlanto-Mediterraneans which always follows these Dinarics. Nothing different from Montenegro (true that western Montenegro and eastern Hercegovina has a strong concentration of Atlanto-Meds). "The Epirotic type described above is met, besides the Pindos massif, among the Epirotes of NW Greece, which we first studied in 1957, and after whom the name of the type was given. The same type is met in Montenegro, as it is described by K.W. Ehrich (1948), in NW Bulgaria, (Poulianos, 1966), in Romania (Milku, Dumitrescu, 1958-1961) and in Ukraine (Djatchenko 1965). It is not confined only to the Dinaric Alps, but extended to the west at least as far as Pyrinnes. It is a real epirotic (e.g. continental). The Palaeolithic Europeans could not vanish without a trace. Their descendants became the Epirotics, and the most representative group of them, the nucleus so to speak of the Epirotic type, is the Sarakatsani isolates."www.aee.gr/english/5sarakatsani/sarakatsani.html
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Post by Emperor AAdmin on Jul 11, 2008 21:42:19 GMT -5
LUNA - Esena thelo mono* All the 'Yugos' (as you guys call us ) who speak Greek have the accent that is displayed by Luna above. I am just curious as far as does it has some similarities to specific Greek dialects in pronunciation and rhythm (especially Epirotic, Macedonian, Tsakonian etc as I am especially aiming at north western Greek dialects)?PS: Just wanted to repost this and bypass the last segment as I do not want this thread to diverted in another direction. I am sure that the accent we use is pre-slavic in origin as I can personally pronounce say Greek almost impeccably (Also Spanish and Italian are extremely easy to pronounce for me) but I can not do the same with Russian or Polish which I do with heavy accent. Therefore if someone knows can someone please answer the question or is their accent too general versus localized meaning more similar to general Greek accent versus to some local accents?
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Post by terroreign on Jul 12, 2008 3:54:05 GMT -5
We Montenegrins are very similar culturally to the Sfakians of Crete...
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Post by Novi Pazar on Jul 12, 2008 20:29:05 GMT -5
"We Montenegrins are very similar culturally to the Sfakians of Crete..."
Montenegrins are, but you arn't!.
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Post by terroreign on Jul 12, 2008 20:31:52 GMT -5
^I'm Montenegrin though yeni, like it or not
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Post by Novi Pazar on Jul 12, 2008 20:31:55 GMT -5
"Northwestern Greeks are Epirotic (basically Dinaric meaning same race goes across much of Western Balkans including western Greece) by race with ample of Atlanto-Mediterraneans which always follows these Dinarics. Nothing different from Montenegro (true that western Montenegro and eastern Hercegovina has a strong concentration of Atlanto-Meds)." I agree.
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Post by terroreign on Jul 12, 2008 20:36:56 GMT -5
^Novi Pazar, but are you jealous you're just a turkish remnant?
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SuperAlbanian
Amicus
King of Gays
20%
CANARIS IS THE REAL KING OF GAYS! OH WAIT! HES THE QUEEN OF GAYS!!!!
Posts: 1,283
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Post by SuperAlbanian on Jul 13, 2008 9:14:35 GMT -5
Admin, I think Slavs are Greek wanabe's.... Take a look at FYROMans as an example.
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