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Post by terroreign on Sept 24, 2011 17:20:52 GMT -5
OHHH GUSLE MOJE JAVOROVE
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Post by mordid2 on Sept 24, 2011 17:24:48 GMT -5
Nice songs
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Post by terroreign on Sept 24, 2011 17:27:09 GMT -5
drugi dio, pomoz bog srbi
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Post by terroreign on Sept 30, 2011 10:00:25 GMT -5
AAdmin - can we get this sticky-ed?
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Post by terroreign on Sept 30, 2011 23:22:58 GMT -5
very interesting...though the alb guy's singing is quite bad....
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Post by terroreign on Oct 18, 2011 15:16:37 GMT -5
српски бумп
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Post by branislavnusic on Sept 27, 2018 0:54:03 GMT -5
pay attention to rams head on end of instrument .....hmmmm very Albanian and most likely Albanian made AHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHA "From this and from conspicuous Slavic terms in some of the songs, it would seem evident that we are dealing with the body of oral material which, probably after centuries of evolution, crystallized in a southern Slavic milieu and which was then transmitted by bilingual singers to (some would say back to) an Albanian milieu." - Robert Elsie
The word Gusle comes from the Old Slavic word "gosl" for fiber.
The horsehead Gusle is much older than the Ramhead one.
There is no consensus about the origin of the instrument. 6th-century Byzantine Greek historian Theophylact Simocatta (fl. c. 630) wrote about "small lyres" brought by the Slavs who settled the Balkans; some researchers believe that this might have been the gusle.
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