I'm from Slovakia and I like the original instrument better, but this is still amazing. And also an inexpensive alternative to a 400-500 euro hand carved fujara.
Es muy envolvente el sonido de este instrumento... primera vez que lo escucho y wao. es alucinante. practico danza árabe y sería muy interesante a#adirlo como fondo en un performance.
I am pleased to have discovered you through Axel Lecourt !! Will check your website.....and all your other videos on Youtube!!! Infinite Blessings and Inspiration!!
Beautiful! I dont care whether its played by Slovak or not... to me it sounds awesome. No matter who plays it ;) Great job, oh and one more question .... how did you find our instrument? :D
what is the hole spacing on the futujara.?..This young man playing it has very long fingers..I have played the bagpipe for many years, and this is simple by compaison..beautiful sounds, though
please DON'T judge slovak people by behaviour of this poor guy (boborko79). I have slovak friends and they are great people, not narrow minded racists at all. Unfortunately in every nation there are people who's retarded enough not to realise that they put shame on their own nation by behaving in this way publicly
WHy am I racist? is Russian or Slovak a race? Nationalistic Eurocentric... fine. But no my friend I am not racist. as I said its fine that he is experimenting but it cannot compare to traditional construction or playing methods. If you are seriious about a fujara it is a shame to buy a plastic piece of junk rather than a hand made wooden instrument... if you were a musician you would know this.
very good,my friend. To face that you're narrow-minded nationalist is already big step. Now if you are serious about gaining more interest to your culture that's the way:1)Face that you making bad advertisement here for Slovaks by your ridiculous behaviour. 2)Delete all your comments. 3)Do something amazing and outstanding,like he did, rather then show your envy and hate . The last step is most important.But even first two are enough at least not to put shame on great Slovak fujara tradition.
At what cost? so you can only play fujara right if you are at the top of the food chain ay? is this why you insist on calling him a hippy? bit capitalist no? as i said before what have you boborko79 done for the fujara? killed it id say...,
(second part) they try to make something new. i felt sad about this.Nadishana is one of the musicians who tries to find new ways and sounds and slowak people should be thankfull that he does this job ...and he is a great musician, when he recorded this he had played the instrument for a couple of days.. i know that because i gave the instrument to him!
i am happy that there exist people who try to approach the sounds of the fujara from a new side! When i was in detva on the folklore festival I got bored by the slowak players. i know the musik since many years and they are very good musicians, the fujara is an instrument that is hard to play if you want to play proper melodies. But there is nothing new, people stay blocked in their traditions and young musicians with new ideas and young instumentmakers are simply put to the side as soon as
I know right? Innovation is such a crime against art. I really dislike the conservative lens you insist on viewing Nadishana's astonishing music through.
non-musical? random? Is that a joke my (slovak) friend? I'd feel being honored, if a musician like him would play my country's instrument going beyond traditional patterns. You're lost in past if you cannot be happy about improvisation as well as beautiful traditional sounds.
Those are 2 approaches to music..
Besides if you can play music (for instance the fujara), you can tell, that he is in control of what he is playing - while letting the liquid element of music manifest through him.
Yes I am Slovak and yes I play the Fujara since before this Russian Hippie was born. He has no control and there it NO technique to it. I have studied under masters Smutny and Rybar in my home of Detva. This is random unfulfilling noise from a plastic piece of junk. if you can play, then you know there is NO substitute for real material and true talent.
Anyway, my friend from Gyetva - I recognize this random noise as fulfilling and as music. (You really need to focus on some fixed idea not to recognize that.)Listen to it once more, maybe you will experience freedom connecting the past of traditions with the courage of experimenting opening up the future. Don't give up! It might show you something that does not compete with tradition.
Besides if it's a plastic piece of junk than it's not a fujara, right? Then why worry?
No teda!:D Yea, it´s difficult to say, what instrument comes from what country, ´cause in time of inventing instruments like this, there were nothing like modern countries, so it´s pretty much possible that fujara is not pure slovak instrument. But it´s Slovakia, where fujara is most popular nowadays. Anyway, I think, that many Slovaks would be so glad to play like this. great job.
Wow, this is shocking! I was just looking up, what kind of floots I am gonna get when I get back to Hungary, and I've found this miraculous sound from Slovakia... Never knew about it's existence!
They talking that PVC is creative idea but its pitty that fujara is traditional Slovakian instrument and nobody represent us. Foreigner like you must represent us:) I am playin on fujara too, it's very nice, and Fujara made out of PVC has great sound. But for effect i prefer traditional wood fujara:) Or PVC but wrapped with elderberry wood :)
This reminds me of the time a pompus member of Lucnica told me (an American who lived in Slovakia for 8 years) that only Slovaks could really play the fujara. Another Slovak friend, a former librarian at the Universitna Kniznica in Bratislava, insists that the fujara is NOT a Slovak invention. No teda!
@nadishana: they're saying; let's do something! because slovaks play fujara best! I say; let's be happy that the fujara is still being played, that it survived modernisation, and it's not a matter of 'who plays it best'!!
Ten "rusky hipik" svoj nastroj ovlada bravurne!!! Ale okolo pravej fujary to neslo. Nezaznel tam jediny autochtonny prvok. ci uz co sa melodie tyka, alebo rytmiky...
Zacnime hravat na fujaru z plastu! Mozno sa od neho nieco naucime :)
I think this is the best I have heard the fujara in that "new age" style, but the actual Slovak way of playing the fujara is soooo much better. But good playing nonetheless. It looks like solid construction, and your kalyukas are gorgeous.
J'adore votre musique =) I love it, it's beautiful....
Thank you
Naturayaa 4 months ago
I'm from Slovakia and I like the original instrument better, but this is still amazing. And also an inexpensive alternative to a 400-500 euro hand carved fujara.
TheLyreGuy 5 months ago
This is "oh my God" awesome! =D
jrmhrpr 8 months ago
Is it possible to use a Kalyuka technique with the Fujara?
FeistyCoconut 9 months ago
@FeistyCoconut
yes, but with this model: watch?v=1Vv9OHA1lPw
nadishana 9 months ago
@nadishana What kind of fipple do you use in making the Futujara? You're a fantastic artist, your music is really inspiring!
FeistyCoconut 9 months ago
i am from Slovakia and fujara is typical for our country,,,i love this clip,,,:) thank you for doing this video :)))
m4rn4 11 months ago 7
Es muy envolvente el sonido de este instrumento... primera vez que lo escucho y wao. es alucinante. practico danza árabe y sería muy interesante a#adirlo como fondo en un performance.
expansionespiral 1 year ago
I am pleased to have discovered you through Axel Lecourt !! Will check your website.....and all your other videos on Youtube!!! Infinite Blessings and Inspiration!!
Shamanicka22 1 year ago
tremendo musico!!! gracias Salud!!
aylaurora 1 year ago
so peaceful... amazing
Bloodragea 1 year ago
skade je ten chuj?
2009wazzup 1 year ago
@2009wazzup prečo chuj?:D
MorkaTerminatorka 1 year ago
@2009wazzup z nemecka,,preco mu nadavas?:D
m4rn4 11 months ago
@2009wazzup teda je to rus,,,ale inak posobi v nemecku
m4rn4 11 months ago
great.
audioscience666 1 year ago
nadishana this is amazing that what u play let me think about my country im gipsy from macedonia,,,
denorecords 1 year ago
Absolutely magical sound you've got going there.
hornetpalooza 1 year ago
this is Slovakia musical instruments!!!
krstnyotec17 1 year ago 12
Listened to most of your stuff. It is magic and strange, keep the nice work.
Good luck and greetings from Bulgaria!
alcek1 1 year ago
Beautiful solo and instrument, well done, Nadishana.
SoldatSolutrea 1 year ago
To jest prawdziwa muzyka!
Michalek1606160 1 year ago
Beautiful! I dont care whether its played by Slovak or not... to me it sounds awesome. No matter who plays it ;) Great job, oh and one more question .... how did you find our instrument? :D
5/5
dzava 1 year ago
toto je ale psihodelia
mrghood1 1 year ago
amazing talent...takes me to another place very mind calming music..romantic and alive thank you for sharing with us...
mizgirlie1 1 year ago
what is the hole spacing on the futujara.?..This young man playing it has very long fingers..I have played the bagpipe for many years, and this is simple by compaison..beautiful sounds, though
coloneldaddy 1 year ago
please DON'T judge slovak people by behaviour of this poor guy (boborko79). I have slovak friends and they are great people, not narrow minded racists at all. Unfortunately in every nation there are people who's retarded enough not to realise that they put shame on their own nation by behaving in this way publicly
windconnect 2 years ago 2
WHy am I racist? is Russian or Slovak a race? Nationalistic Eurocentric... fine. But no my friend I am not racist. as I said its fine that he is experimenting but it cannot compare to traditional construction or playing methods. If you are seriious about a fujara it is a shame to buy a plastic piece of junk rather than a hand made wooden instrument... if you were a musician you would know this.
boborko79 2 years ago
very good,my friend. To face that you're narrow-minded nationalist is already big step. Now if you are serious about gaining more interest to your culture that's the way:1)Face that you making bad advertisement here for Slovaks by your ridiculous behaviour. 2)Delete all your comments. 3)Do something amazing and outstanding,like he did, rather then show your envy and hate . The last step is most important.But even first two are enough at least not to put shame on great Slovak fujara tradition.
windconnect 2 years ago
Comment removed
rhytype 1 year ago
At what cost? so you can only play fujara right if you are at the top of the food chain ay? is this why you insist on calling him a hippy? bit capitalist no? as i said before what have you boborko79 done for the fujara? killed it id say...,
rhytype 1 year ago
(second part) they try to make something new. i felt sad about this.Nadishana is one of the musicians who tries to find new ways and sounds and slowak people should be thankfull that he does this job ...and he is a great musician, when he recorded this he had played the instrument for a couple of days.. i know that because i gave the instrument to him!
overtoneflute 2 years ago
What's a slowak? do you mean SLOVAK?
boborko79 2 years ago
i am happy that there exist people who try to approach the sounds of the fujara from a new side! When i was in detva on the folklore festival I got bored by the slowak players. i know the musik since many years and they are very good musicians, the fujara is an instrument that is hard to play if you want to play proper melodies. But there is nothing new, people stay blocked in their traditions and young musicians with new ideas and young instumentmakers are simply put to the side as soon as
overtoneflute 2 years ago
HANBA!
boborko79 2 years ago
outstanding! amazing sound of a great master...
wunderbaer58 2 years ago
This is how you play a fujara not just random noise like you're making
watch?v=7Y1kv9GDnAM
boborko79 2 years ago
Upload a clip there you do it better, please! :)
The clip you recommended was awesome, just like this...
kblmitsc 2 years ago
Can you play something Slovak? I really dislike the hippie style you insist on playing.... just sounds so random and non-musical
boborko79 2 years ago
I know right? Innovation is such a crime against art. I really dislike the conservative lens you insist on viewing Nadishana's astonishing music through.
ShivaSmiles 2 years ago 4
non-musical? random? Is that a joke my (slovak) friend? I'd feel being honored, if a musician like him would play my country's instrument going beyond traditional patterns. You're lost in past if you cannot be happy about improvisation as well as beautiful traditional sounds.
Those are 2 approaches to music..
Besides if you can play music (for instance the fujara), you can tell, that he is in control of what he is playing - while letting the liquid element of music manifest through him.
holmikor 2 years ago
Yes I am Slovak and yes I play the Fujara since before this Russian Hippie was born. He has no control and there it NO technique to it. I have studied under masters Smutny and Rybar in my home of Detva. This is random unfulfilling noise from a plastic piece of junk. if you can play, then you know there is NO substitute for real material and true talent.
boborko79 2 years ago
Anyway, my friend from Gyetva - I recognize this random noise as fulfilling and as music. (You really need to focus on some fixed idea not to recognize that.)Listen to it once more, maybe you will experience freedom connecting the past of traditions with the courage of experimenting opening up the future. Don't give up! It might show you something that does not compete with tradition.
Besides if it's a plastic piece of junk than it's not a fujara, right? Then why worry?
Good luck and peace!
holmikor 1 year ago
it hurts the heart.. sounds like Turkish and Persian Ney..
ghosteri 2 years ago 3
wow! this is a great music i've ever heard. superb!
inday811 2 years ago
do a kickflip...
PhuckYoui 2 years ago 3
Este intrumento es muy parecido al el MOSENIO de sudamerica, es casi lo mismo, pero la idea con la manguera para soplar me gusto.
peterporrito 2 years ago
Slovakia ruuuuuuuuuulez :))))
fujara is national instrument of SVK
snehulo777 2 years ago 2
National instrument of my country! Slovakia ftw!
Sk8SaM47 2 years ago
fujara is pure slovak instrument!
Bhagawann 2 years ago 2
dont trust this man
Jaspaahh 2 years ago
Why not?
massieko 2 years ago
wooooohoooooooooooo!
DominicTumnus 2 years ago
Very cool instrument!
Turbo852 2 years ago 2
No teda!:D Yea, it´s difficult to say, what instrument comes from what country, ´cause in time of inventing instruments like this, there were nothing like modern countries, so it´s pretty much possible that fujara is not pure slovak instrument. But it´s Slovakia, where fujara is most popular nowadays. Anyway, I think, that many Slovaks would be so glad to play like this. great job.
bachesssss 2 years ago 2
Wow, this is shocking! I was just looking up, what kind of floots I am gonna get when I get back to Hungary, and I've found this miraculous sound from Slovakia... Never knew about it's existence!
Thanks for sharing!!
holmikor 2 years ago
wonderful..love that sound!
mmaarreeccuuss 2 years ago
hey this is wicked,the first time i have ever heard of a fujara, just curious to know if you are able to cicular breath with one like a digirido??
im looking to buy one at the moment after seeing this clip also looking on you web page now awsome stuff
diverhip 3 years ago
thanks for kind words!
yes it's possible to cicular breath with it.
nadishana 3 years ago
wow, that's beautiful. I'm gonna go make one
BeatNick13 3 years ago
Kudos to you :)
baze128 3 years ago
Beautiful array of sonic colors and textures.
bPofDuluth 3 years ago 3
This comment has received too many negative votes show
boring music, almost no melody just chaos, and compared to wooden fujara, this "pipe" has awfull sound, mostly in higher tones.
Bocatius 3 years ago
Haunting and beautiful. I lived/taught in SK from 91-92 and thought this was a really great instrument with a beautifully evocative sound.
evorr55 3 years ago
kreativne...skoda, ze nas prezentuju ini ako my sami seba..
ibnfahlan 3 years ago 3
ze???? podme daco urobit!! lebo slovaci hraju fujare najlepsie....
Slovensko1 3 years ago 3
what are you guys talking about?
nadishana 3 years ago
They talking that PVC is creative idea but its pitty that fujara is traditional Slovakian instrument and nobody represent us. Foreigner like you must represent us:) I am playin on fujara too, it's very nice, and Fujara made out of PVC has great sound. But for effect i prefer traditional wood fujara:) Or PVC but wrapped with elderberry wood :)
Slashinka 3 years ago 2
This reminds me of the time a pompus member of Lucnica told me (an American who lived in Slovakia for 8 years) that only Slovaks could really play the fujara. Another Slovak friend, a former librarian at the Universitna Kniznica in Bratislava, insists that the fujara is NOT a Slovak invention. No teda!
recorderdevoix 3 years ago
@nadishana: they're saying; let's do something! because slovaks play fujara best! I say; let's be happy that the fujara is still being played, that it survived modernisation, and it's not a matter of 'who plays it best'!!
certufpunk 1 year ago
Ten "rusky hipik" svoj nastroj ovlada bravurne!!! Ale okolo pravej fujary to neslo. Nezaznel tam jediny autochtonny prvok. ci uz co sa melodie tyka, alebo rytmiky...
Zacnime hravat na fujaru z plastu! Mozno sa od neho nieco naucime :)
Klajproof 1 year ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
skoro som pri tom zaspal...
lenivec9 3 years ago
Wow, what a beautiful instrument and sound my friend. 5****s to you.
My buddy Sage built a glass Fujara and he plays the theme from Star Wars with it...
You are a rare breed, glad to know you.
RobGuerin03 3 years ago 2
when will this be available for purchase, i would like to buy this PVC fujara, can you make one for me vlad?
DrumTeknique 3 years ago
I think this is the best I have heard the fujara in that "new age" style, but the actual Slovak way of playing the fujara is soooo much better. But good playing nonetheless. It looks like solid construction, and your kalyukas are gorgeous.
Slovensko1 3 years ago
Slovak culture.
DrakenPower 3 years ago 4
did you make this fujara yourself? this is gorgeous. thanks for sharing your instruments...
suimeikai 3 years ago
I really love this bit of music. I get the feeling that the pvc actually gives it a unique sound quality all of it's own.
AlexRawlings 3 years ago
Yes, you're right. I guess this is just different instrument then a wooden one. It's much easier to hold and to play fast rhythmic variations
nadishana 3 years ago
:):):)
davideswarup 4 years ago 2
extraordinary....thank You!
overtoner 4 years ago
Beautiful and wonderful. It opened my heart
Bravissimo..
febi51 4 years ago