Added: 3 years ago
From: izaraya
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  • Olha Lura, tas seguindo muito bem essa caminhada, Deus te abencoa, nossa nova DIVA!!!

  • ♥♫♪ Muito obrigada ... ♥♫♪

  • Grande musica!!!tao bem cantada como se fosse a nossa querida Césaria Évora

    

  • Que linda voz, amei ela e esse fado africano também, abraços desde o Chile.

  • uma grande diva de cabo verde

  • Lindo demais!!! Que voz!!! Música em língua protuguesa em toda parte do mundo. A língua portuguesa possui, atualmente, 230 milhões de falantes sendo a oitava língua mais falada em todo mundo e no ocidente é a terceira, perdendo somente para o inglês e o espanhol. A língua portuguesa faz dos oito países falantes - Brasil, Angola, Moçambique, Cabo Verde, São Tomé e Príncipe, Guiné Bissau e Timor Leste povos irmãos. Música, poesia, arte e irmanação.

  • Lindo demais!!! Que voz!!!

  • Beijos e abraços para todos que amamos esta nossa cultura que nos une.

    Viva Cabo Verde!

    Portugal.

  • uuuuuuuuuuuuuuufffffffffffffff­fffffffffffffffffffff no es sólo buena....me encanta..

    

  • Sooooooooooo Beauifulllllllllllllllllllllll­llllll.Muito Obrigada SenhoraLura

  • Eu gostava de ter conhecido a tua Flor!

    Beijos!!!!!

    Amor

  • she is the woman

  • I love this

  • Belíssima voz !

  • Precioso tema, saludos.

    Anna

  • muito emucionante esta coladeira amo esta morna linda como a tua esprança

  • Love it...! :-)

  • Beautiful

  • LETRA DE LA CANCIÓN S'm sabia Qu'gente novo ta morre 'M ca tava ama Ninguem ness munde Ess morna E sonho di nha esperanca Qui ja confessa-me Qu'ma bo amor Era falso,o flor Na dispidida Bo tchora tcheu 'M magoa 'M tchora tambem
  • MERCI !!

  • I love this version and I love Cesaria's! It's simply a beautiful song.

  • i loved to know that you love it...ijust have to say that this is not Cesaria...there`s a new generation making good music in CV...pay atention

  • Oh, I know. I was just saying that I like both versions =)

  • sorry i just didn t pay atention in your setence...is not my language...sometime we failled...sorry...keep on listening cv music bro...

  • Me enamoré!

  • ¡ Tu pelo

    es una flor

    que corona

    una hermosa planta !

  • Hola alguin me puede decir de donde es esta cantante, el Jueves pasado le vi en un concierto en Chicago, fue una suerte por que no esperaba verla, solo paseaba por el millennium park y hay estaba en concierto de mas esta decirles que me encanto espero alguin me diga de donde es, de que pais, gracias

  • Cabo Verde

  • es portuguesa de origen caboverdiano. Se llama Lura y canta en criollo portugues.

  • grande morna

  • All the cultures mixed, and every country borowed words, instruments, habits...

    It's not casuality people often confuse the styles when they are not from any of those countries... It's a bit like comparing "criolo" and "português". What do you think?

  • CV I feel is a African culture influenced by a variety of other cultures including Portuguese . What you are listening to is African based music that had to be developed in the context of that time. Blues, Rock, Jazz etc. For example Fado and Morna even though have similarities in Language are a totally different rythAmS, but I have also heard Morna being compared to Blues too. I do agree Human history is based on intermingling of cultures.

  • You totally have a point there, the African influence is it's main root and reflecting a little bit more on what you've just said I can only picture west Africa as mother of the most important musical styles from the last 2 centuries. I also agree with the repeating of lines , although I still can find something very familiar with that kind of repeating in CV, Brasilian and Portuguese tunes... though I really don't know what.

  • Sweet  voice

  • precioso, morna cantode

  • this is not Fado, this is Morna from Cabo Verde (Cape Verde Islands). It is a very old song, written by a man who lost his love. In the old days Mornas were sung poems and letters written by various people, and they tell the true life stories, passions and thoughts of their writers.

  • Fado's roots are in Africa, there's no doubt about it, in fact portuguese and cape verdean roots are deeply connected. Sometimes you can't tell where the origin is...

  • Fado and Morna do not sound anything alike to me.

  • Of course they don't sound alike, nor Chuck Berry or The Clash sound alike, although the roots are the same.

    In fact, the traditional instruments used in Morna are more related to northern portuguese folk music than to fado... but of course, you still can get the connections, just like Chuck Berry and The Clash, or Jerry Lee Lewis and The Ramones.

    Um abraço!!!

  • The comment was really for those say they sound alike. comparing one of the pioneers of rock with a british punk band is not a good example. The clash is remake/extension on an existing genre. This is not the case of morna or fado. They are two music genre's created totally different continents by different groups of poeople.

    Brazil(african slaves) and Africa(CV). It's like saying fado and blues sound alike. I mean you can find similarities if you really look hard enough btwn rap and fado.

  • And I never said morna and fado are the same thing... For the record: Fado and Morna are not the same!

    portuguese, spanish or italian language are not the same, but the root is latin, you can connect the three languages, right? But although there are latin roots in modern english language, can you relate it to italian? That's the kind of connection, folk music in portuguese speaking coutries or places even like Malasia or India, has very much in common.

  • @fulani31 Oh stop it! Everything with you has to be afrocentric. Tell me from a music stand point how fado is different from morna? Explain it to me in terms of actual rhythm (i.e. eigth note, quarter notes, etc.) and actual chord and harmonic progressions how the two are different. Listen to Gardenia Benros singing traditional morn out of Brava where it originated and tell me that it is so different. I am sure that you will not respond because you cannot show that the two are different.

  • @BravaAl @BravaAl umm instead of talking music chords with you. how about I let mariza the tell you smarty. She explains the roots of fado and comparing it morna. Do some research before you type: 

  • @BravaAl I will send the link to your email so you can gain some knowledge.

  • @BravaAl I will send the link to your email so you can gain some knowledge. tisk tisk

  • Cape Verdeans use these so called "traditional instruments" with all types of genres. Listen to funana (the gaita). Insturuments do not create the music.

  • can you explain how the roots are the same? As far as the instruments go, they were the only ones allowed by Colinizers so when they created music they had to make do. For example the drum was deemed to African and was outlawed.

  • You can find similarities in brazilian, cape verdian and portuguese folk indeed, because the roots are the same, starting with the most important one: the musicality of the language and the language itself.

    Take this part: "Ess morna, E sonho di nha esperanca,

    Qui ja confessa-me, Qu'ma bo amor, Era falso,o flor", the repeating of the lines is done the same way in folk from those countries.

  • I agree, i never said similarities can't be found. But if you look at much C.V's folk influence is African based specifically of the area of West Africa. I also see similarities with griot culture.

    The repeating of lines is common with many music genres/poetry from all over the world.

  • This is not Fado, this is an old Morna, very very old and sad, Cesaria and many of Cape Verde's great voices sing it as well but it was written by a male poet form Cabo Verde.

  • precioso.

  • Merveilleux, morna cantôde ma cé caracter.

  • Viva Cabo Verde!

    I love you Tobe! thanks you showed me great music:-)))))))))))))))

  • yeah! Africa forever!

  • One of my favourite songs by Lura. Lindo.

  • What a beautiful song originaly by Cesaria. Lura also sings it beautifuly! Viva Cabo Verde! Afriqe for ever!

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