combien de souvenirs n'a t'on pas laissé au Mali? oui, tu resteras une part de notre vie et awa pullo exprime bien cette conviction pure, que les peulhs restent les biens-aimés de ce grand pays. mi wana pulho, mi bambara.
This is really good song, I am Arabian guy. I remember one time i was in Mali and i saw the Niger river and what is shown here in this clip in reality and i heard their songs directly. i really respect those ppls, and i like the way they live. Inna baba, i listen to her songs and believe me i understand nothing of what she is saying. but as they say music is the language which we all can understand. i really like Malian ppls in my point of view they are better than all of the other Africans
Beautiful simplicity of harmonic rhythm and human spirit. Maybe the political commentators should get back to listening to music rather than their own cancerous voices.
Jallo101 thank very very very very very much. this form sound didn't come from any where else. the peopl of the land creatd it, the spirit within, with the land they were blessed with allowed them to create this sound, GIVE THEM THE RESPECT THEY DESERVE stop thinking some other culture contributed to theres. Jallo101 thank you once again, tell these peeps to recognise lol. ~_*
wow this is one of the purest songs/video ive layed my eyes on the humble sound of the West africans, without any unnecessary influence from any other persons. i want to visit the West african land one day.
i am SoMali.. and this rhythm is around in southern Somalia near the Somalian rivers at southern somalia near the Juba and Shabelle rivers near somalia's capital city = Mogadishu..
indeed Fulani's and Somali's are distant cousin tribes that originaly migrated from northern sudan...
and also the Somali and the Fulani and Hausa and Afar where amongst the earliest African tribes to convert to islam, before crakkkeranity/christianity..
anyways Bless all black-muslims = Moor's of africa..HTP
@kha1405 The Fulani are nomads and in contact with many cultures, and donate genes and cultural innovations to many along the way. This is how healthy cultures, whether European, African or Asian grow. Isolation and ethnic pirity are not good for a race or culture. Look what it got the Neanderthalers.
(off topic) Jacque Fresco- Search for Venus Project & Zeitgeist Movement! Beyond Poverty, Politics, Crime & War. A world w/out Money, is it even possible? Stop the Greed w/in the Government ! (Links are in my page!!) Act Now before it's to late !!!
@Vjeya I can see how it might be related to eskesta, though not as overtly sexual. Many of the postures are they same. Just less booty-shaking and booby-bouncing. The charm of West African women is more in their dignity than in their raw sexual allure. The influence of Islam versus Christianity may have something to do with that.
@leftysergeant Islam or christianity don't have any influence and have nothing to do on the charm and dignity of west african women.People have to stop always explaining positive things happen in Africa by a supposed external cause or event.
@Jallo101 Every culture, African or European is influenced by the peoples and cultures they meet. Language, music styles and religion are among the more important things we notice about a culture. It just seems that the most sophisticated cultural styles, such as the Mandinka and Fulani, are more Muslim-influenced. Cultures, and the manners they develop, do not arise in a vacuum.
@leftysergeant cultures and manners mandinka and fulbe dvelop arise from our negro african substratum not from a muslim thing if u really study fulani & mandinka pre islamic and pre colonial sociaties you'll really see that arabs and europeans don't have nothing to do with that;we got it from our own genius. But it's a long debat thanks for your feedback brother.
@VraiDiouf It is also a sign of genius for a culture to pick up some item from another, make it their own in a special way and pass it along to other cultures. I see signs that the Fulani have ranged from coast to coast and had a great impact everywhere. The n'goni appeares to have come from Sumeria, 4000 years ago. I can see only one way that it reached Mali. I think the only advantage my ancestors had over African cultures was shorter trade routes.
@leftysergeant The Fulani have used string instruments for more than 4,000 years it did not come from Sumeria. We call the N'goni Hoddu in Fulani language. Every region has their own string instruments, Africa is no exception. The Hoddu/N'goni/Kontigi/Molo/Tehardent/Xalam (all the same instrument) all gave birth to United States banjo and Guimbri which is used in Morocco by the Gnawa people who originate from Mali. You can research that if you want.
@BedStuyBro My referrence to a vacuum had nothing to do with a lack of creativity in any of the peoples involved. I was saying that a specific trait that is present uniformly across a vast reach is probably shared among people who got it from a point source. Knowing what to keep or ignore from a culture with which you come into contact is a great part of wisdom. There are very few new inventions in any culture, but thousands of ways to use them to solve problems in another culture.
@BedStuyBro I would be the last to defend colonialism, even ecconomic colonialism such as we see now. And after what we did to the Gulf this year, I hardly see how our corporations can be defended on charges of environmental crimes. And I agreed that our banking system was a sin before it went in the toilet. My point is that cultures grow by trading inventions. We wouldn't have bajos had there not been the akonting. Even peanut butter is African. Look at culture as a web, not a well.
@BedStuyBro In a sense, the popular music of Mali, Guinea and Senegal may be part of a solution to a problem. That so much of the older traditions are being preserved even when introducing modern instruments makes a very strong statement of cultural identity and the value of the African creative genius. A nation that cannot feel some pride in its culture will always be a victim to outsiders bringing "modern" ways and values. Take what you will from the outside, but keep what you have and value.
Beautiful video, haunting music, dance, atmosphere. Love the man dressed in green, dancing with the pole across his shoulders! Very smooth moves! LOL! And of course, the lovely women. Thanks "Rickky421".
my grand mother's name was Halima Barry. She was around the area Timnuktu. Maybe we're related. she moved to France and eventually to Guadeloupe and met my grand father.
she's simply saying...people of pulagu(fulbe,fulani,fula)lets be ambitious especially the students,farmers etc,...unity and work hard for our father's land that's where our gain is...and the pictures says the rest about pulagu people
belle musique bonne sonorité foulbé bon message ononne foulbé Mali. un poullo du cameroon
danedjo1 1 month ago
combien de souvenirs n'a t'on pas laissé au Mali? oui, tu resteras une part de notre vie et awa pullo exprime bien cette conviction pure, que les peulhs restent les biens-aimés de ce grand pays. mi wana pulho, mi bambara.
selenguewoman 4 months ago
Yimbe fulbe, Ko Mawdum Rennen. Amin.
والله يرعاكم
simonetticarlo 6 months ago
@simonetticarlo Amin
VraiDiouf 5 months ago
Comment removed
simonetticarlo 6 months ago
Kanko lamdo Fulani!
simonetticarlo 6 months ago
Oh my God. I love it.
lamrof 6 months ago
Toubabou i ni sogoma
sami103435 8 months ago in playlist mamadou57
i'm guinean,from fouta djallon ,i love my community this is very love musique for all african foula people.
abdoulkd 8 months ago
Nice music, I'm senegalese and in Senegal we have the same rythms.
binoucheable 9 months ago
absolutely beautiful
brezelsmile 10 months ago
very nice music. we have a Sudanese song with a similar melody. there are also similar rythms. thank you.
adilcov 10 months ago
very nice song and music and i am American.
punkie411 1 year ago
This is really good song, I am Arabian guy. I remember one time i was in Mali and i saw the Niger river and what is shown here in this clip in reality and i heard their songs directly. i really respect those ppls, and i like the way they live. Inna baba, i listen to her songs and believe me i understand nothing of what she is saying. but as they say music is the language which we all can understand. i really like Malian ppls in my point of view they are better than all of the other Africans
GoooodMan1 1 year ago
africa has retained its spirit against all odds.hang on to ur culture n nurture its roots.
vidaripollen 1 year ago 2
Beautiful simplicity of harmonic rhythm and human spirit. Maybe the political commentators should get back to listening to music rather than their own cancerous voices.
mlbeeman 1 year ago
I LOVE IT!
BedStuyBro 1 year ago
I love this song very much and i listen to it everyday .
amdia45 1 year ago
@amdia45 Cow Milk
Lmasidor 1 year ago
Milk.
Lmasidor 1 year ago
is that palm wine she's mixing up ay ay
CALLINGALLTOLOVE 1 year ago
Jallo101 thank very very very very very much. this form sound didn't come from any where else. the peopl of the land creatd it, the spirit within, with the land they were blessed with allowed them to create this sound, GIVE THEM THE RESPECT THEY DESERVE stop thinking some other culture contributed to theres. Jallo101 thank you once again, tell these peeps to recognise lol. ~_*
ESaHaRaQuEEN3 1 year ago 21
wow this is one of the purest songs/video ive layed my eyes on the humble sound of the West africans, without any unnecessary influence from any other persons. i want to visit the West african land one day.
ESaHaRaQuEEN3 1 year ago 12
Very nice song i listen to it everyday
amdia45 1 year ago
i am SoMali.. and this rhythm is around in southern Somalia near the Somalian rivers at southern somalia near the Juba and Shabelle rivers near somalia's capital city = Mogadishu..
indeed Fulani's and Somali's are distant cousin tribes that originaly migrated from northern sudan...
and also the Somali and the Fulani and Hausa and Afar where amongst the earliest African tribes to convert to islam, before crakkkeranity/christianity..
anyways Bless all black-muslims = Moor's of africa..HTP
CushiticSomalianMale 1 year ago
inchallah on retournera un jour au pays, sur la terre de nos ancetres !!!!!! love this song
5tazumi 1 year ago
YES. This is one of the best songs .I listen to it almost everyday .
amdia45 1 year ago
YES, YES. This is one of the best song . I listen to it everyday .
amdia45 1 year ago
the fulani are from ethiopia
kha1405 1 year ago
@kha1405 no we are not.
VraiDiouf 1 year ago
@kha1405 The Fulani are nomads and in contact with many cultures, and donate genes and cultural innovations to many along the way. This is how healthy cultures, whether European, African or Asian grow. Isolation and ethnic pirity are not good for a race or culture. Look what it got the Neanderthalers.
leftysergeant 1 year ago
(off topic) Jacque Fresco- Search for Venus Project & Zeitgeist Movement! Beyond Poverty, Politics, Crime & War. A world w/out Money, is it even possible? Stop the Greed w/in the Government ! (Links are in my page!!) Act Now before it's to late !!!
AoEnigMoonxPhase 1 year ago
this is not not falani music mali
abdulsidibe 1 year ago
@abdulsidibe don't be a fool, it is Fula(ni) music. You are naive.
VraiDiouf 1 year ago
@VraiDiouf dont mind him...
laluwayye 1 year ago
Can some one tell me where i can buy this wonderful music.
selleba1 1 year ago
Please visit W/African stores.
tdiallo1 1 year ago
I am ethiopian too, there is a striking similarity on the music and the dance i see here
Vjeya 2 years ago
@Vjeya I can see how it might be related to eskesta, though not as overtly sexual. Many of the postures are they same. Just less booty-shaking and booby-bouncing. The charm of West African women is more in their dignity than in their raw sexual allure. The influence of Islam versus Christianity may have something to do with that.
leftysergeant 1 year ago
@leftysergeant Islam or christianity don't have any influence and have nothing to do on the charm and dignity of west african women.People have to stop always explaining positive things happen in Africa by a supposed external cause or event.
Jallo101 1 year ago 4
@Jallo101 Every culture, African or European is influenced by the peoples and cultures they meet. Language, music styles and religion are among the more important things we notice about a culture. It just seems that the most sophisticated cultural styles, such as the Mandinka and Fulani, are more Muslim-influenced. Cultures, and the manners they develop, do not arise in a vacuum.
leftysergeant 1 year ago
@leftysergeant cultures and manners mandinka and fulbe dvelop arise from our negro african substratum not from a muslim thing if u really study fulani & mandinka pre islamic and pre colonial sociaties you'll really see that arabs and europeans don't have nothing to do with that;we got it from our own genius. But it's a long debat thanks for your feedback brother.
Jallo101 1 year ago 6
@leftysergeant that is not true Fulani music has no influence from Arab music or European music. This music has been played for thousand of years.
VraiDiouf 1 year ago 3
@VraiDiouf It is also a sign of genius for a culture to pick up some item from another, make it their own in a special way and pass it along to other cultures. I see signs that the Fulani have ranged from coast to coast and had a great impact everywhere. The n'goni appeares to have come from Sumeria, 4000 years ago. I can see only one way that it reached Mali. I think the only advantage my ancestors had over African cultures was shorter trade routes.
leftysergeant 1 year ago
@leftysergeant The Fulani have used string instruments for more than 4,000 years it did not come from Sumeria. We call the N'goni Hoddu in Fulani language. Every region has their own string instruments, Africa is no exception. The Hoddu/N'goni/Kontigi/Molo/Tehardent/Xalam (all the same instrument) all gave birth to United States banjo and Guimbri which is used in Morocco by the Gnawa people who originate from Mali. You can research that if you want.
VraiDiouf 1 year ago
@leftysergeant white trash racist
MrSivram28 7 months ago
Comment removed
BedStuyBro 1 year ago
Comment removed
BedStuyBro 1 year ago
@BedStuyBro My referrence to a vacuum had nothing to do with a lack of creativity in any of the peoples involved. I was saying that a specific trait that is present uniformly across a vast reach is probably shared among people who got it from a point source. Knowing what to keep or ignore from a culture with which you come into contact is a great part of wisdom. There are very few new inventions in any culture, but thousands of ways to use them to solve problems in another culture.
leftysergeant 1 year ago
Comment removed
BedStuyBro 1 year ago
@BedStuyBro I would be the last to defend colonialism, even ecconomic colonialism such as we see now. And after what we did to the Gulf this year, I hardly see how our corporations can be defended on charges of environmental crimes. And I agreed that our banking system was a sin before it went in the toilet. My point is that cultures grow by trading inventions. We wouldn't have bajos had there not been the akonting. Even peanut butter is African. Look at culture as a web, not a well.
leftysergeant 1 year ago
@BedStuyBro In a sense, the popular music of Mali, Guinea and Senegal may be part of a solution to a problem. That so much of the older traditions are being preserved even when introducing modern instruments makes a very strong statement of cultural identity and the value of the African creative genius. A nation that cannot feel some pride in its culture will always be a victim to outsiders bringing "modern" ways and values. Take what you will from the outside, but keep what you have and value.
leftysergeant 1 year ago
Comment removed
BedStuyBro 1 year ago
c la fille de ina baba coulibaly si qqun a la cassete d'hawa pullo qui me le signale!
mandingue90 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Niggas! :D
CesarSofus96 2 years ago
stupid!!!!!
matitatou 1 year ago
j'aime cette chanson
diarama!!
wyldfiyah 2 years ago
Beautiful video
faysal64 2 years ago
I luv dis song. Dat little brother wit dat stick, dances like we do n New Orleans.
Close culture ties....hmmm bra!
refee00 2 years ago
wat is het toch mooi om naar zulke muziek te luisteren ik wou dat ik wat meer locale muziek kon vinden van nigeria
harryvanesch 2 years ago
beautiful song.
ChanaYah100 2 years ago
beautiful
DeathShamans 2 years ago
I am from Ethiopia and the rhythm looks very familiar to me.
kalkidan1 2 years ago 4
dear Hawa Pullo you are so beautiful and so beautiful is your song and your voice!!
we love you so much!!
Sabina Manetti directeur du choeur
Tribu Vocale Patchworld - Italia - Toscana
sabinamanetti 2 years ago 2
Beautiful video, haunting music, dance, atmosphere. Love the man dressed in green, dancing with the pole across his shoulders! Very smooth moves! LOL! And of course, the lovely women. Thanks "Rickky421".
chalomirof63 2 years ago
she's cute lol. I like the way she looks
AhavaYah 2 years ago 2
This is awsome thank you
Whistlejocket 2 years ago
i am not understand but i love it, cool
soresatina 3 years ago
Comment removed
soumia94 3 years ago
my grand mother's name was Halima Barry. She was around the area Timnuktu. Maybe we're related. she moved to France and eventually to Guadeloupe and met my grand father.
AhavaYah 2 years ago 2
where can i get this entire album?
mandingue90 3 years ago
correct me if i am wrong...she's the daughter of Inna Baba whose sound-only videos i have uploaded already
laluwayye 3 years ago 3
she's simply saying...people of pulagu(fulbe,fulani,fula)lets be ambitious especially the students,farmers etc,...unity and work hard for our father's land that's where our gain is...and the pictures says the rest about pulagu people
laluwayye 3 years ago 3
haa..goranammm! jimol mangol meme kam tdatdi mberrde..
laluwayye 3 years ago
I am somalian and i love Mali people.. i love all africans by god unite us one day..
khalaf2007 3 years ago 3
nice song to remind us of the culture,
haha love it tho
jerellipoo 3 years ago
super! au moins quelqu'un qui kiffe les anciens sons comme moi! ce sont les meilleurs!
mandingue90 3 years ago
baba niche
sexyfeli 3 years ago
I`m from s.South and I love Mali people
Boigin 3 years ago
HI THERE CAN U TRANSLATE ? THANKS
12zaynab 3 years ago
hal pullarrr diarama pr les sons!!
soumia94 3 years ago 2
Miyetti
VraiDiouf 3 years ago
magnifique
ayanna54 3 years ago
love it!
felicer 4 years ago
Jam Tan Fulbeh
VraiDiouf 4 years ago