Gente estúpida tagalog .. ellos piensan que son un número, pero de hecho cebuanos son más inteligentes y más flexible a todos los desafíos. Tagalos son asustados por nosotros .. Visayan's! We rock!
I also have a spanish blood but it doesn't matter whether you speak tagalog or bisaya coz' it really depends on how you've been brought up with your parents.. what if i'm here in cebu or anywhere and I speak spanish though I really speaks spanish, of course I wouldn't do that coz' it would be a foolish act.. However, yeah! I agree! Tagalog people kai mga hambogero jud bitaw.. Pwera gaba!
Kung ganda ang pag-uusapan Ay higit na ang Pilipina Sa lungkot man o sa ligaya Karinyosa rin at masaya Sa gitna man ng kahirapan May sigla pa rin kung kumilos Pilipina ay karinyosa sa pag-irog Ay hirang, sinta kitang tunay Puso mo ay ginto Pangarap ng bawat nagmamahal Ay mutya, yaman ka sa buhay Binata ay dukha Pag di ka nakamtan
mga pilipino b kyo bkit tila yata pulos lenguwaheng banyaga ang gmit ninyo?hindi bat nara2pat lng n sa awiting itoy gmitin nten ang ating wika sa paki2pag talastasan?
PLEASE DONT READ THIS. YOU WILL GET KISSED ON THE NEAREST POSSIBLE FRIDAY BY THE LOVE OF YOUR LIFE. TOMORROW WILL BE THE BEST DAY OF YOUR LIFE. HOWEVER IF YOU DONT POST THIS COMMENT something bad will happen. NOW UV STARTED READIN DIS DUNT STOP THIS IS SO SCARY. SEND THIS TO 5 VIDEOS IN 143 MINUTES WHEN UR DONE PRESS F6 AND UR CRUSHES NAME WILL APPEAR ON THE SCREEN IN BIG LETTERS. THIS IS SO SCARY CAUSE IT ACTUALLY WORKS THIS ACTUALLY
Songs such as this reflects an age of elegance and beauty that Filipinas should aspire to become. As a Filipino, the likes of Pilita Corales are my preference in women.
i copied this from a post which is probably a more accurate translation... Primorosa flor filipina cariñosa, dulce y divina son tus ojos dos rayos de sol que avivan la llama del amor En tus labios un rojo clavel siempre se dibuja al sonreir y la fina seda de tu piel es un vergel CHORUS--- Bella flor, simpática y gentil bailando el tiniclin esparces por doquier gracia sin fin Eres tú la sampaguita en flor que brinda su candor a mi sueño de amor
bueno si el programa es el más filipina la tristeza o la alegría y la diversión, así Cariñosa el hombre en el medio de la pobreza Aún dispone de energía para actuar Cariñosa filipina está en el amor es elegido muy simpatica Su corazón es de oro el sueño de todo amor la riqueza de perlas es vivir jóvenes pobres ....i didn't understand the last line...sorry i use google tranlastor for this.
toiletholder, thank you for the videos. I am enjoying them!
On a side note, YouTube is a great resource but the unintended consequence is that it also opens up avenues to people who will just post thoughtless comments or even seemingly harmless ones which you might not necessarily agree with. (I know... hanging preposition at the end of that sentence)
If you resign yourself to this fact, you could enjoy everybody else's comments and disregard others that you might not find palatable.
@toiletholder: I would like to see your replies to my posts. That may well be your Christmas present to me. ;) Don't be expecting any replies from me anymore though.
In the spirit of the season again, Maligayang Pasko, "kababayan" ko.
I'm sorry that you think that my replies are nonsense. You are making less sense than I am. There are so many things that I can say to you right now. But all you ever do is pick and choose what you can reply to, change the context of my quotes, then make it seem like you have strong control over you ability to reason, when you have almost ZERO. You are not a smart person. Bye.
What a hackneyed way to end an argument, pretending like you are more "real," or "human" or upstanding by appealing to martyrdom. Like because you are offering some kind of pseudo peace offering, you are a better person than me.
You put "kababayan" in quotes. Earlier, however, you insisted that I was Filipino regardless of whether or not I've been to the Philippines. So am I Filipino or not? Make up your mind.
I will not expect any replies from you because I know that you are not a rational person. You are, moreover, guilty of eloquence: using flowery and pretentious language only to serve the purpose of confusing the reader of what the issue is and to make yourself appear intellgent. Using big words and phrases like "that may well be. . ." unecessarily don't make you smart. They make you look like you don't know what you're talking about.
The only reasons I can think of for your lack of response is that YOU KNOW I MAKE MORE SENSE THAN YOU DO and that YOU DON'T KNOW HOW TO RESPOND. You care enough to read my responses. I mean if you do, why not respond? You think my replies are worth reading. Right? If you thought that dealing with me was a complete waste of time, you'd not even bother reading them. So, once again you've demonstrated your stupidity,
"Generalisations are an efficient way of expressing observations." Oh, really? So if I see a Filipino eating some exotic food, does that mean all Filipinos do? I guess so, if you say generalizations are A WAY of expressing observations.
"It's not really a deduction because i didn't state it as a fact." -- Google "define: deduction" and tell me who's right.
"...am not generalising but stating an observation I've made." -- Saying "Filipinos" instead of "some Filipinos" IS a generalization.
You know that I don't mean that drawing generalisations from ONE observation is efficient. Only people who are mentally unstable do that. Look up "deductive reasoning." A deduction in the context of what we're doing (arguing) means drawing and inferred result based on premises. A deduction is not ASSUMING a result based on premises, which is what I did.
Your last quote illustrates nothing. It is nonsensical because by this point I had established the group had been narrowed down to "young Filipinos I've met" as opposed to just "Filipinos."
Did you just pull the word "deduction" out of your dictionary of words used for showing off? You did. I know you did. Furthermore, to demonstrate your ignorance of the word "deduction," you called my "deduction" "false." If you knew what a deduction was then you'd know that deductions are not "true" or "false" but "valid" or "invalid." So yeah, you're not smart.
@toiletholder: As long as I got my point across, I won't care if the other side swallows it or vomits it out. You are a Filipino-with-quotation-marks.
Your in Canada, so I guess you wouldn't know about A.P. English. I intended my comment to be tongue-in-cheek and I'm sorry [for you] if you did not get it.
But then again, I would like to bring out a few more points.
Acutally, Canada has a higher standard for education than the U.S. Canada was the best place in the world in which to live for seven years in a row. Canada is a much better country than the States. And when other countries hire Anglophones to teach English "Canadian national preferred" is a very common thing to find in their job listings. So take that.
So, you said earlier that I am a Filipino, regardless of whether or not I've set foot in the PI. But now I'm a Filipino-in-quotation marks. How is that? The only way I can see that you'd've put my Filipinoness in quotes is if I was calling myself a Filipino and you didn't believe that I was really Filipino.
And yes, you're right. I don't know what A.P. English is. I had to look it up. I don't know what it is because it is the name of an English course or program at schools in THE STATES. I am, however, sure that I'm MORE than familiar with whatever content A.P. English covers because your English is full of grammar errors (assuming that you've taken A.P. English) and I recieved high marks in academic-level high school English, and received the award for Academic Writing in college.
Again, i know what tounge-in-cheek is. I knew what it was before I learned anything about it in school. I asked you to explain to me HOW you comment was tounge-in-cheek. You, however, refuse to and just say that you're sorry for me because I don't get it. Your refusal to show me how your comment was T-I-C only tells me that you don't know what T-I-C is or that you only pulled the term out of your ass to show how smart you are, not being sure that it was the right adj. for your comment.
@toiletholder: I will not be spending my Christmas time replying to all this nonsense. 'Cause who REALLY cares if you like Pilita or not, or if you like this kind of music or not. I pity your for admitting that you haven't gone to the Philippines. This therefore destroys the credibility of your "observations" about the damned ones "dismissing this as 'too old.'" You know how to use Google Translate, ba't hindi iyon ang gamitin mo para malaman mo'ng sinabi ko?
Why is it that you don't care that I actively seek out the folk music of the country of my parents. But you care enough to pity me for not having gone to the PI? Oh wait, because it serves you in bashing me. The fact that I haven't gone to the Philippines does not destroy the "credibility of my observations." I can observe Filipinos here. I can discuss these things with Filipinos on the internet. I can see that this music is VERY hard to find, at least on the internet.
Please show you line of reasoning. Show me how you draw this conclusion, that my observations are incredible because I've never been to the Philippines. How is this logical? Tell me.
On top of that I have to worry about paying rent. My parents were always poor. And now I'm poor. A plane ticket to the Philippines is VERY expensive. So if you want to put me down for that go ahead. 'Tis the season to put people down for their misfortunes, right?
It's not really a deduction because i didn't state it as a fact. I said that "you seem to think. . ." A deduction is something like if one plus one equals two, two minus one equals one.
Adding reverb and raising the higher frequency sound spectrum doesn't make the recording of higher quality. The reverb is actually very distracting and cheap sounding. Why do Filipinos think that adding reverb and treble make for a better recording. This sounds unbalanced.
I commented on what I see as a tendency for Filipinos in gereral to think that adding reverb and treble make a recording higher quality. It's ridiculous to think that when I ask, "Why do Filipinos. . . ?" that I'm asking this of EVERY SINGLE LAST FILIPINO INCLUDING THOSE WHO WERE BORN AND RAISED ABROAD AND WHO HAVE NEVER BEEN TO THE PHILIPPINES. But for the sake of simplicity, I asked, "Why do Filipinos. . . ?" thinking that any normal person wouldn't think that I mean every single one.
I realise that not every last Filipino has poor taste. Your pointing out, however, of my Filipino heritage and a technicality of my statement doesn't answer anything that I asked, nor does it negate anything I said. You're just looking to attack me because I said something critical of Filipinos. You also seem to think that I was trying to hide my Filipino heritage.
"Your pointing out, however, of my Filipino heritage and a technicality of my statement doesn't answer anything that I asked, nor does it negate anything I said." -- If your so smart as to use higher-than-conversational vocabulary, then I am sure you must know what tongue-in-cheek is...and after five comments, what is not.
This is NOT higher that conversational English. What makes it higher than conversational? How was your comment tounge-in-cheek? I'm smart. But that doesn't mean that I know or even pick up on everything.
If I wanted to, I would have used a another account and I wouldn't've pointed out that I knew this was the Levi Celerio version of the song and that this was definitely Pilita, not Nora, in the post just previous. I thought that having a Filipino heritage would entice Filipinos to listen to what I'm saying, not dismiss it as mere racism. Can I be considered a Filipino, never having been to the Philippines, nor having the ability to speak any of the languages?
"If I wanted to, I would have used a another account and I wouldn't've pointed out that I knew this was the Levi Celerio version of the song and that this was definitely Pilita, not Nora, in the post just previous." -- Mhm, 'cause we care, right?
I mean, if I am a Filipino because of my blood I must also be Chinese, Japanese and Spanish. For all intents and purposes I am a Canadian. I speak Canadian English. I act like a Canadian. And I have Canadian attitudes, as opposed to American. I am to some degree Filipino, insofar as I was raised in a Filipino household. If, however, you dropped me off in Manila or Cebu, I wouldn't know what to do or how to behave. I would just freak out.
"I mean, if I am a Filipino because of my blood I must also be Chinese, Japanese and Spanish. For all intents and purposes I am a Canadian. I speak Canadian ..." -- Yeah, as if people care. In the Filipino sense, "E, tinanong ka ba?"
You should be glad that a young, foreign-born Filipino like me has ANY interest in this type of music. Even Filipinos born and raised in the Philippines abandon this music, dismissing it as "too old." That's pretty much the only critique of this music I get from young Filipinos: that it's too old. Wow! That's is very intelligent, insightful and discriminating. Wow.
"You should be glad that a young, foreign-born Filipino like me has ANY interest in this type of music." -- How coincidental, because I am a young, foreign-born Filipino ALSO, and I know that the world does not care about my musical preferences.
"...the only critique of this music I get from young Filipinos" -- There we go with the generalizations again. You are young and Filipino too, so by logic, your one of them. And yes, WOW.
I have yet to meet ONE young Filipino who listens to music like this, who actively seeks out and purchases music like this. Generalisations are an efficient way of expressing observations. Science, for the most part, relies heavily on generalisation and observing correlation.
Again, I'm observing a tendency for young Filipinos to dismiss this music as too old. And I can call it a tendency because of my inclusion in the group. I otherwise would call it an observation: that every young Filipino I've met has dismissed this music as too old.
There now that we've got the problem of generalisation out of the way, please tell me why every young Filipino that I've met abandons this type of music, remembering that I've narrowed the group down to those that I've met and, therefore, am not generalising but stating an observation I've made. And I've met a lot.
CALLING ALL FILIFINO'S ABROAD: Let us ALL unite as ONE, by helping the poor in OUR beloved country the Philippines. "WE cannot do everything, but WE can do something". Let's start with OUR own barrangay/suburbs first, then extend...DON'T asked what your country can do for you! ASKED what you can do for your country! Let us break the cycle of poverty, by giving one child(s) an education. WE cannot help them all, but we can START by HELPING ONE, then TWO. So, LETS START WITH 1, THEN MAYBE 2..
This is Pilita. This is Cariñosa (the Levi Celerio version) as sung by Pilita on her album "Philippine Love Songs Vol. 1" (1971). There is no other version version that I know of with these exact lyrics and arrangements. Also, the voice is unmistakably Pilita NOT Nora.
hindi excuse ang pagiging matanda para d maabot ang high notes...iba talaga ang mga dating singers ....galing ng Pilipino nakakanta pa rin kahit may edad na at d nasisintunado...d gaya ng mga sikat n foreign singers d nakakaaliw...wlang quality...ang mga Pilipino may feelings tama ang interpretation...kailangan natin ng mga composer ngaun na gaya ng dati...lumilikha ng kanta na walng kamatayan...d tulad ngaun 1 week lang laos n pam-perya
yeah...dapat ung comment ko dun sa live song ni pilita...nagpost ako kasi ung mga bagong singers d nakakaaliw...nasisintunado p d gaya ni Pilita kahit matanda na ganda pa rin ng delivery...tsaka nagbigay ako ng credit sa ganda ng mga composition noon...masaydo kasi mag-idolize ung mga ilang kabataan tulad ko sa foreign songs d naman nila naiintindihan...
ikinagagalak din kitang makilala mairosas.. ang ka-ibigan ni erehes ay kaibigan ko rin.. sa tingin ko naman ay isa kang karinyosa kaya ang kantang ito ay para sa 'yo mairosas.. at para rin pala kay erehes.(.baka magselos yon ah) mahilig bang mangarinyo si erehes? nagtatanong lang mairosas, salamat sa comment!!
i think our own filipino songs really have a distintive alluring sound that never goes tiring hearing and thanks to the many talented and gifted Filipinos who can perfectly render these music to level of immortality. proud to be pinoy!
miss ko na ang mga awit na ganito....thanks!
tnb143 2 weeks ago
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Gente estúpida tagalog .. ellos piensan que son un número, pero de hecho cebuanos son más inteligentes y más flexible a todos los desafíos. Tagalos son asustados por nosotros .. Visayan's! We rock!
diandeizsa 4 months ago
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I also have a spanish blood but it doesn't matter whether you speak tagalog or bisaya coz' it really depends on how you've been brought up with your parents.. what if i'm here in cebu or anywhere and I speak spanish though I really speaks spanish, of course I wouldn't do that coz' it would be a foolish act.. However, yeah! I agree! Tagalog people kai mga hambogero jud bitaw.. Pwera gaba!
diandeizsa 4 months ago
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diandeizsa 4 months ago
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diandeizsa 4 months ago
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diandeizsa 4 months ago
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Kung ganda ang pag-uusapan Ay higit na ang Pilipina Sa lungkot man o sa ligaya Karinyosa rin at masaya Sa gitna man ng kahirapan May sigla pa rin kung kumilos Pilipina ay karinyosa sa pag-irog Ay hirang, sinta kitang tunay Puso mo ay ginto Pangarap ng bawat nagmamahal Ay mutya, yaman ka sa buhay Binata ay dukha Pag di ka nakamtan
underthesun65 4 months ago
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underthesun65 4 months ago
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underthesun65 4 months ago
KARINYOSO DIN AKO
preciousjey 4 months ago in playlist preciousjey's favorites
muy bien
maayonslair 7 months ago
sa ganda at linis ng katawan ay higit talaga ang pilipina...tapos karinyosa pa...naturaleza na natin yun he! he! he!
lecheplan76 8 months ago
pak u mga tagalog! ug sa mga bisayang pirmig tinagalog. maypa si pilita corales naay dugo español pero bisayang kaayong dako!
lgoopio 8 months ago
@lgoopio tinuod na bay. ang mga tagalog puro ra hinambog kay mga bisdak kaayong dako!
rabisrabis 5 months ago
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"So good to hear in my beautiful ears"
Mabuhay PHILIPPINES!!
heincuty 11 months ago
"So good to hear on my beautiful ears.."
Mabuhay Philippines...!
heincuty 11 months ago
Ang sarap sa tenga. Me encantan mucho las canciones de Señora Pilta Corrales.
YoSoydePinas 1 year ago
Nice music,thank you!
alwinder60 1 year ago
@alwinder60 THANK YOU !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
italocorrirossi 3 months ago in playlist ZIA CARMELA
When i was in my 4th grade, We had danced this song way back 1987.. Nice song... If I have a time machine.. I wonder!!!
fuchow77 1 year ago
mga pilipino b kyo bkit tila yata pulos lenguwaheng banyaga ang gmit ninyo?hindi bat nara2pat lng n sa awiting itoy gmitin nten ang ating wika sa paki2pag talastasan?
stag0711 1 year ago 2
Yes... I'm proud to be a Filipina....FILIPINA RULE!!!!!
This is so true...beautiful inside and outside..
susanw133 1 year ago
God... Pinoy po ako..... am proud.... jejeje
MrJamesUy 1 year ago
Kung ganda ang pag uusapan, ay higit na ang pilipina. hehe alam na. (tamaaa)
geminjewel 1 year ago
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PLEASE DONT READ THIS. YOU WILL GET KISSED ON THE NEAREST POSSIBLE FRIDAY BY THE LOVE OF YOUR LIFE. TOMORROW WILL BE THE BEST DAY OF YOUR LIFE. HOWEVER IF YOU DONT POST THIS COMMENT something bad will happen. NOW UV STARTED READIN DIS DUNT STOP THIS IS SO SCARY. SEND THIS TO 5 VIDEOS IN 143 MINUTES WHEN UR DONE PRESS F6 AND UR CRUSHES NAME WILL APPEAR ON THE SCREEN IN BIG LETTERS. THIS IS SO SCARY CAUSE IT ACTUALLY WORKS THIS ACTUALLY
jubotero2 1 year ago
i love this song... original classic songs..
loveraine03 1 year ago
Ima Filipino born in Germany.
I love the Filipino/Spanish mix !! Im always looking for stuffs like that.
ad1class 2 years ago
@ad1class U'll never fail, Philippine music especially folk songs have strong Spanish influence... Listen to the beat very Spanish...
naturalbeaful 1 year ago
Songs such as this reflects an age of elegance and beauty that Filipinas should aspire to become. As a Filipino, the likes of Pilita Corales are my preference in women.
mikefountaini1 2 years ago
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kareenibox 2 years ago
kareenibox 2 years ago
toiletholder, thank you for the videos. I am enjoying them!
On a side note, YouTube is a great resource but the unintended consequence is that it also opens up avenues to people who will just post thoughtless comments or even seemingly harmless ones which you might not necessarily agree with. (I know... hanging preposition at the end of that sentence)
If you resign yourself to this fact, you could enjoy everybody else's comments and disregard others that you might not find palatable.
dafaust 2 years ago
sino bang kaaway mo.
bahay1956 2 years ago 2
@toiletholder: I would like to see your replies to my posts. That may well be your Christmas present to me. ;) Don't be expecting any replies from me anymore though.
In the spirit of the season again, Maligayang Pasko, "kababayan" ko.
jjqnario 2 years ago
I'm sorry that you think that my replies are nonsense. You are making less sense than I am. There are so many things that I can say to you right now. But all you ever do is pick and choose what you can reply to, change the context of my quotes, then make it seem like you have strong control over you ability to reason, when you have almost ZERO. You are not a smart person. Bye.
toiletholder 2 years ago
What a hackneyed way to end an argument, pretending like you are more "real," or "human" or upstanding by appealing to martyrdom. Like because you are offering some kind of pseudo peace offering, you are a better person than me.
toiletholder 2 years ago
You put "kababayan" in quotes. Earlier, however, you insisted that I was Filipino regardless of whether or not I've been to the Philippines. So am I Filipino or not? Make up your mind.
toiletholder 2 years ago
I will not expect any replies from you because I know that you are not a rational person. You are, moreover, guilty of eloquence: using flowery and pretentious language only to serve the purpose of confusing the reader of what the issue is and to make yourself appear intellgent. Using big words and phrases like "that may well be. . ." unecessarily don't make you smart. They make you look like you don't know what you're talking about.
toiletholder 2 years ago
You should only use big words if they more concisely illustrate your point, which you obviously don't have.
toiletholder 2 years ago
The only reasons I can think of for your lack of response is that YOU KNOW I MAKE MORE SENSE THAN YOU DO and that YOU DON'T KNOW HOW TO RESPOND. You care enough to read my responses. I mean if you do, why not respond? You think my replies are worth reading. Right? If you thought that dealing with me was a complete waste of time, you'd not even bother reading them. So, once again you've demonstrated your stupidity,
toiletholder 2 years ago
"Generalisations are an efficient way of expressing observations." Oh, really? So if I see a Filipino eating some exotic food, does that mean all Filipinos do? I guess so, if you say generalizations are A WAY of expressing observations.
"It's not really a deduction because i didn't state it as a fact." -- Google "define: deduction" and tell me who's right.
"...am not generalising but stating an observation I've made." -- Saying "Filipinos" instead of "some Filipinos" IS a generalization.
jjqnario 2 years ago
You know that I don't mean that drawing generalisations from ONE observation is efficient. Only people who are mentally unstable do that. Look up "deductive reasoning." A deduction in the context of what we're doing (arguing) means drawing and inferred result based on premises. A deduction is not ASSUMING a result based on premises, which is what I did.
toiletholder 2 years ago
That is called and INDUCTION, NOT a DEDUCTION.
toiletholder 2 years ago
"an" induction
toiletholder 2 years ago
typo: AN inferred result. . .
toiletholder 2 years ago
Your last quote illustrates nothing. It is nonsensical because by this point I had established the group had been narrowed down to "young Filipinos I've met" as opposed to just "Filipinos."
toiletholder 2 years ago
So yeah, you're still wrong and even stupider than I thought.
toiletholder 2 years ago
Did you just pull the word "deduction" out of your dictionary of words used for showing off? You did. I know you did. Furthermore, to demonstrate your ignorance of the word "deduction," you called my "deduction" "false." If you knew what a deduction was then you'd know that deductions are not "true" or "false" but "valid" or "invalid." So yeah, you're not smart.
toiletholder 2 years ago
@toiletholder: As long as I got my point across, I won't care if the other side swallows it or vomits it out. You are a Filipino-with-quotation-marks.
Your in Canada, so I guess you wouldn't know about A.P. English. I intended my comment to be tongue-in-cheek and I'm sorry [for you] if you did not get it.
But then again, I would like to bring out a few more points.
jjqnario 2 years ago
Acutally, Canada has a higher standard for education than the U.S. Canada was the best place in the world in which to live for seven years in a row. Canada is a much better country than the States. And when other countries hire Anglophones to teach English "Canadian national preferred" is a very common thing to find in their job listings. So take that.
toiletholder 2 years ago
If you were in A.P. English you should know then that you should have typed "You're in Canada." And the comma after "Canada" is a comma splice error.
toiletholder 2 years ago
So, you said earlier that I am a Filipino, regardless of whether or not I've set foot in the PI. But now I'm a Filipino-in-quotation marks. How is that? The only way I can see that you'd've put my Filipinoness in quotes is if I was calling myself a Filipino and you didn't believe that I was really Filipino.
toiletholder 2 years ago
And yes, you're right. I don't know what A.P. English is. I had to look it up. I don't know what it is because it is the name of an English course or program at schools in THE STATES. I am, however, sure that I'm MORE than familiar with whatever content A.P. English covers because your English is full of grammar errors (assuming that you've taken A.P. English) and I recieved high marks in academic-level high school English, and received the award for Academic Writing in college.
toiletholder 2 years ago
Again, i know what tounge-in-cheek is. I knew what it was before I learned anything about it in school. I asked you to explain to me HOW you comment was tounge-in-cheek. You, however, refuse to and just say that you're sorry for me because I don't get it. Your refusal to show me how your comment was T-I-C only tells me that you don't know what T-I-C is or that you only pulled the term out of your ass to show how smart you are, not being sure that it was the right adj. for your comment.
toiletholder 2 years ago
Or that you don't know how to effectively use tounge in cheek rhetoric.
toiletholder 2 years ago
@toiletholder: I will not be spending my Christmas time replying to all this nonsense. 'Cause who REALLY cares if you like Pilita or not, or if you like this kind of music or not. I pity your for admitting that you haven't gone to the Philippines. This therefore destroys the credibility of your "observations" about the damned ones "dismissing this as 'too old.'" You know how to use Google Translate, ba't hindi iyon ang gamitin mo para malaman mo'ng sinabi ko?
jjqnario 2 years ago
Why is it that you don't care that I actively seek out the folk music of the country of my parents. But you care enough to pity me for not having gone to the PI? Oh wait, because it serves you in bashing me. The fact that I haven't gone to the Philippines does not destroy the "credibility of my observations." I can observe Filipinos here. I can discuss these things with Filipinos on the internet. I can see that this music is VERY hard to find, at least on the internet.
toiletholder 2 years ago
Please show you line of reasoning. Show me how you draw this conclusion, that my observations are incredible because I've never been to the Philippines. How is this logical? Tell me.
toiletholder 2 years ago
On top of that I have to worry about paying rent. My parents were always poor. And now I'm poor. A plane ticket to the Philippines is VERY expensive. So if you want to put me down for that go ahead. 'Tis the season to put people down for their misfortunes, right?
toiletholder 2 years ago
@toiletholder: Five replies in a row for a comment of two lines? Now, THAT's what I call O.A.
"Why do Filipinos..." -- If you can speak English so well, I'm sure there's a better way to put that forth without generalization.
"You also seem to think that I was trying to hide my Filipino heritage." -- Now, that's false deduction.
jjqnario 2 years ago
It's not really a deduction because i didn't state it as a fact. I said that "you seem to think. . ." A deduction is something like if one plus one equals two, two minus one equals one.
toiletholder 2 years ago
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toiletholder 2 years ago
Adding reverb and raising the higher frequency sound spectrum doesn't make the recording of higher quality. The reverb is actually very distracting and cheap sounding. Why do Filipinos think that adding reverb and treble make for a better recording. This sounds unbalanced.
toiletholder 2 years ago
"My name is Manny. I'm 27 years old. I'm a Canadian of Filipino descent."
..funny you include yourself when you say "Why do Filipinos...".
jjqnario 2 years ago
I commented on what I see as a tendency for Filipinos in gereral to think that adding reverb and treble make a recording higher quality. It's ridiculous to think that when I ask, "Why do Filipinos. . . ?" that I'm asking this of EVERY SINGLE LAST FILIPINO INCLUDING THOSE WHO WERE BORN AND RAISED ABROAD AND WHO HAVE NEVER BEEN TO THE PHILIPPINES. But for the sake of simplicity, I asked, "Why do Filipinos. . . ?" thinking that any normal person wouldn't think that I mean every single one.
toiletholder 2 years ago
I realise that not every last Filipino has poor taste. Your pointing out, however, of my Filipino heritage and a technicality of my statement doesn't answer anything that I asked, nor does it negate anything I said. You're just looking to attack me because I said something critical of Filipinos. You also seem to think that I was trying to hide my Filipino heritage.
toiletholder 2 years ago
"Your pointing out, however, of my Filipino heritage and a technicality of my statement doesn't answer anything that I asked, nor does it negate anything I said." -- If your so smart as to use higher-than-conversational vocabulary, then I am sure you must know what tongue-in-cheek is...and after five comments, what is not.
jjqnario 2 years ago
This is NOT higher that conversational English. What makes it higher than conversational? How was your comment tounge-in-cheek? I'm smart. But that doesn't mean that I know or even pick up on everything.
toiletholder 2 years ago
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If I wanted to, I would have used a another account and I wouldn't've pointed out that I knew this was the Levi Celerio version of the song and that this was definitely Pilita, not Nora, in the post just previous. I thought that having a Filipino heritage would entice Filipinos to listen to what I'm saying, not dismiss it as mere racism. Can I be considered a Filipino, never having been to the Philippines, nor having the ability to speak any of the languages?
toiletholder 2 years ago
"If I wanted to, I would have used a another account and I wouldn't've pointed out that I knew this was the Levi Celerio version of the song and that this was definitely Pilita, not Nora, in the post just previous." -- Mhm, 'cause we care, right?
jjqnario 2 years ago
There were several users discussing whether this was Nora or Pilita. You might not care but obvious some people did.
toiletholder 2 years ago
I mean, if I am a Filipino because of my blood I must also be Chinese, Japanese and Spanish. For all intents and purposes I am a Canadian. I speak Canadian English. I act like a Canadian. And I have Canadian attitudes, as opposed to American. I am to some degree Filipino, insofar as I was raised in a Filipino household. If, however, you dropped me off in Manila or Cebu, I wouldn't know what to do or how to behave. I would just freak out.
toiletholder 2 years ago
"I mean, if I am a Filipino because of my blood I must also be Chinese, Japanese and Spanish. For all intents and purposes I am a Canadian. I speak Canadian ..." -- Yeah, as if people care. In the Filipino sense, "E, tinanong ka ba?"
jjqnario 2 years ago
I don't understand your response. "...as if people care in the Filipino sense." Please explain this more thoroughly.
toiletholder 2 years ago
You should be glad that a young, foreign-born Filipino like me has ANY interest in this type of music. Even Filipinos born and raised in the Philippines abandon this music, dismissing it as "too old." That's pretty much the only critique of this music I get from young Filipinos: that it's too old. Wow! That's is very intelligent, insightful and discriminating. Wow.
toiletholder 2 years ago
"You should be glad that a young, foreign-born Filipino like me has ANY interest in this type of music." -- How coincidental, because I am a young, foreign-born Filipino ALSO, and I know that the world does not care about my musical preferences.
"...the only critique of this music I get from young Filipinos" -- There we go with the generalizations again. You are young and Filipino too, so by logic, your one of them. And yes, WOW.
jjqnario 2 years ago
I have yet to meet ONE young Filipino who listens to music like this, who actively seeks out and purchases music like this. Generalisations are an efficient way of expressing observations. Science, for the most part, relies heavily on generalisation and observing correlation.
toiletholder 2 years ago
Again, I'm observing a tendency for young Filipinos to dismiss this music as too old. And I can call it a tendency because of my inclusion in the group. I otherwise would call it an observation: that every young Filipino I've met has dismissed this music as too old.
toiletholder 2 years ago
There now that we've got the problem of generalisation out of the way, please tell me why every young Filipino that I've met abandons this type of music, remembering that I've narrowed the group down to those that I've met and, therefore, am not generalising but stating an observation I've made. And I've met a lot.
toiletholder 2 years ago
Does anyone have the lyrics for this? I'd really like to learn how to sing it~~
marifrance 2 years ago
I dont agree nora aunor coz pilita is the original of 1st quenn of popsongs.,
rekgwapo 2 years ago
i luuurve this song.reminds me of the time when a kababata taught us how to dance to this tune when we're at grade 4,he he he!!
msirvine 2 years ago
may narinig akong parang retro or medyo rock version ng Cariñosa. Sino 'yung kumanta?? Pakisabi naman, PLEASE. Astig kasi 'yon. Thank you very much.
baijiowada 2 years ago
saan po kya pwede magdownload n2?
chareal18 2 years ago
hanap k s internet ng youtube downloader.. download mo s computer then ready to download n ang mga videos dto
waynecomps 2 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
CALLING ALL FILIFINO'S ABROAD: Let us ALL unite as ONE, by helping the poor in OUR beloved country the Philippines. "WE cannot do everything, but WE can do something". Let's start with OUR own barrangay/suburbs first, then extend...DON'T asked what your country can do for you! ASKED what you can do for your country! Let us break the cycle of poverty, by giving one child(s) an education. WE cannot help them all, but we can START by HELPING ONE, then TWO. So, LETS START WITH 1, THEN MAYBE 2..
freshflowers4u2 2 years ago
Sounds like Nora Aunor to me. Not Pilita. Do you agree?
milpitasko 2 years ago
mas mababa ang boses ni nora aunor
renerevuelta1 2 years ago
Ke Nora, Ke Pilita, I don't care...basta ang ganda ng pagkakakanta. Galeng talaga ng Pinoy!
bettelgeux 2 years ago
yeah I strongly agree , all the folk songs are all sounds NORA AUNOR.
MrBestdream 2 years ago
This is Pilita. This is Cariñosa (the Levi Celerio version) as sung by Pilita on her album "Philippine Love Songs Vol. 1" (1971). There is no other version version that I know of with these exact lyrics and arrangements. Also, the voice is unmistakably Pilita NOT Nora.
toiletholder 2 years ago
It IS Pilita.
Milordvega 2 years ago
astig..
krisleyvetta 2 years ago
hindi excuse ang pagiging matanda para d maabot ang high notes...iba talaga ang mga dating singers ....galing ng Pilipino nakakanta pa rin kahit may edad na at d nasisintunado...d gaya ng mga sikat n foreign singers d nakakaaliw...wlang quality...ang mga Pilipino may feelings tama ang interpretation...kailangan natin ng mga composer ngaun na gaya ng dati...lumilikha ng kanta na walng kamatayan...d tulad ngaun 1 week lang laos n pam-perya
naborghsoj08 2 years ago 6
Comment removed
jamcajilig 2 years ago
yeah...dapat ung comment ko dun sa live song ni pilita...nagpost ako kasi ung mga bagong singers d nakakaaliw...nasisintunado p d gaya ni Pilita kahit matanda na ganda pa rin ng delivery...tsaka nagbigay ako ng credit sa ganda ng mga composition noon...masaydo kasi mag-idolize ung mga ilang kabataan tulad ko sa foreign songs d naman nila naiintindihan...
naborghsoj08 2 years ago
talagang napakaganda noung ng mga awitin magpahangang ngayon ganon parin maganda talaga ang mga pinay matalino pa kasaali ako diyan ,,
mercenarie65 2 years ago
¡Un saludo! desde el Canal de Filipinas en español.
RepublicadeFilipinas 2 years ago
thank u for posting this wonferful song!
it gives me back memories of yesterday
Thanks =D
MissZenyP 2 years ago
helloww!!! thanks for posting this song,i really like it.more power............
sulpeng123123 2 years ago
walang kupas talaga ang asia queen of songs! Bravo!!!
chenwenhua2269 2 years ago
i love this song! My Lolo used to play this song when I was a little girl. It brings back old memories. Thank you for posting! :-)
lolo1983 2 years ago
uhmmmm. napakangdang pakinggan ang mga kanta nong araw.. thanks for sharing .. warm regards,, beth
quibuar 3 years ago
ikinagagalak din kitang makilala mairosas.. ang ka-ibigan ni erehes ay kaibigan ko rin.. sa tingin ko naman ay isa kang karinyosa kaya ang kantang ito ay para sa 'yo mairosas.. at para rin pala kay erehes.(.baka magselos yon ah) mahilig bang mangarinyo si erehes? nagtatanong lang mairosas, salamat sa comment!!
apmech 3 years ago
muy bonita canción la cariñosa. la melodía es preciosa.
cristobalito66 3 years ago
muchas gracias sr. cristobalito66
apmech 3 years ago
i think our own filipino songs really have a distintive alluring sound that never goes tiring hearing and thanks to the many talented and gifted Filipinos who can perfectly render these music to level of immortality. proud to be pinoy!
bakaltoits 3 years ago 2
naaalala ko tuloy ang Lola ko. Inaawit nya ito nung bata ako para patulugin. Miss ko lola ko. I love her so much!
tsukishiro23 3 years ago 2
I only know 2 versions, one by Mabuhay Singers and one by Sylvia La Torre.
apmech 3 years ago
You are very much welcome dmarco07!!
apmech 3 years ago
Marvelous
zulkiflimanaf 3 years ago
I might not be able to understand all of it, but I can feel the emotion in the lyrics. I love the passion ever associated with us filipinos.
XenoXelloss 3 years ago
thanks jan-carlo! you were there in the "carinosa" folk dance video in your channel?
apmech 3 years ago
1981? our Philippines must be missing you a lot now... thanks LZERAT!
apmech 3 years ago
tommybilit15: (2 weeks ago)
The ancestors of Pilita is spanish, but she is living in philippines and has filipina character thats a good combination
pinoyako30: (2 weeks ago)
ang babaeng pilipina...
angelnette19: (1 month ago)
...sO ..CoOL...!!!!
apmech 3 years ago