本日我們的YouTube終於來到1480人啦!!獻上Yerko超久以前上巴西電視台的專訪,雖然全程說西班牙語,不過依舊有好聽的歌,還可以看看Yerko年輕時候的樣子😂😂😂
Today our community on YouTube is arrived to 1.480 subscribers. We want to share a video of an interview held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It has several minutes of music in which Yerko performs songs of own composition and traditional West African songs with Kora. We hope you enjoy it. Hugs 😀
Hoy nuestra comunidad en Youtube ha alcanzado 1.480 suscriptores. Queremos compartir un video de una entrevista realizada en Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Tiene varios minutos de música en las que Yerko interpreta con kora canciones de composición propia y tradicionales de África Occidental. Espero la disfrutéis. Abrazos 😀
https://youtu.be/SUrNKfdD9ew
Yerko Fuenzalida Lorca 黃冠螢
同時也有3部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過1萬的網紅MADE by Radw,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Aloha! Back again with another Malaysian food video. Gotta admit I am a foodie and this time I tried out different types of kuih (the Malaysian word f...
「traditional african music」的推薦目錄:
- 關於traditional african music 在 YK樂團 - YK band - Yerko Lorca & Kuan Yin Facebook 的最佳貼文
- 關於traditional african music 在 Nyssa the Kueenz Facebook 的最佳解答
- 關於traditional african music 在 旅行熱炒店Podcast Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於traditional african music 在 MADE by Radw Youtube 的精選貼文
- 關於traditional african music 在 lifeintaiwan Youtube 的最佳貼文
- 關於traditional african music 在 serpentza Youtube 的最佳解答
- 關於traditional african music 在 Musical Instruments: African Instruments Clip Art - Pinterest 的評價
traditional african music 在 Nyssa the Kueenz Facebook 的最佳解答
Such a beautiful night!!!! Good west African traditional music and dance performance. 😌🤙🏽❤️❤️
第一次在台南看非洲鼓還有西非傳統舞的表演,席間都是台南的鄉親,男女老少,大家都知道今天的演出內容,購票前來支持與欣賞,如同主持人開玩笑說,太好了,大家不是被騙來的😂😂。最後非洲大師Epizo 老師表演完,大家更是一個接一個起身鼓掌。內心真的開心的是自己愛的文化也同等被家鄉的人尊重與欣賞,我想這些一直在堅持文化推廣的老師們的苦心絕對不會白費。也許仍有很長的路要走,但我也會加入你們繼續走🙏🏽🙏🏽。在此向所有鼓手老師,舞者老師們致敬,謝謝你們熱情專業的演出。👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼💪🏼💪🏼🌹🌹🌹❤️❤️
#非洲太暘鼓舞劇團 #空空把西非擊鼓樂團 #聲唄鼓舞樂團 #africanculture #taiwan #台南 #africantradition #performance #台灣西非傳統文化 #nyssathekueenz #自由非行 #culturemixedlady #muroora @ U11 Performance Art Space 拾壹庫展演空間
traditional african music 在 旅行熱炒店Podcast Facebook 的精選貼文
[Meeting Martin Luther King Jr. in Boston]
Having lived in Boston for several years, I'm very used to a conversation with questions like "where are you from", "what do you do", etc at social events or church. Now, let's imagine that I lived in the year of 1953, just a few years after world war II. On an ordinary weekday morning, when I was on the Green Line B branch (which then was numbered "route #62") along Commonwealth Avenue toward downtown, I started a conversation with an African American guy who got up at the BU central stop. I quickly got into the typical Bostonian conversation:
"Hi, what's your name?"
"Martin." He said.
"I'm Jerome. Nice to meet you."
"Nice to meet you, too."
"Are you a student at BU?"
"Ya. I go to the divinity school."
"That's cool. What do you study there?"
"I'm a doctoral student in systematic theology."
"Wow, that sounds very hard-core. So did you come to Boston to attend this program?"
"Ya. I'm from Atlanta, Georgia. I moved here two years ago after getting my bachelor of divinity."
"So are you a pastor?"
"Yes, I am."
"Cool. So where are you heading right now?"
"I'm going to downtown to meet my finacee. She's a music student at New England Conservatory. We're going to get married in Alabama next month."
"Wow, congratulations!"
That's true. I met the civil right activist-to-be Martin Luther King Jr. in the city of Boston, where it's never a surprise to randomly run into a doctor or a professor on the street. In a few minutes, I heard more about his story. While living in the south most of his life, he did spent 4 years in Boston, where he attended Boston University and got his PhD in systematic theology. While racial segregation (which came to existence after the civil war) was still prevalent in the south, Boston was the first city where I felt he was free to do everything without discrimination. He really enjoyed this city. And instead of living in the dorm of BU, he rented an apartment at 397 Mass Ave, right next to today's Orange Line Mass Ave station.
Boston was also the city where he met his wife Coretta Scott. They got married in June 1953. And he was incredibly young as a doctoral student -- he skipped two grades in high school and completed college at the age of 19. By the time he started doctoral study in Boston (at the age of 22), he already obtained his first seminary degree. By the way, he was also the assistant pastor at Twelfth Baptist Church, an African-American congregation near Dudley Square.
--------
Now the conversation continued. Martin and I started talking about Christian church and theology.
"Which church do you go to?" He asked.
"The XXX church. It's an evangelical church."
"Ah, Christian evangelism." From his eyes, you could tell there was probably something in his head.
"What do you think about it?"
"Well, I'm a pastor, and I do build my ministry on the teaching of Jesus. But I hope your church is not like one of the typical American churches today. I think really miss the point of the gospel."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean, they've been focusing too much on individuals being saved and ignoring the injustice in this society. They miss their mission to liberate the oppressed."
"Well, isn't a Christian church supposed to share the gospel and convert sinners to God?"
"Yup, but doesn't the gospel free us? How can you say you're sharing the gospel while so many people in this country are oppressed and suffering from inequality?"
"You're right, but this should be the outcome of salvation, instead of the salvation itself..."
"(Sigh.) I think the some churches really need to shift focus." He breathed before continuing. "Old faiths like the bodily resurrection, virgin birth and miracles that contradict the science may not be necessary for Christianity today. Churches are called to realize the Kingdom of God on earth by exercising justice and mercy..."
Now I could sense where on the "church spectrum" he was. He was vastly influenced by Walter Rauschenbusch's social gospel, a theological thought popular in the early 20th century that called for a return to the "Kingdom of God" doctrine. Church's primary calling, in social gospel's perspective, is to bring God's kingdom on earth by applying Jesus' teaching to solve social issues and rescue the oppressed. Along with Mohandas Gandhi's nonviolent approach, it shaped King's theology and fueled the later movements he led.
And It was also interesting to see theologically how liberal his was. He casted his doubt on some essential doctrines that most Christian denominations held true back then. If you are from an evangelical background, this may get on your nerves. (But keep in mind that he lived before the age of neo-orthodoxy, and people often abandoned traditional views when running into doctrines that contradict scientific knowledge.) And this is probably why while many pastors today would say King's accomplishment was fueled by the Christian faith, but avoid talking too much about his view on doctrines.
--------
Let's get back on the train scene. At the Park Street underground station in downtown Boston, I said bye to the newly met friend Martin and saw him disappearing in the crowd. I could tell he's a brilliant and eloquent person, but might not expect two years later he'd be the person would be a key leader in the Montgomery bus boycott, nor decades later he'd deliver his famous speech in Washington. I might not agree with everything he said, but I'd definitely remember this conversation with Martin, a person that was once like me, who lived to Boston short-term to pursue a degree and was shaped by the personality of this city.
--------
[Afterthought] As a member of an American evangelical church (and also a foreigner of a minority group), the story of Martin Luther King Jr. continues to puzzle me. His view on certain doctrines are likely to be condemned as unorthodox by evangelical churches, but meanwhile, as the "saved" people, do we eager to live out and advocate the biblical justice in daily life as he did? Or we're always being "gospel-centered" while ignoring the all-inclusive nature of the biblical gospel?
(In pictures: Martin Luther King Jr.'s school, apartment and church in Boston.)
traditional african music 在 MADE by Radw Youtube 的精選貼文
Aloha! Back again with another Malaysian food video. Gotta admit I am a foodie and this time I tried out different types of kuih (the Malaysian word for cake). Have you tried these before? What food would you recommend for me? Let me know in the comments!
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Check out my Malaysia playlist! :)
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNGNBUj5npjx6VlKzsW-s0kwqJxz5K3iJ
Eating Nasi Lemak (Malaysia's national dish):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZ9zykF_bVU
Male Malaysian makeup artist does my makeup:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_1wJsOZZrk
Trying Malaysian childhood snacks:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ChPn1Wv9lDQ
MCO Malaysia:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nyc6ImEn5YQ
Life in Malaysia now:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw13Cqf6yco
The good and bad of being Black in Malaysia:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gQZvOBeK8M
What I like about Malaysia:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YrNKH5tQzCo
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Filming Details
Camera: Canon G7X Mark III
Mic: Saramonic SR XM1
Editor: Final Cut Pro X
Music by Kwesi Quartey
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/kwesi-quartey/akwaaba-ft-specikinging
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-cBx3SRkEF0vQs3_vWt4aQ
Spotify. : https://open.spotify.com/artist/7wEZ3N33zlWd8CrSlP77PG?si=5HCgZE-ZSHG3XY3yPaRnOg
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traditional african music 在 lifeintaiwan Youtube 的最佳貼文
A magical week with my son in South Africa... reviewed over a picnic where we eat some traditional South African snacks and foods!
Send me anything you wanna share (NO GIFTS, Thanks!):
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traditional african music 在 serpentza Youtube 的最佳解答
My friend Gary, a Chinese American who was born and grew up in America is in Mainland China, tracing his roots and for the first time is getting to experience Southern China all on his own, completely uncensored and so I had to meet up and ask him what he thinks of the drastic differences between living in China and America from the point of view as an Asian American, does he feel he fits in? Is his Chinese ability good enough? How are people treating him and what does he think about the crowds, noises, food, culture and his experiences so far...
Only since the 1940s when the United States and China became allies during World War II, did the situation for Chinese Americans begin to improve, as restrictions on entry into the country, naturalization and mixed marriage were being lessened. In 1943, Chinese immigration to the United States was once again permitted—by way of the Magnuson Act—thereby repealing 61 years of official racial discrimination against the Chinese. Large-scale Chinese immigration did not occur until 1965 when the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 lifted national origin quotas. After World War II, anti-Asian prejudice began to decrease, and Chinese immigrants, along with other Asians (such as Japanese, Koreans, Indians and Vietnamese), have adapted and advanced. Currently, the Chinese constitute the largest ethnic group of Asian Americans (about 22%), and have confounded earlier expectations that they would form an indigestible mass in American society. For example, many Chinese Americans of American birth may know little or nothing about traditional Chinese culture, just as European Americans and African Americans may know little or nothing about the original cultures of their ancestors.
As of the 2010 United States Census, there are more than 3.3 million Chinese in the United States, about 1% of the total population. The influx continues, where each year ethnic Chinese people from the People's Republic of China, Taiwan and to a lesser extent Southeast Asia move to the United States, surpassing Hispanic and Latino immigration by 2012.
⚫Music used: Valence - Infinite
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traditional african music 在 Musical Instruments: African Instruments Clip Art - Pinterest 的推薦與評價
Contains the following list of traditional African instruments in both color and black and white line art. - African Balafon - Djembe Drum - Talking Drum ... ... <看更多>