Ben from Lockruf music is playing Misirlou with the Mulatar More info about the mulatar: www.lockruf-music.de or www.rubimo.net Subscribe to my channel: / @rubimomaker
Perfect for wandering travelers in the Saharan desert. Small, lightweight, easy to wrap up and pack. Easy to pull out and serenade the camels. Actually a lovely sound. This person played it well, smooth and lamguid, soothing after a hard, hot day traveling across the endless expanse.
@@Targivod Not only 'originally'. The lyrics (which most of today's generation don't even know exist) are still about an Egyptian girl - and 'forbidden love'.
Misirlou is actually an eastern mediterranean folk song to begin with. It's been camels from the beginning, Dick Dale took it and did a surf rock cover
Fantastic instrument. Shows that authentic innovation can happen anywhere at any moment. Someone somewhere, some time understood possibilities for the first time… respect👍
A guy posts something stupid with 13 equally stupid replies but you get none. Let me join you in saying thank you to the producer-musician and how much this is NOT a sitar. A unique sound that seems prevalent the Biblical past. A thousand “thank yous, sir.”
@@robkunkel8833nothing significant has happened to the electric guitar since Gibsons 335 of 1958. And yet here is authentic originality with great potential broadly ignored. BTW ‘Zero’ (0) was devised for the first time in India and then spread through international trade. The consequences of that small act of ingenuity defy estimation!
This song was played on the Mulatar long before the guitar. Dick Dale borrowed the tune from a folk song. Surf rock was inspired by north african and middle eastern sounds.
@@SuperMrHiggins I thought was some misterious ancient middle east instrument, turns out that its a modern instrument made by Lockruf music! Freaking awesome
Nice rendition! I never heard of a mulatar until now; it has a lovely sound. I remember learning to dance to this old Greek folk song with other girls in high school gym class way back in 1971.
You just poked several bears. Much of the Med, North Africa, and even Near East might want to join this convo. Just saying; breathe deep… The origin of this melody is highly contested.
@@bebe7C9 Yes! Greatly under-appreciated!! As evidenced by your comment. FYI - Since it appeared in the 1920s there have been considerably more than "like 5 consecutive (?) remakes". 'Recognising', 'knowing' and 'appreciating' are not synonymous.
@@user-cf1vb6op5h This is much closer to the first version I ever heard, recorded by Nikos Roubanis and releaseed under the Columbia label in the 1920s. The next version I heard was recorded by Harry James in the 1940s (if memory serves), also released under the Columbia label. I believe either Glenn Miller or Benny Goodman (maybe both) also released a version in the 1940s.
You could argue it is. Not many people know it's history as a greek/egyptian folk tune and that it has lyrics. I think about a greek/egyptian love story? Have you ever heard a version with lyrics? @@bebe7C9
@@yepiratesworkshop7997 Their song is always to glorify the Supreme Djinn, they only ever charge Kharma on the Evil and Unjust men, who would harass and chastise our Brethren. Those who are tone deaf, who sing out of key and those Frontmen with too much Ego create disharmony in the Song of Life, are passed over by The Seraphs when darkness falls, and unless repentant and subscribe to Music lessons, then they are cast out into the wilderness to screech with jackals and hungry ghosts.
I absolutely loved this performance. It evokes some intense emotional images in my mind. So much so that I can't help but think that anyone on earth that heard it wouldn't also have similar images. Thank yo so much.
Never heard of this instrument or an Orgatar before but I've heard you play both now and I gotta say I'm all here for it. Keep the music coming my dude you've earned my subscription that's for sure.
wow, love it, this songs reminds me both of 12 years of playing in a surfrock band to me from 2000-2012 (The Killer Bananazz, dutch band), having stopped pleasing drunk kids and getting home late at 3 am every weekend day and then continuing with music composing for film, theatre, podwalks, etc and for that collecting dozens of ethnic string and wind instruments. This is such a gorgeous sound, this 'mulatar', quite new to me, and so well-played, the relaxed pace and simple drumming gives it a really good mood. Great to hear you master 'the art of omission' as we tend to say in the netherlands, meaning you keep the essence of the song but play not a single note too many. Made my day. thanks
A new type of rheostat😂😂 Much needed for our physics lab . Btw this is the best version i had heard. The slides and glides were as smooth as butter. This is the first time i have seen and heard this instrument. Keep going.
The algorithm is working again. It's getting better at its job and this is some quality tunage! EDIT: Just realised I was watching at x2 speed which made it bouncy and happy!
Wow! This was cool! Love the dots as frets. Bass notes and melody very clever. I want to hear all the strings played and the top side strings too. very interesting! great job!
well that was outstanding whoever designed that thing deserves an award
it is like a tiny Japanese Koto
and this guy totally wailed on it
he created it!
for some reason, I now have sand in my shoes and pockets
the curse of the pharaoh !
80th lik
e
Based pocket sand enjoyer
@@MECHA-TEDsh-sh-shaa!
Perfect for wandering travelers in the Saharan desert. Small, lightweight, easy to wrap up and pack. Easy to pull out and serenade the camels. Actually a lovely sound. This person played it well, smooth and lamguid, soothing after a hard, hot day traveling across the endless expanse.
Misirlou is actually a song about an Egyptian girl originally
@@Targivod
Not only 'originally'.
The lyrics (which most of today's generation don't even know exist) are still about an Egyptian girl - and 'forbidden love'.
Where can I obtain one...and learn it?
@@trueaussie9230
Well that’s what I meant, people talk about Dick Dale’s version which has no lyrics
@@Targivod
Well, that's what I understood. 🤣🤣🤣
Surf music, except instead of riding the waves you’re riding a camel.
Sand dunes can look alot like large waves
Misirlou is actually an eastern mediterranean folk song to begin with. It's been camels from the beginning, Dick Dale took it and did a surf rock cover
@@Sollys3 I learned that a few months ago and it's just such a cool little piece of trivia.
Sand seal shield surfing from BotW era Zelda
Sufi Surfers
I remember dancing the Miserlou and enjoying it. I don't remember the steps anymore, its been a long time. Nice to hear the tune again.
Fantastic instrument. Shows that authentic innovation can happen anywhere at any moment. Someone somewhere, some time understood possibilities for the first time… respect👍
A guy posts something stupid with 13 equally stupid replies but you get none. Let me join you in saying thank you to the producer-musician and how much this is NOT a sitar. A unique sound that seems prevalent the Biblical past. A thousand “thank yous, sir.”
@@robkunkel8833nothing significant has happened to the electric guitar since Gibsons 335 of 1958. And yet here is authentic originality with great potential broadly ignored.
BTW ‘Zero’ (0) was devised for the first time in India and then spread through international trade. The consequences of that small act of ingenuity defy estimation!
This song was played on the Mulatar long before the guitar. Dick Dale borrowed the tune from a folk song. Surf rock was inspired by north african and middle eastern sounds.
I used to play Misirlou in a surf band decades ago. Very cool!
This is the first time I’ve heard or seen this instrument. wow cool.
What a fascinating instrument, great execution!
Right? Thing looks incredible and such a good job performing!
@@SuperMrHiggins I thought was some misterious ancient middle east instrument, turns out that its a modern instrument made by Lockruf music! Freaking awesome
Nice rendition! I never heard of a mulatar until now; it has a lovely sound. I remember learning to dance to this old Greek folk song with other girls in high school gym class way back in 1971.
If someone took another ancient instrument and added a layer on top of this track.
Somebody call Peter Pringle.
Today I’ve learned a new word.
Mulatar.
Beautiful! THANK YOU!
I don't know how I ended up here, but this did send me down a rabbit hole.
Now I know that rebetiko is a thing. And Misirlou is actually a Greek song.
You just poked several bears. Much of the Med, North Africa, and even Near East might want to join this convo. Just saying; breathe deep… The origin of this melody is highly contested.
yes, the only sand in Greece is on the beautiful blue watered beaches of the Mediterranean sea. No camels in the near horizon.
@@ryanclark6402 ... *_Uh Oh..._*
@@oscarcacnio8418 Dick Dale, Greek. The song?
czcams.com/video/n3tJ_XyBwyE/video.html
Ryan knows his stuff
Cheers!
Edit: DD was Leb/Pole?
@@ryanclark6402 I just put a link down there
1948 Lebanon; words n music
Cheers!
Misirlou - a greatly under-appreciated tune.
Well done. 👍👍👍
Underappreciated? It has like 5 consecutive remakes and people in general know the tune.
@@bebe7C9
Yes!
Greatly under-appreciated!!
As evidenced by your comment.
FYI - Since it appeared in the 1920s there have been considerably more than "like 5 consecutive (?) remakes".
'Recognising', 'knowing' and 'appreciating' are not synonymous.
Significantly different from the first version I ever heard, which was by Dick Dale.
@@user-cf1vb6op5h
This is much closer to the first version I ever heard, recorded by Nikos Roubanis and releaseed under the Columbia label in the 1920s.
The next version I heard was recorded by Harry James in the 1940s (if memory serves), also released under the Columbia label.
I believe either Glenn Miller or Benny Goodman (maybe both) also released a version in the 1940s.
You could argue it is. Not many people know it's history as a greek/egyptian folk tune and that it has lyrics. I think about a greek/egyptian love story? Have you ever heard a version with lyrics? @@bebe7C9
Pure poetry for the senses.
You really know how to turn a phrase Kevin
spherical lyrical miracle
Sounds even better in a Rif Mountain valley beneath a full moon high on hashish with a seraphic choir as backing vocals.
I thought the seraphs were on strike for higher royalty cuts.
@@yepiratesworkshop7997 Their song is always to glorify the Supreme Djinn, they only ever charge Kharma on the Evil and Unjust men, who would harass and chastise our Brethren.
Those who are tone deaf, who sing out of key and those Frontmen with too much Ego create disharmony in the Song of Life, are passed over by The Seraphs when darkness falls, and unless repentant and subscribe to Music lessons, then they are cast out into the wilderness to screech with jackals and hungry ghosts.
Inshallah
@@BarrackObamna God willing
isn't it better to be sitting high up on the mountain?
Mastery displayed in this delightful capture!
I'm sure Mr. Dale would love this! ✌️
Possibly, but you know his version was already a cover.
I think he's Lebanese, so he knew this one from childhood!
I am glad that I clicked on this.
What a great sound, good arrangement and well played!
Thanks for listening
Dick Dale and the Del Tones turned this into king of the surf guitars hit of early 60s in LA
Coolest instrument I've heard in quite a while
I absolutely loved this performance. It evokes some intense emotional images in my mind. So much so that I can't help but think that anyone on earth that heard it wouldn't also have similar images. Thank yo so much.
The way he moves his head to the beat is absolutely heartwarming and adorable 😂 bro is vibing to that shit😅
Never heard of this instrument or an Orgatar before but I've heard you play both now and I gotta say I'm all here for it. Keep the music coming my dude you've earned my subscription that's for sure.
wow, love it, this songs reminds me both of 12 years of playing in a surfrock band to me from 2000-2012 (The Killer Bananazz, dutch band), having stopped pleasing drunk kids and getting home late at 3 am every weekend day and then continuing with music composing for film, theatre, podwalks, etc and for that collecting dozens of ethnic string and wind instruments. This is such a gorgeous sound, this 'mulatar', quite new to me, and so well-played, the relaxed pace and simple drumming gives it a really good mood. Great to hear you master 'the art of omission' as we tend to say in the netherlands, meaning you keep the essence of the song but play not a single note too many. Made my day. thanks
I gotta get one of these,love it😂😊🎉❤
So glad YT decided to randomly suggest your channel. Love unique instruments!
A new type of rheostat😂😂
Much needed for our physics lab .
Btw this is the best version i had heard. The slides and glides were as smooth as butter. This is the first time i have seen and heard this instrument. Keep going.
I love the sound and how it changes the pitch
Very nice.... reminds me of movies such as Algiers....✨♒💖
Looks like an instrument from a sci-fi movie. Thanks for sharing.
Damn, this was tight. Now I want one
Never seen this instrument played before. It was a very pretty song. I really enjoyed it very much.
Makes me feel like playing Bastion again
This thing is wild to look at and and you're a bard in every sense with how you play that thing.
I guess the mulatar could be used as an abacus too! From antiquity, maths and music have been linked 😉
Very nice connection you made! It has a similar visual understanding of what you are doing.
dude, you realize the mulatar was invented in 2011?
@@DDiodesNo one knows wtf this thing is, so no, dude: no one realized it was invented in 2011 until you pointed it out. Thanks for the info.
How magical this is!
I think of the first Taxi-move.
I am a great fan of Luc Besson.
There are some great Balkan versions of this tune too. Well played and on a beautiful instrument. Thank you!
Beautiful instrument and playing, thanks so much for sharing!
We breaking out the pyramids with this one 🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥
I want one!😊
Absolutely superb! As a long time fan and student of the song on guitar, thanks for the lesson.
🔥🔥🔥 keeping that ostinato going while playing percussion and melody. I kept looking for a loop pedal lol
Music to cross the desert to.
This is Super Amazing!!! First time I have come across such instrument and lovely playing too. 💗💗👌👌
i need a 10hr version of this
wanna collab?
The algorithm is working again. It's getting better at its job and this is some quality tunage! EDIT: Just realised I was watching at x2 speed which made it bouncy and happy!
Благодарю!
A Greek beautiful song!
Simple musical instruments, simple sound, natural resonance.
Really cool instrument, thank you for video
This is when CZcams is awesome.
Lovely
Eye opener.. and lovely.. Thank you.
Классно играешь! первый раз вижу такой инструмент🤔
Sooooo so good. I love this. 💕
Very exotic and melodious version. Excellent arrangement. Thanks.
So good!
Amazing how you learned to play that ancient instrument so well.
What a great sound, thanks for sharing with us!
Super Instrument thank you
FIRE , subbed before video even started
Beautiful. Thank you.
Such an amazing instrument! Perfect sound for a desert evening...... 🧡
Красиво звучит этот необычный инструмент - просто завораживает....
Love this music!
That was absolutely not what I was expecting, but very happy it isn't. Great job!
A new instrument to obsess about! So well played and such a pretty piece.
This is absolutely amazing
Woow amazing sound
Sounds beautiful. Well played.
Fantastic performance, loved it.
Thank you, I know the sound, but this is the first time I have seen the instrument. What a beautiful instrument!
"The desert awaits you..."
Merci beaucoup. Well played.
What an amazing and interesting instrument. Excellent!
Wow!! That's beautiful!!
I love this!
Thank you for sharing this 💜
🙏
it's come full circle, back to its roots :0
It sounds like the soundtrack from some The Legend of Zelda game. I loved!
Excellent.
Actually a return to the roots. Miserlou was inspired by traditional middle eastern music.
awesome!
liked b4 i even watched ,i KNEW it would be great
What a cool instrument
This is soooo good I’m now mega inspired! Thankyou Rubi
Thank you 🙏
Love it!!!
Amazing 🤩
Love it.
Wow! This was cool! Love the dots as frets. Bass notes and melody very clever. I want to hear all the strings played and the top side strings too. very interesting! great job!
That sounded so cool!
Super Cool!! I’m getting some serious Secret Chiefs 3 vibes off of this. 😀👍
BEAUTIFULLLLLL .❤❤❤❤❤❤
Fantastic.
Fabulous instrument.
Amazing...
Felicitaciones! Saludos desde Buenos Aires Argentina 😊🇦🇷👍🏻