Serbia Eurovision 2024 Reactionalysis - Music Teacher Analyses Ramonda by Teya Dora (Reaction)

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  • čas přidán 25. 04. 2024
  • Can Serbia can be as impressive as the last two years? Mike analyses their entry for the 2024 Eurovision Song Contest - Tamonda by Teya Dora
    Original Video: • TEYA DORA - RAMONDA | ...
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Komentáře • 166

  • @dalmatinoboy
    @dalmatinoboy Před 20 dny +354

    12p from croatia goes to serbia🏆🥇

    • @djurdjinajovanovic5885
      @djurdjinajovanovic5885 Před 17 dny +22

      Nadam se da će 12 poena cela Evropa dati Hrvatskoj jer ste ove godine najbolji! Pa komšije SREĆNO I DO POBEDE!!!Vidimo se u Zagrebu 2025 na Evroviziji 🇭🇷❤️🇷🇸🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 Neka gori Evropa !!!

    • @mildew1
      @mildew1 Před 14 dny

      ​@@djurdjinajovanovic5885 vidim da hoces Evroviziju u genocidaskoj zemlji

    • @Mmmm-ho2rc
      @Mmmm-ho2rc Před 13 dny +10

      Hahaha...uvek tako kazete na kraju 12 poena date Italiji 😂😂😂

    • @dalmatinoboy
      @dalmatinoboy Před 12 dny +6

      Definitivno glasovi Srbije ne zasluzuju otici pjesmu rim tim p... dim. Kedzina pjesma je zakon za ovi trash. Srbi glasujte za italiju i švicarsku.

    • @Mmmm-ho2rc
      @Mmmm-ho2rc Před 12 dny +2

      @@dalmatinoboy glasamo za Sloveniju!

  • @lakimilano3665
    @lakimilano3665 Před 20 dny +335

    Thank God that the song is interpreted by someone who understands music, harmony, the set of instruments.....Thank you for your honest listening and opinion about the song!

  • @milojkodjokin8079
    @milojkodjokin8079 Před 19 dny +180

    The rock on which the singer is lying at the beginning of the video represents the island of Corfu in Greece,
    where Serbian soldiers recovered in the First World War, after retreating across Albania.
    We call the sea around the island of Krv the Blue Tomb, because many soldiers who died are buried there.
    In Serbia, the Ramonda flower is a symbol of rebirth and rising from the ashes.Also Ramonda is called phoenix flower.
    The people have gone through and are going through many misfortunes and sufferings, but they always hope that everything will be fine.
    This song is dedicated to all those who sacrificed themselves for the benefit of new generations.

  • @user-hd5tu8ni5u
    @user-hd5tu8ni5u Před 10 dny +89

    Ramonda serbica - the phoenix flower, an endemic, relict plant of southeastern Serbia, is a symbol of the Serbian victory in WWI and the enormous sacrifice that the Serbian people made for their freedom and the freedom of neighboring nations. A third of the total population lost their lives, but the Serbian nation rose from the ashes like a phoenix. The song is about the pain of loss and the hope of resurrection!

  • @Vanessagualtieri
    @Vanessagualtieri Před 15 dny +103

    Serbia numero uno !!!complimenti

  • @majstoroviconline
    @majstoroviconline Před 19 dny +102

    In the First World War, Serbia lost about 30% of its population, 60% of its male population. The figure is around 1,200,000 inhabitants who lost their lives. This is perhaps the highest percentage that a country lost in that war. Ramonda is an endemic species and has 3 subspecies. One grows on the Iberian peninsula and in Serbia there is Ramonda Serbica and Natalija's ramonda, which was named after the Serbian queen. Both species are endangered and are protected by law. Natalija's ramonda is also known as the phoenix because it can to dry completely and to revive again when the conditions are favorable. In the First World War, Natalija's ramonda was taken as a symbol of Armistice Day and as a symbol of Serbian suffering in that war, as a new beginning, as a phoenix. The song follows these two stories. It tells where the purple Ramonde disappeared, as a metaphor for the suffering that Serbia suffered. During the performance, purple luminous dots appear on the LED screens that rise and rise. They represent the souls of Serbian soldiers who died defending their country and which go to heaven. At the end of the words, a purple ramonda rises from the ashes. That verse represents the aspiration for a better tomorrow, for the end of war, for the end of suffering, for peace..
    Blue tomb.
    In one part of the song, he says, everything is quiet under the sea. When the Serbian army retreated through Albania to the Greek island of Vido, many soldiers died of disease and hunger. It is estimated that around 5,000 people died then and were thrown into the Ionian Sea for eternal rest. Since then, that place has been called the blue tomb.

    • @bobilaforce8252
      @bobilaforce8252 Před 12 dny +21

      Хвала много за, не само коментар, већ лекцију историје за оне, који не знају своју сопствену историју и за информацију странцима, који о нама само предрасуде гаје.
      Хвала ти

    • @majstoroviconline
      @majstoroviconline Před 12 dny +4

      Nema na čemu

    • @zoranb.milanovic3482
      @zoranb.milanovic3482 Před 6 dny +8

      Hvala ti puno u ime celog srbskog roda na ovako divnom tekstu ( komentaru )❤❤❤

    • @bobilaforce8252
      @bobilaforce8252 Před 6 dny

      @@zoranb.milanovic3482 придружујем ср🤗

    • @bobilaforce8252
      @bobilaforce8252 Před 6 dny

      Коректура: се

  • @glutebridge1318
    @glutebridge1318 Před 20 dny +236

    My winner! She is amazing!

  • @ozkanatasoy4392
    @ozkanatasoy4392 Před 19 dny +154

    Hayatım boyunca dinleyeceğim bir sanat eseri yaptığın için teşekkür ederim Teya Dora❤ love from Türkiye❤

  • @AsiaOriol
    @AsiaOriol Před 17 dny +100

    Love Teya from Belarus

  • @oo-pt9cx
    @oo-pt9cx Před 19 dny +126

    She finished Berkeley university of Music in US, she is very talented singer and song writer, music writer .

  • @ljiljanasabranovic5391
    @ljiljanasabranovic5391 Před 17 dny +69

    Stručnjak je rekao svoje pametnom dovoljno hvala❤

    • @ljiljanasabranovic5391
      @ljiljanasabranovic5391 Před 8 dny +2

      Eto Ramonda je tamo gde joj je i mesto kada se publika pita hvala svima od srca

  • @redvista2054
    @redvista2054 Před 20 dny +155

    My favourite eurovision song breakdowns on youtube. Thank you for this video :)

  • @djurdjinajovanovic5885
    @djurdjinajovanovic5885 Před 20 dny +124

    Hvala , ljubav iz Srbije 🇷🇸❤️💜🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸

  • @giordanabruna4825
    @giordanabruna4825 Před 19 dny +99

    Beautiful song, extrordinary vocals and performance, this girl is amazing! Wish her best!

  • @CionnFE
    @CionnFE Před 20 dny +92

    A lovely gentle song. You looked genuinely moved while watching the clip, and your appreciation is infectious.
    I’m not certain it will connect widely, but Serbia does always manage to break through with something unusual. Thanks again for a great review 😊

    • @TheMuserResolute
      @TheMuserResolute  Před 19 dny +16

      Thanks as always! This is such a beautiful song

    • @CionnFE
      @CionnFE Před 19 dny +3

      @@TheMuserResolute it is that

  • @dekade1554
    @dekade1554 Před 20 dny +78

    Dark horse of the year 💜

  • @danijelajanackovic7648
    @danijelajanackovic7648 Před 20 dny +82

    💜THE BEST SONG!TEYA IS SIMPLY MAGICAL!💜

  • @ristopizula9734
    @ristopizula9734 Před 19 dny +74

    Masterpiece,so unique and beautiful 💗🇷🇸 Serbia 💗🇷🇸 Ramonda
    Tnx for the very good reaction and analysis 💗🇷🇸

  • @marasmiljanic9239
    @marasmiljanic9239 Před 18 dny +40

    ❤ Serbia in top ❤

  • @miggavic5450
    @miggavic5450 Před 6 dny +6

    The message in the lyrics is very important also. After burning down Serbia in the ww1, the com back like a phenix or a "lila srbica ramonda" 💜💜💜🇷🇸🇷🇸🇷🇸☦️☦️☦️

  • @natascha81
    @natascha81 Před 18 dny +43

    Absolute Gänsehaut 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻🇷🇸

  • @martinnur
    @martinnur Před 20 dny +85

    Great analysis as always, it makes me value the song more. Thank you!!

  • @milansvideochannel
    @milansvideochannel Před 20 dny +99

    By far the best song this year at Eurovision. If this was Sweden, France or Ukraine it would win the whole thing easily, but because it's Serbia it will be anywhere from 10th to 15th place.

    • @diodaon4898
      @diodaon4898 Před 19 dny +2

      Its no where near being the best…this year has so many good songs and her vocals are limited

    • @user-oy9oo2vq1n
      @user-oy9oo2vq1n Před 17 dny +6

      ​@@diodaon4898nisu im bolje pesme ali 20 god unazad sve iste drzave pretenduju za vrh samo se menjaju u redosledu.mi smo u drugoj grupi koja nedobija glasove zirija samo smo tu da bi imali broj ucesnika za oba polufinala

    • @snezanaknezevic2825
      @snezanaknezevic2825 Před 15 dny +4

      ​@@diodaon4898hoces neku opersku divu da cujes one nisu ogranicenog vokala.Ograniceno je tvoje razmisljanje.Odlicna je ,pitacemo he da proba da otpeva neku opersku ariju😂

    • @tanjabrajovic4304
      @tanjabrajovic4304 Před 15 dny +5

      She has trained vocal abilities from Berkelee College of Music … but when someone hates, nothing can stop hatred

    • @2710daisy
      @2710daisy Před 2 dny

      @@diodaon4898 You are obviously limited

  • @srbsrb3898
    @srbsrb3898 Před 19 dny +36

    I don't want you to worry about the stage performance...what you saw will be much, much higher in Sweden...and listen to the acoustic version...and you will see what is the beauty....except for the melody.... she emits pure emotion and that's the magic... we love you from Serbia💜💜💜💜

  • @mirab9068
    @mirab9068 Před 17 dny +19

    #1 Serbia ❤

  • @MK-es2je
    @MK-es2je Před 15 dny +20

    GREAT ANALYSIS OF THE SONG.
    MOST OF THE PEOPLE WHO ARE COMMENTING ON EUROVISION SONGS ARE MUSIC AMATEURS.
    THERE ARE FEW THAT ARE MUSICALLY EDUCATED.
    THANK YOU FOR YOUR EXPERTISE AND GOOD COMMENTS.

  • @frostflower5555
    @frostflower5555 Před 17 dny +25

    I love her deep voice!

  • @cool3041
    @cool3041 Před 19 dny +47

    She's stunning 🔥 Too bad shitty songs are in hype

  • @MrMmistery
    @MrMmistery Před 19 dny +50

    The best song this year
    But we all know some stupid non-music shit is going to win ESC 2024😢

    • @radostmala
      @radostmala Před 5 dny

      As always, it will be a political decision; Israel or Ukraine. Croatia has a good chance with its beautiful song,

  • @vesnaeastelysium
    @vesnaeastelysium Před 13 dny +17

    Brilliant reaction with so much musical knowledge and insight.....and she is just alike a singing fairy.

  • @Vanessagualtieri
    @Vanessagualtieri Před 15 dny +18

    Bravissima!!!! Che emozione ❤❤❤.stupenda

  • @hondacrx8232
    @hondacrx8232 Před 19 dny +23

    Love Tey!!!!❤🎉😊

  • @marijadjedovic
    @marijadjedovic Před 8 dny +5

    She' s the author of the song !

  • @Ok-ow2ye
    @Ok-ow2ye Před 19 dny +33

    Tea-text, music, arrangement
    Contra alt 🎵🎹🎶
    Music academy Berkly, USA
    Jimy Page/Led Zeppelin give her diploma 🎓

  • @DusicaBrzakovic-zz5yw
    @DusicaBrzakovic-zz5yw Před 19 dny +19

    Love Tey❤❤❤❤

  • @alohallo2879
    @alohallo2879 Před 18 dny +20

    Love it win Teya❤

  • @marko_radic_
    @marko_radic_ Před 20 dny +58

    💜ANALYSIS by a SERBIAN NATIVE SPEAKER (please read until the end):
    The song ‘Ramonda’ has a universal symbolism, which means it can be applied to a variety of situations in life. Even though it is originally written as a deeply personal song, a personal struggle that anyone can relate to, it can be perceived both as a patriotic song with a fragment of painful Serbian history and a song whose lyrics portray the great suffering of all the people around the world whose countries are devastated by wars and disasters. It is also infused with weltschmerz (= world pain), which is defined as a sense of deep sadness at the evils or perils of the world caused by comparing the actual state of the world with an idealised longing for things to be different.
    The reason I am bringing weltschmerz up is because not only are people from war-stricken countries suffering but also people from other countries witnessing it and not being able to do anything to stop it. They are also hopeless and probably anxious about the same thing possibly happening to them in the future because this world has become a dangerous place. No one feels safe. Therefore, the lyrics can be interpreted as the internal monologue of both ‘the wounded’ and those who are not wounded yet but are depressed by constant exposure to human suffering through media.
    MAIN POINTS OF THE ANALYSIS:
    1) Zvezda Danica, pronounced as /danitsa/, is a feminine name personifying the morning star / Venus in Slavic mythology; it can often be found in Serbian lyric poetry. I transliterated it to Danitsa so that non-native speakers wouldn't pronounce it as /danika/. Danitsa has the word 'day' in its root, so it can be literally translated as ‘day star’. They also call it ‘zornjača’ which translates as ‘dawn star’. The North Star is a wrong translation even though it can be used as an alternative with similar symbolism.
    2) In the phrase ‘lilac ramonda’, ‘lilac’ is an adjective meaning ‘pale purple colour’, not a noun meaning ‘a type of flower’. So, ramonda is a flower, and lilac is its colour. When it comes to the English translation of the lyrics, you can find my translation on my CZcams channel. I used some archaic and poetic words since the original lyrics of the song are quite poetic as well.
    3) The island and the surrounding sea at the beginning of the official video could be a reference to the Greek island of Vido and the Ionian sea in which over 5,000 Serbian soldiers were buried during World War I. A Serbian poet Milutin Bojić dedicated his poem 'Plava grobnica' (The Blue Tomb) to these soldiers. In this poem, Bojić expressed the tragic fate of the Serbian army that had passed through the snow-covered mountains of Montenegro and Albania to get to the Greek island of Corfu, where they found refuge and shelter. Corfu was their salvation. Vido was regarded as the island of death since those transported from Corfu to Vido were believed to be terminally ill and could not be saved. The line ‘ko pod vodom tiho je sve’ (= everything is quiet like under the water) could be an allusion to the deathly silence of the ‘blue tomb’, the sea around Vido which was the last resting place of the brave Serbian soldiers. The reason why they were thrown into the sea is because there was not enough space on Vido and Corfu. Their corpses were weighted with rocks to prevent them from floating.
    4) The title of this song references a flower called ‘Ramonda serbica’ in Latin, a species endemic to Serbia. The mountain called Rtanj is the home to this flower which was discovered in 1874 by a famous Serbian botanist Josif Pančić. Being a living fossil from the Tertiary period, it is capable of surviving extremely harsh conditions. Even if it is completely withered, just a few drops of water can revive it. Natalie's ramonda (natalijina ramonda), the flower of the same genus, is very similar to ‘Ramonda serbica’. It was named after Queen of Serbia Natalija Obrenović, and it is worn as an emblem on Armistice Day in Serbia. This flower, also known as the ‘phoenix flower’, symbolises the unprecedented suffering of the Serbian Army (during the Great Retreat) that managed to rise victoriously like a phoenix from the ashes that World War I, in which Serbia lost one third of its population, had left behind. I am also fascinated by the fact that Ramonda also grows on Kaymakchalan. The Battle of Kaymakchalan was fought between Serbian and Bulgarian troops on the Salonika Front in 1916. This was the first and most significant victory of the Serbian army since they started to retreat from Serbia the year before. Like Ramonda, the Serbian army survived the agonies of the Great Retreat (better known as the Albanian Golgotha among the Serbian people), and even though they were, so to speak, an army of the dead given their very bad health, they eventually got their ‘drop of water’ on Corfu (also known as ‘the island of salvation’) and resurrected, highly motivated to return to their fatherland. Kaymakchalan was that ‘gate of freedom’ for them, ‘the peak of hope’.
    5) This song can be interpreted in different ways due to the universal symbolism of ramonda as the beacon of hope for people going through tough times (wars, natural disasters, disease, psychological problems, heartbreaks, etc.). The repetition of the line ‘where have they evanesced, those lilac ramondas?’ (rhetorical question) at the end of each pre-chorus represents the feeling of powerlessness, hopelessness and despair. However, the outro of the song reminds us that hope springs eternal. Despite all the atrocities occurring in the world, it is in human nature to never lose hope. Disappearing lilac ramondas can also imply the people who are currently being wiped off the face of the earth and who are actually disappearing with no possibility of resurrection, unlike ramondas. However, you can never get rid of them all. There'll always remain that one ramonda to ‘tell the tale’. From a patriotic point of view, ramondas could be the Serbian soldiers who died in WWI.
    6) Also, there's something magical and unexplainable about the melody of this song. It embodies the national spirit of the Serbian people from the 19th and the 20th century, the spirit that Stevan Stojanović Mokranjac, the most important composer of Serbian romanticism, wove into his music. This particular atmosphere of the melody can be sensed strongly only by listening to a piano cover.
    7) Danitsa, the bright morning star, is the ONLY thing left for the lyrical subject (= anyone who identifies with the lyrics, not necessarily the author) to guide him through sadness and hopelessness. In other words, the only thing left for people going through great suffering is to wait for Danitsa to appear in the morning sky because only then will they know they survived to see another day. I perceive the song as a cry of people who are currently going through wars and great suffering. If we look at the text from that perspective, the first and the second verse describe their psychological state in the form of an internal monologue. They cannot sleep; they feel restless; they are traumatised; they are scared; every night seems like an eternity; they are lonely because it looks to them as if no one is coming to their rescue, and even if they scream, no one will hear them, as if they were underwater. Their cry is muffled. They know that normal life (= white glow) is still happening outside the borders of their countries, and that depresses them because it seems to them as if their suffering is never going to end while somewhere in the distance everything is teeming with life.
    8) In the second pre-chorus, a kind of descending gradation can be noticed. In the first pre-chorus, the lyrical subject's glimmer of hope is the morning star while in the second pre-chorus not even that because now all the stars have fallen asleep, which indicates that the lyrical subject is losing hope throughout the song, but since we know that the night is darkest just before the dawn (which can be felt in the musical atmosphere of the silent break before the last chorus), what happens in the outro of the song is peripeteia, i.e. the plot twist when a single lilac ramonda eventually rises from the ashes and the tone of the song changes from depressive to optimistic. Ramonda is that light at the end of the tunnel. By the way, the lyrical subject summons Ramonda in every chorus by repeating its name, as if in the form of a mantra, hoping that it will resurrect, and it eventually does come to life.
    9) The official video features the archetype of light vs darkness or good vs evil, which is suggested at the very beginning by quoting a verse from the Gospel of John. I assume that the light sphere from the video actually represents the morning star and is significantly smaller compared to the amount of darkness that surrounds it. It is what leads Teya Dora through the darkness (= hopelessness) until the break of dawn, the sunrise and the resurrection of ramonda (= hope) that we see at the end. Incidentally, the morning star is visible until sunrise, which is probably why they made it disappear into the rock just before the sun appears in the video, to illustrate the behaviour of this celestial body in a more imaginative way. Interestingly, the morning star / Venus is the brightest planet in the sky, so it's clear why it is depicted as the guiding star in the video. It may also represent Teya Dora's late father since she devoted this song to him too. In her national final performance, the moment Teya sings the phrase ‘zvezde Danice’, she moves her body to the left, and the light behind her back flashes like a star. In the video, Danitsa and Ramonda are actually two interconnected motifs because they both represent light, hope, birth, new beginnings. Ramonda is born from the light of Danitsa.

    • @StokaNeDaVidljivNazivAzbukom
      @StokaNeDaVidljivNazivAzbukom Před 20 dny +2

      Свака част на анализи и одабиру енглеских речи... Читам и плачем... Браво!

    • @marko_radic_
      @marko_radic_ Před 20 dny +6

      @@StokaNeDaVidljivNazivAzbukom Hvalaa! 💜😢

    • @mattspintosmith5285
      @mattspintosmith5285 Před 19 dny +15

      What a brilliant analysis. Thank you.

    • @marko_radic_
      @marko_radic_ Před 19 dny +6

      @@mattspintosmith5285 💜 I appreciate it.

    • @draganaavdic5705
      @draganaavdic5705 Před 13 dny +2

      Divno receno. Sad se pesma mnogo bolje i dublje razume. Hvala.

  • @Berndr
    @Berndr Před 20 dny +29

    you should watch her acoustic version , she released it last week , its great

  • @jasminkagligorijevic113
    @jasminkagligorijevic113 Před 20 dny +60

    Teya Dora fantastic vokals!

  • @tatianatanja
    @tatianatanja Před 19 dny +21

    thanks 💜💟🤍

  • @nenad2427
    @nenad2427 Před 12 dny +12

    THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT ON THIS PHENOMENAL SONG.. IT'S HARD TO WIN, WE KNOW WHY😔😔

  • @zoranb.milanovic3482
    @zoranb.milanovic3482 Před 6 dny +4

    Thank you so much for such a wonderful, beautiful review of this incredibly beautiful song. Greetings from the Serbian people.❤❤❤

  • @snemare
    @snemare Před 17 dny +12

    If you want to win at eurovision, you send a popular song, catchy, that you remember and sing in the shower. Unfortunally Eurovision is not interested in music to analyze, or the meaning of words, but something immediate that sells well, commercial for consumption.

  • @ivananka0115
    @ivananka0115 Před 8 dny +5

    Hvala na podrsci 🇷🇸

  • @drmax3162
    @drmax3162 Před 19 dny +18

    RAMONDA
    the song certainly sounds victorious
    putting it in a cliché has no logic because it stands out from all the compositions by itself.
    listen to it in the acoustic version
    so it is clear

  • @MladenMavrovic
    @MladenMavrovic Před 15 dny +9

    the best ramonda review in the known universe :) thank you

  • @draganstankovic5470
    @draganstankovic5470 Před 7 dny +2

    BerkeleyBerkli u punom sjaju! Ova devojka zna šta radi!

  • @Bata989
    @Bata989 Před 14 dny +6

    Maybe fun fact for you - all back vocals in sang is sang by herself....

  • @jelicaivanovic9718
    @jelicaivanovic9718 Před 19 dny +12

    💜🇷🇸

  • @adrijanabarbir125
    @adrijanabarbir125 Před 9 dny +4

    srecno Teya Dora danas!!! ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉

  • @Dexter-zi6zl
    @Dexter-zi6zl Před 19 dny +9

    💜🕊🙏🇷🇸

  • @marinamugosa2354
    @marinamugosa2354 Před 6 dny +3

    Bravo LILA RAMONDA FOREVER

  • @BugarskiMarko
    @BugarskiMarko Před 19 dny +16

    Listen to Acoustic version :)

  • @markojovanovic5901
    @markojovanovic5901 Před 19 dny +13

    Thabk god there are people who understand music and are not blinded by uo beat generic boring pop songs

  • @YellaVilla
    @YellaVilla Před 19 dny +9

    ❤ for song end video

  • @funnysunnyvideos351
    @funnysunnyvideos351 Před 18 dny +6

    Great song and story behind it. Thank You for great listening and opinion.

  • @jovanrad9224
    @jovanrad9224 Před 19 dny +13

    💜🌸💜🌸💜🌸💜🌸

  • @janap8019
    @janap8019 Před 20 dny +16

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @danijelandroid
    @danijelandroid Před 8 dny +3

    I agree about your comment about Hurricane, it has a nice rithm to shake your booty but Teya Dora hits your heart string.😊

  • @tenamatic1147
    @tenamatic1147 Před 7 dny +2

    I love that she sings on serbian, i love it❤

  • @milenailic1437
    @milenailic1437 Před 15 dny +8

    She sings lilke Billie Eilish.

  • @majadns
    @majadns Před 8 dny +2

    Pure emotion❤

  • @88cabone
    @88cabone Před 7 dny +2

    Song name - Ramonda, Lila Ramonda or Purple Ramonda is a very rare flower somewhere in Serbia,and its very beautiful,the magic thing about it is,only one drop water is enough to get to life when the flower die out. The message behind this song is very powerfull,TeyaDora personaly said its a message from Serbia after WW1 when we lost 70 or 80 percent of male population,but we won and Serbia did the reborn after war. She also said that this song can be a motivation for curent depressed people or people who going trough dark times....there is always little bit of hope,only one drop water or light is enough. Cheers from Serbia

  • @marinadjokic233
    @marinadjokic233 Před 9 dny +3

    So amazing,so arthistic💜🪻💜🪻💜🪻💜🪻💜🪻

  • @arianemontemuro7901
    @arianemontemuro7901 Před 4 dny +2

    Bravo for Serbia!!❤

  • @majabogdan2514
    @majabogdan2514 Před 18 dny +6

    ❤❤❤

  • @KARADJORDJIJE
    @KARADJORDJIJE Před 9 dny +2

    Great analysis man..Pure art.... Europe Contests is not just party...we have always some similar songs..tralala tralala...

  • @Vanessagualtieri
    @Vanessagualtieri Před 15 dny +6

    Numero uno !!!!

  • @brunokuhar
    @brunokuhar Před 9 dny +2

    Teya Dora for the win!!

  • @Evolver10286
    @Evolver10286 Před 8 dny +3

    How the hell is this not in top 10?

  • @adrijanacenipoka4506
    @adrijanacenipoka4506 Před 7 dny +2

    Thanks again 👍

  • @FromSpaceVu
    @FromSpaceVu Před 7 dny +1

    Wow. Like her and croatia.❤

  • @macivovk9603
    @macivovk9603 Před 14 dny +4

    Great reaction❤️ Maybe you could do next Slovenian esc song, Veronika by Raiven.

  • @sanjajovanovic6733
    @sanjajovanovic6733 Před 19 dny +8

    ❤💜🪻

  • @jovanrad9224
    @jovanrad9224 Před 15 dny +9

    🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤❤❤🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸💜💜💜💜💜

  • @sandradebil2432
    @sandradebil2432 Před 6 dny +1

    Love the reaction! ❤

  • @vmm684
    @vmm684 Před 5 dny

    Well explained, thank you for sharing from a professional point of view, I think also what’s powerful is the message and the meaning behind Ramonda flower not only for Serbia post war but the whole EU. Greetings from Texas 🙌

  • @marijacap6148
    @marijacap6148 Před 20 dny +12

    💜✨🌸☺️

  • @DraganaRadic-fh6ix
    @DraganaRadic-fh6ix Před 18 dny +5

    ❤❤❤👏👏👏🍀

  • @2710daisy
    @2710daisy Před 2 dny

    Thank you sir. You know what you are talking about.

  • @nikoladimitrijevic1015
    @nikoladimitrijevic1015 Před 7 dny +1

    Here is the text in English, but I will give you also some insight, so that you can understand. The part of feeling and sensation will be lost In translation, but it should work
    "I don't have, I don't have, I don't have
    I have no peace, no sleep
    Night don't let the day to come
    It is difficult for the one who is alone
    Everything is quiet like under water
    I scream but it is not heard
    Behind the mountains, a white glow
    I don't see the end in sight
    This is the way for the wounded
    And there is no one to guide me
    Towards the light of Danica star (Northern star)
    Everything burns, everything burns;
    Every flower, every flower
    Where did the Lila Ramondas go?
    And there is no one to guide me
    Because the stars are all asleep
    Not even prayers help
    Where did the Lila Ramondas go?
    ......
    It rises from the ashes
    One lilac ramonda"
    During WWI, the complete Serbian army was forced to retreat from Serbia, via Albania to Greece, in what was one of the most horrific withdraw in known history, where many died from hunger, illnes and attacks ftom the Albanian gangs. Later. From the coast of Albania, allied ships were transported them to Greece. Some ships were attacked by Germans and a lot of Serbian solders died under the watter.
    In the Greek island Corfu, Serbian army recovered, but still thousands of them died from exhaustion and illnes. When there were no more empty land to bury the dead on Vido island (where was the Serbian army field hospital located) and Corfu, they were buried in the sea close to Vido island, which is known in Greece and Serbia as the Blue tomb
    When recovered, Serbian army broke Thessaloniki front line, moving very fast thus leaving allied troops far, far behind while destroying Germans and liberating Serbia.
    In WWI, Serbia lost almost 1/3 of its population, and 60% of male population
    Ramonda Serbica and Natalia Ramonda are the flower of lilac (purple) color, that can dry out completely when conditions are bad, and it can resurrect again after a long time with just a few drops of a watter. It is also called the Phoenix flower
    So I hope that I can help you understand how heavy this song is, but still full of hope
    The terrible situation in which the Serbs were, but even though it seems that the lilac Ramonda have disappeared (for Serbs, that flower is a symbol of faith in liberation), still one rises from the ashes (faith in the beginning of liberation).
    On Serbia's liberation day, people are wearing the Ramonda symbol on their dresses.
    In the official music video for this song, at the very beginning there is a message in English: "The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness can never extinguish it" or in the translation "And the light shines in the darkness and the darkness did not overcome it" which is the text from the Gospel according to John 1:5. It further reinforces the message of the song and indicates the artist's attitude.

  • @marianalazarevic1210
    @marianalazarevic1210 Před 5 dny

    I have heard that Lila Ramonda is the plant growing from rocks need just a drop of water to exist. This song is a massage for humanity .

  • @gabrijelakelec4361
    @gabrijelakelec4361 Před 5 dny

    A beautiful song. I am proud that she represents our country.🥰
    This year was a strong one,there were MANY amazing songs to choose to sendvto Eurovision.
    If you are interested Konstrakta sent a song too,it is an episode two after In corpore sano. There were some others too like Zorja "Lik u ogledalu" and Breskvica etc. You could react to them if you want.👀🥰🥳🎇💕

  • @Itslucic_
    @Itslucic_ Před 5 dny +1

    Omg 😍💜🌸🦋

  • @milicapejcic4286
    @milicapejcic4286 Před 4 dny +1

    Amazing amazing song Ramonda by amazing amazing amazing singer composer songwriter and pianist TEYA DORA ❤️ WINNER of Evrovision 24. ❤ vote 12 points for Serbia🎉 Thanks for very very nice reaction 🙏

  • @katjapopin5091
    @katjapopin5091 Před 8 dny +1

  • @user-pv6fd8ij6p
    @user-pv6fd8ij6p Před 4 dny

    I would really like to see your reaction to her song "Dzanum"

  • @daliborkasljevic7273
    @daliborkasljevic7273 Před 9 dny +1

    🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤

  • @rockbill5439
    @rockbill5439 Před 5 dny

    Pesma napravljena na isti fazon kao dzanum.....

  • @sanelapavlovic2520
    @sanelapavlovic2520 Před 19 dny +2

  • @vladimirprokic9006
    @vladimirprokic9006 Před 8 dny

    Do you know her world wide hit dzanum? React to that pls

  • @ritmovesuviano
    @ritmovesuviano Před 15 dny

    Next reaction - Nick Thurl end up dead 😍

  • @tonyttt31
    @tonyttt31 Před 15 dny

    Hurricane was still great though. The song was in Serbian.

  • @iaindj
    @iaindj Před 19 dny +5

    Please react to another master piece from Serbian national final "Lik u ogledalu" by Zorja. She was third but would be deserving winner. You will be surprised by quality singers Serbia has.

  • @Filip_Srdic
    @Filip_Srdic Před 4 dny

    Fun fact: song is dedicated to WWI victims

  • @ananikolic1414
    @ananikolic1414 Před 15 dny

    You should react to Zorja and her song"Lik u ogledalu" in Serbian national competition which is also a great song and she have an amazing voice!

  • @lovelife1867
    @lovelife1867 Před 6 dny

    you could make a winner so easy,,, why would you skip on that ??

  • @danijelandroid
    @danijelandroid Před 8 dny

    I'm a Serbian, so I'm bias. I probably would have liked it if she was an Albanian.

  • @Naky-wr3zk
    @Naky-wr3zk Před 6 dny

    She sings about Ramonda and her country Serbia committed the biggest crimes in Europe, genocide in Srebrenica in Bosnia, war crimes in Kosovo, Albania, Croatia. Still, after all, their people call war crimes heroes.

  • @themeiafy
    @themeiafy Před 7 dny +1

    I would be in love with this song if it wasn't for the repetitive and meaningless refrain. She lost me there.