Be part of me, Barry/ບ່າວລີ, and particular visitors for a chat in each English and Lao as I stream stay from in Vientiane, Laos at 6am LAOS or 4pm MST. Admire all of you which were watching my movies and thought that this might be a great way for us to have an extended type dialog collectively about all issues Lao. Speak to you quickly.:)
#laos #laolegends #laosvlog #travellaos #learnlao
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Conversation starts at 13:45. Was a little troubleshooting at the start, but overall a great first live stream. It was an absolute pleasure meeting those of you that joined the live stream and enjoyed answering your questions. Looking forward to having another great discussion about life in Lao in the next live stream.:)
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It was great for me because there are many words that I did not know in Lao. It had my brain learning and kept interesting all throughout. You are the first to make a language learning video that was a POV that was natural and helpful by far, unlike other videos.
Definitely need to improve the sounding/equipment/quality as your channel grows good luck
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awesome vid bro,,keep going strong!!
Why does YT keep deleting my comments? Every time I try to post a comment, it disappears into the ether.
I love the sound of the "phin". It's so emblematic of Esarn and Laos. And there are two distinctive styles. "Phin serng" (พิณเซิ้ง) is meant to accompany a certain type of dance. It can start with a fast beat, then changes to a slower rhythm for the main part of the song. Basically, the exact opposite of "mor lam" songs. "Phin sing" (พิณซิ่ง) is by definition very fast paced. "Sing" is a contraction of the English word "racing". There's also "mor lam sing" which is also very fast paced. It's sometimes referred to as "Lao rap". Like "luk thung" it makes liberal use of double entendre, but the live performances of "mor lam sing" leave little to the imagination. 🤣
Check out ຕຸກຕາ ສາລີກາທອງ… ຍາວ ຍາວ ຍາວ! 555
Do you have a Facebook bro?