Kill Bill - Uma Thurman Revenge | Mongolian Music Boerte - Gobi

  • 2 years ago

Kill Bill - Uma Thurman Revenge |#mongolian Music - Boerte - Gobi |

Empyrean

Kill Bill - Uma Thurman Revenge |
#killbill #mongolians
#mongolianmusic
#umathurman

Kill Bill is a Japanese-American film of 2003 and 2004, the fourth film from writer-director Quentin Tarantino. Originally conceived as a single film, But was released in two volumes, because of its length of approximately four hours.

FILM DESCRIPTION:

Perhaps the most highly anticipated film of 2003, Kill Bill Vol. 1 marked the return of renowned filmmaker Quentin Tarantino after a six-year hiatus. Re-teaming the director with Uma Thurman for the first time since 1994's Pulp Fiction, the film was originally the first half of what was to be a three-hour-plus movie before being split into two films. Thurman stars as The Bride, one-fifth of a team of assassins called DiVAS. When The Bride opts to leave the outfit for a life of marital bliss, it doesn't sit well with her boss, Bill (David Carradine), so he has her former cohorts, played by Lucy Liu, Vivica A. Fox, Daryl Hannah, and Michael Madsen, show up at the nuptials, leaving behind a blood bath. Miraculously, The Bride survives a bullet to the head and, four years later, she sets out for revenge against her four assassins and their employer. The story is concluded in Kill Bill Vol. 2, released six months later.

Credits:-

#mongolian Music - Boerte - Gobi |
CulturesInMusiç



For those who wondering what they are singing about: The lyrics roughly goes like: There is the endless gobi, and there are saxauls, not only gems but also keeps the gobi warm. Somewhere there lives and sings .
I believe this song is the soundtrack of the documentary film "the weeping camel", in which a mother camel shunned it's baby camel (which really happens sometimes), and the baby camel wails. The herders then plays a ritual music with a Mongolian musical instrument named "horse headed fiddle" to the mother camel. The camel whines (this really happens too!) and accepts it's baby, as you can see in the video. How the music touches and why the camel reacts to it like that is unknown (to me).
If you wonder, why it sings that the mother lives "somewhere", the gobi is one of the harshest landscapes on earth, people who live there must move from one location to another depending on the season. The mother lives in the gobi and the kids apparently live somewhere else and memorizing their mother's lifestyle in their song.

Recommended