This could be my favourite Amenra song. It's really deep and powerful and I just love the singing. The song is a lovestory. I see the singer as the man and he sings for his woman. Somehow something came between them, but the woman did something. Even after that the man can't let go and still wants to take care and love her. The man isn't a stalker or fiend, but the woman doesn't want to be with him and this tears the mans soul. The man has faith and prays that everything would be like it once was.
Twuhste En Tljihste is again Western Flanders dialect, it means the Highest and the Lowest. I think that when the man is in love for his woman, he feels like he is in heaven, he feels so happy, his feelings are at the highest point there. But, when they break up, he falls down like a brick, in that split second he becomes the saddest man alive, he is now at the lowest possible feeling, hell. Isn't love always like that? It's a constant pendulum between being very happy and getting hurt. You can feel the man longing for his...
Twuhste En Tljihste is again Western Flanders dialect, it means the Highest and the Lowest. I think that when the man is in love for his woman, he feels like he is in heaven, he feels so happy, his feelings are at the highest point there. But, when they break up, he falls down like a brick, in that split second he becomes the saddest man alive, he is now at the lowest possible feeling, hell. Isn't love always like that? It's a constant pendulum between being very happy and getting hurt. You can feel the man longing for his wife in the song, longing for these happy times. I love the title and the song.
This could be my favourite Amenra song. It's really deep and powerful and I just love the singing. The song is a lovestory. I see the singer as the man and he sings for his woman. Somehow something came between them, but the woman did something. Even after that the man can't let go and still wants to take care and love her. The man isn't a stalker or fiend, but the woman doesn't want to be with him and this tears the mans soul. The man has faith and prays that everything would be like it once was.
"Némelèndèlle" is a phonetic transcription of the Western Flanders dialect for "Heaven and Hell" and the longest name for the song has been at one time "Némelèndèlle. Twuhste En Tljihste". I don't know what that means. Maybe someone could translate?
Twuhste En Tljihste is again Western Flanders dialect, it means the Highest and the Lowest. I think that when the man is in love for his woman, he feels like he is in heaven, he feels so happy, his feelings are at the highest point there. But, when they break up, he falls down like a brick, in that split second he becomes the saddest man alive, he is now at the lowest possible feeling, hell. Isn't love always like that? It's a constant pendulum between being very happy and getting hurt. You can feel the man longing for his...
Twuhste En Tljihste is again Western Flanders dialect, it means the Highest and the Lowest. I think that when the man is in love for his woman, he feels like he is in heaven, he feels so happy, his feelings are at the highest point there. But, when they break up, he falls down like a brick, in that split second he becomes the saddest man alive, he is now at the lowest possible feeling, hell. Isn't love always like that? It's a constant pendulum between being very happy and getting hurt. You can feel the man longing for his wife in the song, longing for these happy times. I love the title and the song.
@tablomqvist thank you.
@tablomqvist thank you.