Gjallarhorn - Herr Olof

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  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • Gjallarhorn - "Herr Olof" from "Ranarop", 1997

Комментарии • 299

  • @r.j.mckenziesullivan2412
    @r.j.mckenziesullivan2412 4 года назад +87

    I used this in my class today. I am having my students listen to music they don't usually hear. So today they enjoyed this ballad and some wanted to dance. They learned what a drone is. I love the drone that underlies the rest of the piece. thankyou for being on RUclips.

    • @leflyxdvd
      @leflyxdvd Год назад

      souns very fun and you sound like a great teacher atleast, on i wouold have liked to have. Good for you to give these cultural lessons. sounds fun :)

  • @hokage64th
    @hokage64th 11 лет назад +49

    Im not Nordic or European, Im from half the world away, from the Philippines to be exact, Nordic music, history, and culture is beautiful. Greetings :)

    • @salomelinan1531
      @salomelinan1531 3 года назад +3

      Me too, i'm from spain, but my child's father is from iceland, i see in his eyes every day the beauty of their culture.. and i embrace the love all around the world and their cultures.. ❤️❤️

    • @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius
      @Dave.Mustaine.Is.Genius 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@salomelinan1531not all. African cvltures generally aren't as good as other parts of the world.

  • @jonnieve6692
    @jonnieve6692 11 лет назад +61

    Well..im not nordic, and i dont have any nordic roots, but i still love this.

    • @chloenatasha7672
      @chloenatasha7672 3 года назад

      same, im vibing to this lol

    • @Pirustae
      @Pirustae 3 года назад +1

      Origins don't matter here

    • @jonnieve6692
      @jonnieve6692 3 года назад +3

      @@Pirustae I was so confused from your reply, my comment is from 8 years ago xdd

    • @GAB-qq6jc
      @GAB-qq6jc 10 месяцев назад

      Time don't matter here@@jonnieve6692

  • @verityandstu
    @verityandstu 13 лет назад +18

    I started listening to Swedish and Finnish traditional music a few years ago. I absolutely love it. It connects me to places I have no first hand knowledge of, words I can't understand but I feel the spirit of them. It doesn't rob me of my own sense of my indigenous culture. It opens a door for me. And it kindles a love of my own history at the same time. And, at the end of the day - we're all migrants, we've all come from somewhere else at some point in our history. Enjoy both! :) x

  • @BOISEKEEPER
    @BOISEKEEPER 13 лет назад +12

    Gjallarhorn was formed in 1994 on the west coast of Finland, in the Swedish speaking area, by Jenny Wilhelms, Christopher Öhman (viola, mandola) and Jacob Frankenhaeuser (didgeridoo).

    • @RussellTeapot
      @RussellTeapot Год назад

      Oh so it's a didgeridoo what I hear in the background! So haunting, in certain moments it almost sounds like a very low jaw harp

  • @northernbrother417
    @northernbrother417 5 лет назад +8

    What a fantastic song this was one of the first songs I listened to when I started getting obsessed with neo folk about 4 years ago. Another great band like this is hedningarna.

  • @arendalformeg
    @arendalformeg 12 лет назад +2

    I am from Arendal, Norway and like the music from Gjallarhorn very much. Thank you.

  • @stianfiskermann2919
    @stianfiskermann2919 8 лет назад +252

    Anglo translation:
    Herr Olof has saddled his good grey mare,
    And off he has ridden to the mermaid's lair.
    His saddle of gold floated high on the waves
    And down sank Herr Olof to the mermaid's embrace.
    "O welcome, Herr Olof, and welcome to me!
    Full fifteen years I have waited for thee.
    "Where were you born, and where you raised,
    And where were your courtly garments made?"
    "Twas in the king's castle I was born and raised,
    And it's there that my courtly garments were made.
    "There lives my father, there lives my mother,
    And there live my sister and brother."
    "But where are your fields and where are your lands,
    And where in the world does your bridal bed stand?
    "Where in the world does your true love lie,
    With whom you will live and die?"
    "There are my fields and there are my lands,
    And there is the place where my bridal bed stands.
    "There is the place where my true love does lie,
    With whom I have sworn to live and to die."
    "Come in now, Herr Olof, sit down by me here,
    And drink from my goblet of wine so clear.
    "Now where were you born, and where were you raised,
    And where were your courtly garments made?
    "Here I was born, and here I was raised,
    And here is where my courtly garments were made.
    "Here lives my father, and here lives my mother,
    And here are my sister and brother."
    "But where are your fields and where are your lands,
    And where in the world does your bridal bed stand?
    "Where in the world does your true love lie,
    With whom you will live and die?"
    "Here are my fields and here are my lands.
    Here is the place where my bridal bed stands.
    "Here is the place where my true love does lie,
    With you I will live and with you I will die."

    • @elegathor4251
      @elegathor4251 8 лет назад +10

      I'm hungarian, and want to learn to speak all the scandinavian languages. And I recognize one easy way. Not too hard learn scandinavian from english.

    • @stianfiskermann2919
      @stianfiskermann2919 8 лет назад +15

      English has actually been reclassified as a Scandinavian dialect, rather than western germanic one a few years back. So yes indeed it should be rather easy to learn if you know english and also if you know german. Icelandic is tougher they speak old norse still basically, while we have taken a great dutch influence, while the english have taken french influence from the norse and danish normans who took french tongue... phew!

    • @stianfiskermann2919
      @stianfiskermann2919 8 лет назад +4

      ***** it's in the morning here now, I don't think I will be able to find research papers on it but try google scholar.
      www.apollon.uio.no/english/articles/2012/4-english-scandinavian.html
      Not what I was looking for this is the claim, that's been obvious to us all along(part ON/IS speakers). You have many things preserved in your dialect, that is gone in ours. The whole I am/Ék em/you are/þú ert.... grammars ie. Now sleep. Funny thing is, the normans took french tongue after 80 years there. If they hadn't they would still spoken ON/Danish tongue, so you would be closer. Bed sorry dude try scholar or bibex, google gives you shit

    • @Medulle38
      @Medulle38 8 лет назад +3

      Remember that the structure of modern english has lost its scandinavian or saxon roots: english language is a french creole since 1000 years...
      Thanks to the French/Northmen, masters of your poor saxon people...

    • @omega1231
      @omega1231 8 лет назад +9

      English didn't come from old norse so you're hard pressed to call it a scandinavian language, Danish has alot of borrow words from french and german, doesn't mean that Danish is either. English is a Germanic language at its roots which is the only commonality between Scandinavian languages and english, also lexical similarity doesn't constitute one coming from the other, 2x also the words in english that came from old norse is things that would be traded or everyday stuff like egg, stool, ship, hen etc. etc. which shows that the mix came from trade not from roots. Old english had more in common with old norse and i can understand a little bit of it in written form without ever having seen it before, but that language is technically dead at this point with little to no relation to modern english.
      x3 also i got to disagree with your friendly neighbourhood linguist again, Norwegians having an easy time learning English has nothing to do with the languages being related, as opposed to english, Norwegian and the other Scandinavian languages has very complicated phonetics and alot of them, this seems like a more logical reason as to why scandinavians are so good at languages in general and not just English, try teaching an English speaking person a Scandinavian language i'd bet you that they'll find it damn near impossible because English has extremely neutral phonetics and not many of them, and a claim also doesn't constitute being true or being reclassified, calling something a claim basicly means "So yeah i have this thesis that i can't really prove yet" i.e. everything i just wrote is a claim and partly anecdotal, which makes it just as legit as that other claim. "that which is claimed without evidence can be dismissed without evidence"
      For reference; Old english "Hwæt is þīn nama?" - modern english "What is your name?" - Danish "Hvad er dit navn?" if we have to make a guess which one is more closely related to Danish, it's the first, "þ" is even an old Danish letter.

  • @daydreamer1991white
    @daydreamer1991white 14 лет назад +7

    This is by far the best version of this song. And I love it. Thank you so much for posting. :)

  • @eastvswest7237
    @eastvswest7237 4 года назад +5

    *Why do I feel happy whenever I listen to this album? It makes me feel so fresh*

  • @agnethapettersson1587
    @agnethapettersson1587 9 лет назад

    Carin Kjellman! Jösses... det är ju hon som är upphovet! Repris. Men inte mej emot, hon är folklore musik nr 1 !

  • @suvetar
    @suvetar 15 лет назад +7

    Love this song, thank you so much for posting it.
    I've heard a few versions of Herr Olof, but Jenny wilhelms voice really makes this work.

  • @BOISEKEEPER
    @BOISEKEEPER 13 лет назад +8

    The band is Finnish and hails from Ostrobothnia, a Swedish-speaking region on the west coast of Finland, [1] one of the four regions of the historical province of Ostrobothnia and the only region in Finland outside the Åland Islands where more people speak Swedish than Finnish.

  • @hejhejhej9519
    @hejhejhej9519 5 лет назад +3

    i love this song because my grandfathers name is Sven-Olof and this reminds me of him

  • @Tarresh89
    @Tarresh89 11 лет назад +2

    What a beautiful voice does this woman have...

  • @elektra121
    @elektra121 8 лет назад +32

    Deutsche Übersetzung (von Friedrich Herder!):
    Erlkönigs Tochter
    Herr Oluf reitet spät und weit,
    Zu bitten seine Hochzeitsleut'.
    Da tanzen die Elfen auf grünem Land',
    Erlkönigs Tochter reicht ihm die Hand.
    "Willkommen, Herr Oluf! Was eilst du von hier?
    Tritt hier in die Reihen und tanze mit mir."
    "Ich darf nicht tanzen, nicht tanzen ich mag,
    Frühmorgen ist mein Hochzeittag."
    "Hör an, Herr Oluf, tritt tanzen mit mir,
    Zwei güldne Sporen schenk' ich dir.
    Ein Hemd von Seide so weiß und fein,
    Meine Mutter bleicht's mit Mondenschein."
    "Ich darf nicht tanzen, nicht tanzen ich mag,
    Frühmorgen ist mein Hochzeittag."
    "Hör an, Herr Oluf, tritt tanzen mit mir,
    Einen Haufen Goldes schenk' ich dir."
    "Einen Haufen Goldes, den nähm ich wohl;
    Doch tanzen ich nicht darf noch soll."
    "Und willst, Herr Oluf, nicht tanzen mit mir,
    Soll Seuch und Krankheit folgen dir."
    Sie tät einen Schlag ihm auf sein Herz,
    Noch nimmer fühlt' er solchen Schmerz.
    Sie hob ihn bleichend auf sein Pferd:
    "Reit heim nun zu dein'm Fräulein wert."
    Und als er kam vor Hauses Tür,
    Seine Mutter zitternd stand dafür.
    "Hör an mein Sohn, sag an mir gleich,
    Wie ist dein' Farbe so blaß und bleich?"
    "Und sollt sie nicht sein blaß und bleich,
    Ich trat in Erlenkönigs Reich."
    "Hör an, mein Sohn, so lieb und traut,
    Was soll ich nun sagen deiner Braut?"
    "Sagt ihr, ich sei im Wald zur Stund,
    Zu proben da mein Pferd und Hund."
    Frühmorgen, als es Tag kaum war,
    Da kam die Braut mit der Hochzeitschar.
    Sie schenkten Met, sie schenkten Wein;
    "Wo ist Herr Oluf, der Bräutigam mein?"
    "Herr Oluf, er ritt aus zur Stund,
    Er wollt probieren sein Pferd und Hund."
    Die Braut hob auf den Scharlach rot,
    Da lag Herr Oluf, und er war tot.

    • @RSProduxx
      @RSProduxx 6 лет назад +2

      ist aber nicht wirklich ´ne Übersetzung... ganz anderer Text, wenn man sich die beiden weiter oben mal ansieht...

    • @everon778
      @everon778 5 лет назад

      danke

  • @ingrain63
    @ingrain63 10 лет назад +8

    Many thanks, drhenryetripshaw!!

  • @diogoeusebio4111
    @diogoeusebio4111 6 лет назад

    Amazing song, percussions are wonderful ! Cheers.

  • @aleksanderberisha777
    @aleksanderberisha777 5 лет назад

    **RESPECT AND GREETINGS FROM ALBANIA**

  • @F1re_and_frost
    @F1re_and_frost 5 лет назад

    Love, love, love! Ancestors are pleased indeed!

  • @ralphyboy25
    @ralphyboy25 12 лет назад +4

    Random...not really. More of a perfect blending of primal tones from two deep rooted cultures that are located on opposite ends of this small Earth we live on. The use of the didgeridoo in much of Gjallarhorn's songs, in my mind, is shear brilliance.

  • @ellie311
    @ellie311 12 лет назад +7

    I learn swedish in college and I am so happy that i actually understand most of it although it's dialect and little harder to get for me =)

  • @ViriatoII
    @ViriatoII 5 лет назад +36

    Amazing, especially considering it's more than 20 years old!
    And Scandinavian Airlines comes telling me Scandinavia has no culture of it's own....

    • @passengerpigeon20
      @passengerpigeon20 4 года назад +8

      Scandinavian Airlines did? When was that? That sounds like no way to run a marketing campaign.

    • @prometheus5770
      @prometheus5770 4 года назад +2

      hang them and all the oikophobes

  • @ralphyboy25
    @ralphyboy25 11 лет назад +3

    Having roots is not necessary to appreciate music from around the world. Just an awareness and a sense of humanity.

  • @ralphyboy25
    @ralphyboy25 13 лет назад +1

    @Dnamsak Hello. Thank you for pointing out "Folk & Rackare". I had not heard of them before until you mentioned them. I just found some of their songs on RUclips, a lot of interesting music.
    thanks again..

  • @erebosphoenix380
    @erebosphoenix380 6 лет назад +8

    So sad that they have removed this beautiful group from spotify :(

  • @WalkingOshaViolation
    @WalkingOshaViolation 2 года назад +1

    American here. Had a knife in the car with me when I listened to this song. Now it’s a skjeggøks.

  • @70CarStall
    @70CarStall 12 лет назад +1

    I sure dont subscribe to much at all. But this one is a must! From the USA

  • @sigridpalsater1401
    @sigridpalsater1401 8 лет назад +6

    Den här låten har jag hört som ung.jag är pensonär.

  • @ChristianWandzala
    @ChristianWandzala 12 лет назад +49

    This is funny, I wonder if any one else has caught onto this:
    I've noticed on every Gjallarhorn video ther is ONE dislike hit.
    Which most likely means some jerk just went around to every Gjallarhorn video just so he could hit the dislike button. Some people are so ridiculous lol

  • @aDespondentThespian
    @aDespondentThespian 12 лет назад

    This person is awesome for being so smart.

  • @Laplantis
    @Laplantis 7 лет назад +1

    This is beautiful

  • @alflindgren3905
    @alflindgren3905 9 лет назад +4

    I don´t care where it come´s from or who made it first! This is perfek!

  • @vcihiethea
    @vcihiethea 8 лет назад +1

    Thank you senpai for introducing me to this music

  • @Rikjaard
    @Rikjaard 11 лет назад +2

    Im not of scandinavian origins. but of Lombardic roots! Hails to our brothers in the North! we share a beautiful past! :) Wuotan Mit Uns!!!

  • @nick-spin9115
    @nick-spin9115 7 лет назад +1

    perfect voice keep up

  • @WolkieNL
    @WolkieNL 9 лет назад +62

    The violin reminds me of a korpiklaani song.

    • @DeltaXXI
      @DeltaXXI 9 лет назад +16

      +WolkieNL Wooden pints?

    • @WolkieNL
      @WolkieNL 9 лет назад +4

      +Delta21 Yes!

    • @ZA-mb5di
      @ZA-mb5di 5 лет назад

      @@WolkieNL I just looked that up and it's badass

  • @boromirkarpow6457
    @boromirkarpow6457 7 лет назад

    Enea pesn jest prekrasnea!!

  • @EneriGiilaan
    @EneriGiilaan 14 лет назад +7

    Great song - one of many by Gjallarhorn. However the RUclips sound quality is really an issue with their material - as is every sound packing method (MP3 etc). The actual greatness of the clear and open soundscapes are available only through the original records played on a decent system. I just found it myself when I finally managed to obtain the records - absolutely stunning stuff.

  • @Theyovillepimps
    @Theyovillepimps 11 лет назад +7

    I love being Swedish!

    • @Radialzzz
      @Radialzzz 2 года назад

      You are so lucky

  • @LadyDoloris
    @LadyDoloris 12 лет назад +6

    I understand that some dialects we have are hard for you to understand. "Skåne" for example, was once owned by our neighbour "Denmark" and therefor the people living there have a dialect that's hard to understand even by some swedes.
    I live in "Småland", but I come from Stockholm, so you'd probably get what I was saying to you. Or, maybe you think the dialect of the whole language is a little hard to get? :) People sometimes say that it sounds like we're singing when we're talking. x)

    • @mintpastill
      @mintpastill 7 лет назад

      LadyDoloris hej jag är från Bergslagen, men såg du skrev om sjungande prat och jag hörde en äldre man från Torsby prata, de verkligen sjöng, synd sådana dialekter försvinner. Jag är 42 och när jag var barn och inte lärt alla dialekt ord och mötte de som var i 80 eller 90 är då de prata ju enbart slang på deras dialekt vis hela meningar, men jag förstod bättre än de som inte kom från hällefors. Men vilken skillnad! Man hör idag bara ett gruskorn vad som var då, dessvärre så stöna vi vid varje ord de äldre så jag tyckte Torsby var finare.

    • @OliverPerssonMusik
      @OliverPerssonMusik 6 лет назад

      Hej! Kull att du gillör dialekten vi pratör här i traktan. Skull int kunn påstå att dialekten på nö vis skull va påväg å försvinn. Mång av öss ä fortfarande jävligt mån öm å bevar ön. Förr tyckt dock fölk att dä va ofint å tal mä dialekt så nog kanske ann ä tunner än ann har vör. Höppes du ger dig på Hagförs trakten nön göng, Nörra Värmlann SKiljer sä rektigt myck frå mällerst å sör sia.

    • @carrl8832
      @carrl8832 3 года назад

      I speak way less swedish than i do norwegian (despite being born in Linköping myself), and i can say that the dialect used here made it much easier for me to understand the words (somehow, sounds more like norsk though not really, dunno how to explain).
      I might be way off, sorry if i am, but just how i feel.

  • @Goldplus1001
    @Goldplus1001 13 лет назад +2

    My new best song :)

  • @vaelnocturno2318
    @vaelnocturno2318 5 лет назад +3

    No se si hay otro hispanohablante por aquí, pero aquí estoy yo, greetings from Argentina.

    • @AYan-oy6hb
      @AYan-oy6hb 4 года назад +2

      Sí, pero nunca comento en casi ningún video, desde Argentina también 👍

  • @mattttera
    @mattttera 9 лет назад +1

    Underbar musik!

  • @davesnyder4231
    @davesnyder4231 6 лет назад

    Thankyou for the translation in english

  • @thorvalld
    @thorvalld 7 лет назад +58

    this brings joy to my pagan heart, sadly they disbanded...

  • @verityandstu
    @verityandstu 13 лет назад +2

    My life is very much connected to the English landscape. I feel it in my veins. And I love where I'm from. And I also love the richness of the influences in my country that could only be there because people have migrated here. They've brought their language, their food, their customs, their music, their art. European, African, Asian, American. I started listening to Swedish and Finnish traditional music a few years ago, and I absolutely love it.

  • @ralphyboy25
    @ralphyboy25 13 лет назад +2

    @leleobhz Yes, I agree. The Garmarna, the Gjallarhorn AND the Azam Ali version are all well done, each one representing the artists' unique personalities and styles.
    With traditional source material like this to start with, its easy to see how there can be many interesting and enjoyable interpretations.

  • @MimMert-uv6cn
    @MimMert-uv6cn 2 года назад +1

    My bath song

  • @DSLRmusic
    @DSLRmusic 12 лет назад +3

    Really good version. My favorite among Brâna Keternâ's version.

  • @GreatMisterE
    @GreatMisterE 8 лет назад +10

    It seems like the most fascinating stories are told about a certain person(character) like in this song "herr Olof" as well as another song "herr Mannelig". You guys know of any other song/stories like these two?

    • @swedishsweetness3755
      @swedishsweetness3755 8 лет назад +13

      Erik Zuk Buckle yourself up, because I have quite the list! :) If you like Gjallarhorn, the songs Ramunder, Sjöjungfrun och Konungadottern, and Konungen och Trollkvinnan are all the ones I've found so far based on some sort of character.
      Now, if you like Garmarna, you'd probably like Herr Holkin, Herr Holger, Liten Kersti, and Hilla Lilla. They also have a version of Herr Olaf that I really like.
      And another song that I absolutely love is called Ólafur Liljurós. One version I know of is done by Islandsklukkur but it's sung in Icelandic, not Swedish like the rest of the songs. Hope my long and boring list helps a bit! :)

    • @GreatMisterE
      @GreatMisterE 8 лет назад +2

      thanks you very much,I really appreciate that, definitely will check all of them out!

    • @emmajochum8682
      @emmajochum8682 5 лет назад

      My favorite is I Riden Så. I'm pretty sure it's about a character called Silibrand, but I don't think it's really a story. It's still beautiful nonetheless

    • @josipabasic7963
      @josipabasic7963 4 года назад

      Herr Holkin and Herr Holger by Garmarna

  • @TheOmuur
    @TheOmuur 12 лет назад +1

    Wow! That's a didgeridoo! It sounds great with this music.

  • @MysMultilanguagesFav
    @MysMultilanguagesFav 13 лет назад +1

    @Dnamsak Min mamma hade den LP'n :) Vi letade precis upp den och ska lyssna, tack vare att jag hittade denna låten.

  • @vaultkeeper2
    @vaultkeeper2 13 лет назад +2

    @FreddyThaNightmare It's Fenno-Swedish (Finland Swedish), an accent of Swedish that they speak in parts of Finland

  • @vikingsailorboy
    @vikingsailorboy 12 лет назад +2

    Look up Azam Ali "Sackpipslat" and it is a medieval remix of this song

  • @aaronfischer6740
    @aaronfischer6740 Год назад

    Hypnotic

  • @vil4038
    @vil4038 4 года назад +2

    i love how theyre the only scandi-finnish folk band that plays the didgeridoo

    • @MissLoonasSpeech
      @MissLoonasSpeech 3 года назад

      Not entirely true. Hedningarna also used it on their album "Hippjokk", even though only on three songs (and played by a guest musician), out of which "Bierdna" and "Graucholorfen" with guest musician Wimme Saari doing the joiking are the most impressive: ruclips.net/video/SAG-FkDqdb0/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/gdGVVv6JVn4/видео.html (You could, of course, argue that at that time, Hedningarna were not Scandi-Finnish anymore, since their two Finnish female singers had left by then, but with Wimme Saari being Finnish, at least these two song were Scandi-Finnish collaborations.)

  • @LadyDoloris
    @LadyDoloris 12 лет назад +2

    Yeah, that's completely normal. :) I wouldn't be able to understand all accents of a language other than english. I mean, learning a foreign language is always a bit of a struggle. :D
    That sounds lovely! :) Hope you have fun!

  • @dalwand
    @dalwand Год назад

    So sad this is not on spotify. I regularly check, but they are not. 😞

  • @LadyDoloris
    @LadyDoloris 12 лет назад +1

    Haha, glad someone likes it! ;) Yeah, Gothenburg also has a special accent. :) Although the people of Skåne and Norrland has a LOT more accent when speaking. ;D
    Oh, Stockholm for a month? :) Sounds nice! Going with friends or family?

  • @ellie311
    @ellie311 12 лет назад +1

    yeah, i really like it. i kinda still struggle with it myself, but i think that's just normal :D i will be an intern at the goethe institute for two months - and a friend of mine lives in stockholm as well, so i will also see him :D

  • @levimoore805
    @levimoore805 6 лет назад

    The slow rolling pace and even the in trumpets sound just like the theme song for firefly. Anybody agree?

  • @ZA-mb5di
    @ZA-mb5di 5 лет назад +6

    I'm a huge metalhead and I love this.
    What am I?

  • @danswe86
    @danswe86 12 лет назад +1

    finland swedish is still a dialect of swedish and hence a scandinavan language, although spoken outside scandinavia.

  • @SuperThewatch
    @SuperThewatch 12 лет назад

    Wow, so beautiful! O.O

  • @thangacchi
    @thangacchi 13 лет назад +1

    Woah! I'm Indian and I like this a lot! You have pretty cool music, Sweden!

  • @ralphyboy25
    @ralphyboy25 14 лет назад +1

    @Bulgroz99 I feel the same. In fact, I find the entire 'Ranarop' album entrancing. It harkens me to a world and time far away and long ago.

  • @MysMultilanguagesFav
    @MysMultilanguagesFav 13 лет назад +1

    @FreddyThaNightmare Their dialect is Fenno-Swedish, but the language is really old time Swedish :)

  • @wmcmick
    @wmcmick 12 лет назад +1

    It does yes. Since this song is from the 17th century you are free to do whatever you want with it, Record and release the whole song or just use parts from it, modified or not. :)

  • @corbillat6718
    @corbillat6718 Год назад

    Still waiting for it to be on spotify bruh

  • @ViolentCriminalOrganization
    @ViolentCriminalOrganization 6 лет назад

    dette høres veldig bra ut

  • @eventhor7524
    @eventhor7524 5 лет назад

    Thats good man.

  • @nedimgery-buyukyuksel513
    @nedimgery-buyukyuksel513 8 лет назад +1

    toppest of the keks

  • @TheTrollOMeter
    @TheTrollOMeter 9 лет назад +1

    I like gjallarhorn. The wolf pack rounds are powerful. Am I the only one who came here from destiny videos?

  • @MysMultilanguagesFav
    @MysMultilanguagesFav 13 лет назад +1

    @Dnamsak Kändes riktigt häftigt när mamma plockade fram den :) Hon spelade den hela tiden förut sade hon. Nu är både hon och jag sugen på att få igång vår spelade i källaren och börja spela lite gamla plattor igen ^^

  • @fsrhodes
    @fsrhodes 13 лет назад +1

    @RyanVonFleming i'd like to hear Gjallarhorn do Herr Mannelig! Garmarna has the best version i've heard so far...

  • @IHeartGameplay
    @IHeartGameplay 5 лет назад +1

    You know shits going down when the grey horse gets involved lol

  • @rainerzdziarstek3569
    @rainerzdziarstek3569 4 года назад

    🥀

  • @JohannesPardes
    @JohannesPardes 12 лет назад +1

    I am an Australian, they have Australian Aborigine instruments in there!! like the didgeredoo and the percussion sticks.. how random!

  • @jordanvanderwerf
    @jordanvanderwerf 11 лет назад +1

    Hey good call!

  • @thangacchi
    @thangacchi 13 лет назад +1

    @QueenRopagrim
    People usually like their own culture's music. For instance a Greek person usually wouldn't like Chinses music or a South Africn person wouldn't usually like Indonesian music. Likewise I'm Indian and am surprised that I love this. Get it now?

  • @808thampire
    @808thampire 11 лет назад +66

    This music gave me heresy.

    • @Blackhuskyy
      @Blackhuskyy 8 лет назад +2

      HAHA

    • @gunnarthorsen
      @gunnarthorsen 7 лет назад +11

      A mixture of honey and vinegar, 1 to 1, will clear up a bad case of heresy in no time. Apply to affected part liberally.

    • @DerogatoryMess
      @DerogatoryMess 7 лет назад +1

      Gunnar Thorsen that doesn't always work some cases become permanent. Exposure to source over long periods of time create understanding and awareness which induces heresy. LOL

    • @yoshimario40
      @yoshimario40 7 лет назад +8

      For more severe cases of heresy, contact your nearest inquisitor for a more permanent solution to the affliction.

    • @imapizza4095
      @imapizza4095 4 года назад

      SON HAVE YOU BEEN READING HERESY UNACCEPTABLE *GRABS SHOTGUN*

  • @verityandstu
    @verityandstu 13 лет назад +10

    @NationalLibertarian
    You can preserve your culture and embrace multiculturalism. The two are not mutually exclusive. I'm feel very much English. I am discovering more and more about English traditional music, and slowly deepening my understanding of where I've come from. My dad's been immersed in tracing our family history, and I'm getting a greater sense of my ancestry, the professions, the hardships, the migrations, the values.

    • @scythescythe884
      @scythescythe884 4 года назад +2

      exactly. thats part of multiculturalism, multi cultures is in the name after all... i am American, but have Irish and Celtic roots that run deep. while i hang out with people of all colors and backgrounds i have a deep passion for my Celtic roots. this doesn't prevent me from loving a single one of my friends and their culture as much as i love my own. i will sit and help my friend sew a beaded necklace piece for her tribal dresses and later that same day visit songs like this and Irish ones. neither cultures are lost when you aren't assholes about it.

    • @noimnotnice
      @noimnotnice 11 месяцев назад

      That is absolute folly and everybody can see how comments like these have aged like dead possums on hot tarmac.
      Multiculturalism has never worked historically. It was a principal component of Rome's downfall. Today, it is synonymous with White erasure. It means the replacement of indigenous Europeans with browns. Multiculturalism has seen to it that London is no longer English.

  • @EneriGiilaan
    @EneriGiilaan 14 лет назад +1

    @nodak746 Likewise - though I think I prefer this (just a bit) over the Garmarna version. Perhaps it is just that I have the Ranarop CD and the sound is naturally richer and more clear and balanced on that - while I know the Garmarna version only from the YT.
    And I totally agree on your last point ;)

  • @StellandBlood
    @StellandBlood 13 лет назад +1

    @thangacchi
    It depends of one´s personality.

  • @intheendgirl
    @intheendgirl 10 лет назад +12

    I have heard a version of this song about 2 years ago in a "medieval music" playlist, but it was sung by a choir and violins were the only instruments... Does anyone know this version? I need to find it!!

    • @AbortiveDoll
      @AbortiveDoll 10 лет назад

      /watch?v=sclwhsEIlTk

    • @renatomagalhaes1561
      @renatomagalhaes1561 10 лет назад +1

      Azam ali - Sackpipslat

    • @SeaNNyTizzle
      @SeaNNyTizzle 10 лет назад

      Here ya go /watch?v=cPkLhSVtPS4

    • @ekoi1995
      @ekoi1995 8 лет назад

      +intheendgirl omg I was thinking hard where did I hear this music, i just remember i watched a video about medieval music and that was a long time ago

    • @davesnyder4231
      @davesnyder4231 6 лет назад

      intheendgirl garmana does it too

  • @EneriGiilaan
    @EneriGiilaan 11 лет назад +1

    Hyvin sanottu - bra sagt.

  • @juanmanuellobosolitario4386
    @juanmanuellobosolitario4386 5 лет назад +2

    Odin os bendiga grupo

  • @kevincieslak9086
    @kevincieslak9086 11 лет назад +1

    i'm from poland, but once my brothers, you was here and so we people in northpoland are mostly skandinavian vikings :) i soon want to live in norway, finnland or sweden :)

  • @LadyDoloris
    @LadyDoloris 12 лет назад +1

    God dag ;)

  • @alexanderprime8003
    @alexanderprime8003 5 лет назад

    AND THEY FIGHT AND DANCE TILL THE MORNINNNNNNG

  • @ralphyboy25
    @ralphyboy25 13 лет назад +1

    @fsrhodes Actually I would like to hear anything new from Gjallarhorn. They seem to have been rather dormant for the last several years.

  • @TheHorrorExperiment
    @TheHorrorExperiment 3 года назад

    It's a shame I can't buy this anywhere without paying an arm and A leg

  • @Spelgodis
    @Spelgodis 13 лет назад +1

    @thangacchi Actually that's not true. Many people find music from different cultures very interesting. Me for example, I love listening to Arabic traditional music, and Turkish, but focus mostly on Swedish and nordic music because I can understand it best and it feels the most right. If you like one type of traditional music from one place, then you usually like some from another country too :)

  • @KiralearnsNorwegian
    @KiralearnsNorwegian 5 лет назад +2

    This is so beautiful. Where do I get the album ( I couldn't find on Spotify)

  • @RenskevanDonk
    @RenskevanDonk 7 лет назад +4

    Does anyone know why this song is similar to Sakpipslät?

  • @anjawilmink
    @anjawilmink 14 лет назад +1

    My Gjallar is laying here and doing nothing...

  • @modepet
    @modepet 11 лет назад

    well said, mate :D

  • @georgemalandrakis
    @georgemalandrakis 10 лет назад

    I can't decide which version i love the most... This one or Garmana's?

  • @ctmaniak
    @ctmaniak 14 лет назад

    The violin seems a bit similar to the Wooden Pints song by Korpiklaani