Translation for Intro... Your welcome. Silence, ancient tales, the voices of ancient sites Revenge and hatred mentioned, the fire of envy Hope has died on battlefields Garm barks loud before the gates of Hel Wind-age, wolf-age has come Axe-age, sword-age will soon be gone Bring forth armour, marked by many battles Chainmail and shiny sword and ride forth into the field Face what may come, then let everything go Long have I carried this day in my mind.
Ok, wow... now that my head is still spinning from the annoyance below on several points. Back to the main point. I love this song INCLUDING the Faroese at the beginning! Heri Joensen and the other members of Tyr are beyond talented and really bring the culture and lore to light. Being of Norwegian decent as well as majoring in archeology and anthropology, I just love it!!! :)
I totally gree. There is a "call" through the bloodlines. I feel it seems as though it is specific for this time. Victory of the light brothers and sisters. Now is ragnarok. True ragnarok
It is all a reference to Ragnarök, the wolf in chains is Fenrir, the dragon in the deep is the second son of Loki who fought Thor and Thor was only able to take 9 steps before collapsing after defeating the beast, the Earth will be green again and 2 humans survived and repopulated Earth, and an Eagle flew over a waterfall and hunted it's prey and the Gods who survived Ragnarök gathered and shared memories, whereas the worst place to be after Ragnarök is Hel(?) where a dragon would be destroying the corpses of the dead.
All mythology is awesome to me. But Norse and Celtic in particular speak to me me. I might be biased, being mostly Irish and Swedish Norwegian ancestry.
I actually like Ragnarok. It tells a story that all things must come to an end and that life will continue in our absence and Ragnarok will happen again bringing about the perpetual cycle of death and rebirth. And my chosen god is Tyr because he's the fucking man, so Ragnarok is a bitter sweet tale for me.@@MetalWolf47
If I die, let me go to Valhalla so I may stand with my allies in the great battle that awaits us all at Ragnarok. No Jotun nor Dragur will shake us, and with swords in hand, we will stand firm, knowing we all die in vain, but we die fighting the enemy... And we die with honor
Luhnge I know, but we're living in the world of gunpowder and ranged weapons. No chance that any commander will let us fight with a sword if any war comes up.
i am from the faroe islands and i love this song. and if you love this band i would recommend checking out hamradun the old singer for tyr is in hamradun it is also a faroese band.
This song was perfectly thought through enough, and again, it's not like they were writing bomb defusing manual, they were writing a progressive metal song. I see where you're coming from, as I don't speak Faroese, but, more importantly, I think it sounds cool, so I enjoy the employment of the multilingual lyrics to add to the songs individuality. The beginning makes this song sound like a true old viking tale, and it transitions into what we can understand.
In addition to being much older than the information in the Prose Edda where Týr is listed as Óðinn's son, the compilation of the Poetic Edda that we commonly accept today is NOT what is actually put together in the manuscripts extant. Baldr's Drapa, for example, is not included in the manuscripts used to reproduce the Poetic Edda. It is in a different manuscript all together. (Part 5)
Týr's name is sometimes linked to that of Teutates/Tuisto on the continent and is placed in equal if not greater status to the god that became known as Odin. To follow along societal rules of leaders not being blemished or disabled, the moment that Týr no longer had one of his hands made him unable to rule. For the benefit of the tribe and mankind he made this sacrifice. If you remember, Týr sent Thor to his mom and dad's house in Jotunheim in search of Hymir's cauldron. (Part 6)
The lyrics were created essentially being in what they were sung us, not to show it in a specific language. If you wanted to sing the song, this is the video you would watch. Not one showing the faroese part translated into english, not the one showing the english part translated into faroese. Those are translations, these are lyrics. Last time I checked lyrics was what a person sung, not what they would be singing in another language.
If you have ever played the game 'telephone' you can see how a story can grow and change over time and transmittance. Snorri was trying to take the stories and make them fit within his own limited scope of cosmology while trying to not get burned at the stake for heresy by writing down the mythology of pagan gods. He was not interested in preserving the lore. He wanted to preserve the style of skaldic poetry that was rapidly dying out at the time. (Part 3)
Oh, this hurts my head. Norse Lore is not only part of my faith but my area of scholastic study as well. Týr has been portrayed as both a son of Óðinn and a son of Hymir. Archaelogical evidence points to a time where he was considered the father of the pantheon of gods rather than Óðinn. (Part 1 of response)
Tyr is not Odin's son. Fenrir does not swallow the sun, that is Skoll. Fenrir is the son of Loki & the Angrboda. The Aesir raised Fenrir amongst them in Asgard. When he became too big they began to try & find ways to bind him. After 2 tries they asked the dwarves for the rope that is described below. Fenrir would not at first allow it as he smelled magic. Only after Tyr agreed to place his hand in the wolf's mouth would he relent. The rope held, Fenrir could not free himself, Tyr lost his hand.
I've found bits of translations when reading about Norse mythology. They've taken parts from the epic poems called the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda. Google it and you should find a translation to some parts of the Faroese section
The lyrics translated: Bring forth armour, marked by many battles Chainmail and shiny sword and ride forth into the field Face what will come, then let everything go Long have I carried this day in my mind.
The bands name is named after the son of odin TYR his name is pronounced like Tear. tyr had his arm bitten off by fenrir the wolf, one day fenrir the wolf would swallow the sun and cause ragnarok but to prevent that they got the dwarves to make a magic chain to hold the wolf in place the chain was made out of things like the footstep of a cat, the roots of a mountain, a woman's beard, the breath of fishes, the sinews of a bear, and a bird's spittle. Norse mythology is mental in a good way
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA YOU MADE MY DAY. As you've been told, Ragnarok is NOT English. And AJ's got a point. "Common sense dictates to write lyrics how they are sung/written, not how they are translated." TRUE STORY.
Right on @highmax 17! The only place for a warrior to go after the physical dying is to face the Second Death at Ragnarok. I swear to follow my liege lord Týr to the gates of hell, and there to die beside him fighting the hound of destruction. So ducking what if we're called to sacrifice our spirit- lives?! Our reward will be knowing that we restore the earth to her natural honor, the way it was always meant to be -- as Heri says, where eagles will soar over the green land and hunt beside the waterfalls.
Why, because your english speaking ass has a superficial cultural fetish for words you can't understand, so the poet should limit themselves for you? Grow up.
You know iirc so many think of viking axes and think "COOL!", but the truth is the axe and spear were (relatively) common mans weapons, men of stature in the nordic lands had custom swords made for them, even named them and wrote poems and sagas about them
Here is the tricky part. The Prose Edda was written in the 13th century. Over 300 years AFTER the practice of Norse Cosmology as a religion ceased in its last stronghold of Iceland. Snorri was a scholar monk. This is why you see so many christian references in the Prose Edda. He was relaying the stories filtered through his xtian viewpoint that had been passed down over several generations via Oral Tradition. (Part 2)
I think that has been the first time that I have ever been referred to as 'sir' on the internet. Hell, I don't ever remember being called that, internet or otherwise. :P
listen to this by the fire. as it burns. i think..i lost my lifes war. the battle to keep her. i could not win. i was defeated. by a woman that could not speak. put me up against a fleet of men. i'd die trying to kill them all. put me up against a woman. i can be defeated. but left living. living with the defeat. we are bound to battle to eternity. 00:14 this is how you sing in lonely missery. heartbroken of your defeat. nods.. licking your wounds that do not ever seem to heal
and fenrir isn't captured with ropes at the two first times but with chain who 's called loeding and dromi . he was captured with a ruban called gleipnir and it was created by an elve nammed skimir and he was the freyr messenger
The Poetic Edda was COMPILED from manuscript fragments towards the end of the 13th century. The fragments PRE-DATED the Prose Edda. The Poetic Edda fragments area copies of older manuscripts. Týr was listed as the son of Hymir in the Poetic Edda. Keep up with me...... (Part 4)
the point i'm making is that the lyrics shown are the correct lyrics, if they were translated they'd be incorrect since it's almost, if not completely, impossible to translate a song without changing the lyrics. the uploader never claimed to provide the translation, only the lyrics and they did that with 100% accuracy aside from that one misspelled word in the beginning (which they corrected in the description even though the misspelled version is still in the video)
No, they're singing Faroese. Faroese is considered an Insular Nordic language due to the Faroe Islands being isolated. (Minus the Dutch trying to push it out) It descends from Old West Norse along with Icelandic, Norwegian and the extinct Norn. Gaelic is a different as it descends from Insular Celtic (Scottish Gaelic, Irish, Welsh, Manx, Breton and Cornish), but eons ago they shared a common ancestor - Indo-European
I didn't know that. Then again, I'm kind of/really rusty on European history. But you're saying that the inclusion of Faroese make this more dramatic, when in said context? I can definitely see that as a reason, and looking at it that way makes a lot of sense.
No one exactly knows, though most of us feel it has not come yet. I do not think it has, and most agree on that. Different theories are around, however.
I can't understand it either, but you don't need to understand lyrics to enjoy the music. Most of the music I listen to isn't in English, the only language I know, but I still listen to the songs because they are good.
Silence, old myth, ancient subject, revenge and hatred named, jealousy-fire. On the battlefields, hope dies, high before Helheim's lattice, Garm barks. Windage, vargage has arrived. Beardage, lawlessness suddenly is gone. Carry forth soliderclothes, marked of much conflict, armor and shining sword, and forth on the field ride. Come what come must, let go of everything, for long have I this day, in my mind hidden.
The only way you could have had a relative fight in Ragnarok, and be alive today to tell the tale, would you aren't even human. The only humans who survive Ragnarok just hid in a tree the whole time. But oh well, the legend changes where you go, so I'm not going to try and disprove you.
@MrRiverman81 so the language they use in some songs is their islands language? i looked a little at their homeland, looks like a pretty awesome place.
I'm learning Swedish, it's suprisingly similiar to English, being that most of the dialect is more or less similiar but spelt very different due to us Saxons moving away before written forms were created. It's like English people learning German, only the spelling is the hard part. Germans should be able to grasp it easier, good luck man!
Translation for Intro... Your welcome.
Silence, ancient tales, the voices of ancient sites
Revenge and hatred mentioned, the fire of envy
Hope has died on battlefields
Garm barks loud before the gates of Hel
Wind-age, wolf-age has come
Axe-age, sword-age will soon be gone
Bring forth armour, marked by many battles
Chainmail and shiny sword and ride forth into the field
Face what may come, then let everything go
Long have I carried this day in my mind.
This was the first song i listened to from Tyr. Best decision of my life
Third song I heard, after Hammer of Thor and Ride to Hel. Best decision of my life.
hold the heathen hammer high was my first
and it's absolutely the best choice :3
Turið Torkilsdóttir for me. I love vocal harmony.
You must hear Sinklars Visa
Lord of Lies was my first song c:
Ok, wow... now that my head is still spinning from the annoyance below on several points. Back to the main point. I love this song INCLUDING the Faroese at the beginning! Heri Joensen and the other members of Tyr are beyond talented and really bring the culture and lore to light. Being of Norwegian decent as well as majoring in archeology and anthropology, I just love it!!! :)
I totally gree. There is a "call" through the bloodlines. I feel it seems as though it is specific for this time. Victory of the light brothers and sisters. Now is ragnarok. True ragnarok
It is all a reference to Ragnarök, the wolf in chains is Fenrir, the dragon in the deep is the second son of Loki who fought Thor and Thor was only able to take 9 steps before collapsing after defeating the beast, the Earth will be green again and 2 humans survived and repopulated Earth, and an Eagle flew over a waterfall and hunted it's prey and the Gods who survived Ragnarök gathered and shared memories, whereas the worst place to be after Ragnarök is Hel(?) where a dragon would be destroying the corpses of the dead.
When all is good again, the dragon (with the fallen) will enter the world again, starting the cycle anew.
Man, the entire middle section of this track puts chills down my spine. Every time.
Banda fantástica!!!
Looked into Norse mythology, and that shit just oozes awesomeness!!!
All mythology is awesome to me. But Norse and Celtic in particular speak to me me. I might be biased, being mostly Irish and Swedish Norwegian ancestry.
Yeah, your biased. I've got quite a bit of swede in me, and family has the nobility title over there in sweden. So, i'm biased too.
Norse myth is cool till ragnarok, that is shit
I actually like Ragnarok. It tells a story that all things must come to an end and that life will continue in our absence and Ragnarok will happen again bringing about the perpetual cycle of death and rebirth. And my chosen god is Tyr because he's the fucking man, so Ragnarok is a bitter sweet tale for me.@@MetalWolf47
Hail from Brazil
I missed this song so much
Proud to be Faroese
you should be! \m/
Danish*
+Torsvård *Faroese
+Torsvård It's really both
im from Poland and dont understand lyrics but style of this song, vocal, instruments and cover is epic!
HAIL from Denmark to your all ! SKÅL !
+Danelaw Skal
+Torstein i t t ' amon amarth nordic ong fore on oIverp i jujI8oilmf9ut jmammography du? Layin o ply
+Daniel Smith can you speak english or swedish
skål på er också från sverige
skål makker
if tyr had it's own guitar hero... this song would be the end game song... considering the end is "Ragnarok"
Or the soundtrack from the cd called "The END"
Ragnarok is also the beginning tho
Nah too easy for the last song
Ragnarök is neither the end or a beginning. It's the culmination of deeds and ill-deeds; namely the deeds of the Aseir.
The best Tyr song I 've ever heard!
If I die, let me go to Valhalla so I may stand with my allies in the great battle that awaits us all at Ragnarok. No Jotun nor Dragur will shake us, and with swords in hand, we will stand firm, knowing we all die in vain, but we die fighting the enemy... And we die with honor
We will fight till the end when hammers break our bones and arrows dring in our chests!!
I'm sorry, but none of us is going there. We need to die fighting with sword or such real weapon to end up in Valhalla
Luhnge I know, but we're living in the world of gunpowder and ranged weapons. No chance that any commander will let us fight with a sword if any war comes up.
You neopagans make me lol......
Szymon Woźniak You could pull a Jack Churchill. Then again, he was a commander himself.
Son Fabulosos, LOS AMOOOO !!!
proud days to be a part of the Asa thanks for sharing =D
Merry Ragnarök!
VIKING METAL IS SO AWESOME!
Neither did I until I started listening to Týr. You're not alone on that one.
Excellent! Thank you Anna!
i am from the faroe islands and i love this song. and if you love this band i would recommend checking out hamradun the old singer for tyr is in hamradun it is also a faroese band.
Awesome, I didn't know about that band until now
*Grabs an Axe and a sword* Brothers, Ragnarok is upon us.
+Geeky Metalhead HAIL TO THE GODS !!! IM READY FOR RAGNAROK!
Yea, sucks ass that the gods will die
+Crazy Crow no. that is how things should be
Sucks that the rest of us are going to be following them as well when the continents flood
+Iordáin Breathnach we will die with honor and we will die for our gods
The start of this song always reminds me of Diablo 1 for some reason...
Heri,it is Masterpiece!
This feels like a song about my past life that already happened
This song was perfectly thought through enough, and again, it's not like they were writing bomb defusing manual, they were writing a progressive metal song. I see where you're coming from, as I don't speak Faroese, but, more importantly, I think it sounds cool, so I enjoy the employment of the multilingual lyrics to add to the songs individuality. The beginning makes this song sound like a true old viking tale, and it transitions into what we can understand.
When i hear or read Scandinavian languages, a sense of VALOUR and HONOUR is felt !
This song fills me with a longing, a longing for something. I don't know what, but it makes me feel sad and manly at the same time.
In addition to being much older than the information in the Prose Edda where Týr is listed as Óðinn's son, the compilation of the Poetic Edda that we commonly accept today is NOT what is actually put together in the manuscripts extant. Baldr's Drapa, for example, is not included in the manuscripts used to reproduce the Poetic Edda. It is in a different manuscript all together.
(Part 5)
So, how many here are heathens? Hail Thor!
Me. Hail all our gods and hold the heathen hammer high!
I’m here. :)
Týr's name is sometimes linked to that of Teutates/Tuisto on the continent and is placed in equal if not greater status to the god that became known as Odin. To follow along societal rules of leaders not being blemished or disabled, the moment that Týr no longer had one of his hands made him unable to rule. For the benefit of the tribe and mankind he made this sacrifice. If you remember, Týr sent Thor to his mom and dad's house in Jotunheim in search of Hymir's cauldron.
(Part 6)
The ending ( 5:39 ) is the best part, with its heavy beat. I love this song.
Never even heard of that language until now. Wow.
Such a beautiful song
This Music is classic!!
Hail Tyr!! Great band!
¿Alguien de habla hispana que le guste esta música? uwu
Isabel Garcia Pero claro (:
Isabel Garcia es mi amanecer y mi anochecer
Hombreeee!!!! Pero claro hermana !! \m/
Viva Tyr
Por fin, mi gente.
The lyrics were created essentially being in what they were sung us, not to show it in a specific language. If you wanted to sing the song, this is the video you would watch. Not one showing the faroese part translated into english, not the one showing the english part translated into faroese. Those are translations, these are lyrics. Last time I checked lyrics was what a person sung, not what they would be singing in another language.
If you have ever played the game 'telephone' you can see how a story can grow and change over time and transmittance. Snorri was trying to take the stories and make them fit within his own limited scope of cosmology while trying to not get burned at the stake for heresy by writing down the mythology of pagan gods. He was not interested in preserving the lore. He wanted to preserve the style of skaldic poetry that was rapidly dying out at the time.
(Part 3)
This boost my spirit.
@MyLordMusic look search for "Synarchy" and "SIC".
hint: search for the song "to dare to risk to regret" if you whant any hopes of finding the find.
Oh, this hurts my head. Norse Lore is not only part of my faith but my area of scholastic study as well.
Týr has been portrayed as both a son of Óðinn and a son of Hymir. Archaelogical evidence points to a time where he was considered the father of the pantheon of gods rather than Óðinn.
(Part 1 of response)
Almost broke my neck headbanging to this..
We don't claim him. I'm American and I came here because I appreciate the beauty of Faroese
HAIL!
Skal! Hail to the true Gods
Thank you vm.! (...from Hungary!)
I hope my neighbors like Týr cause they're gonna listen to it now hahaha
Tyr is not Odin's son. Fenrir does not swallow the sun, that is Skoll. Fenrir is the son of Loki & the Angrboda. The Aesir raised Fenrir amongst them in Asgard. When he became too big they began to try & find ways to bind him. After 2 tries they asked the dwarves for the rope that is described below. Fenrir would not at first allow it as he smelled magic. Only after Tyr agreed to place his hand in the wolf's mouth would he relent. The rope held, Fenrir could not free himself, Tyr lost his hand.
I've found bits of translations when reading about Norse mythology. They've taken parts from the epic poems called the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda. Google it and you should find a translation to some parts of the Faroese section
The lyrics translated: Bring forth armour, marked by many battles
Chainmail and shiny sword and ride forth into the field
Face what will come, then let everything go
Long have I carried this day in my mind.
The bands name is named after the son of odin TYR his name is pronounced like Tear. tyr had his arm bitten off by fenrir the wolf, one day fenrir the wolf would swallow the sun and cause ragnarok but to prevent that they got the dwarves to make a magic chain to hold the wolf in place the chain was made out of things like the footstep of a cat, the roots of a mountain, a woman's beard, the breath of fishes, the sinews of a bear, and a bird's spittle. Norse mythology is mental in a good way
i fell in love with this song. i thought about looking up what it means in english but i desided to learn the language but i got a long way to go lol
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
YOU MADE MY DAY. As you've been told, Ragnarok is NOT English.
And AJ's got a point. "Common sense dictates to write lyrics how they are sung/written, not how they are translated."
TRUE STORY.
Shit, I was looking for Periphery and I found this. This is fucking tight.
Right on @highmax 17! The only place for a warrior to go after the physical dying is to face the Second Death at Ragnarok. I swear to follow my liege lord Týr to the gates of hell, and there to die beside him fighting the hound of destruction. So ducking what if we're called to sacrifice our spirit- lives?! Our reward will be knowing that we restore the earth to her natural honor, the way it was always meant to be -- as Heri says, where eagles will soar over the green land and hunt beside the waterfalls.
F. Elaine Anderson it is spelt hel!
Ragnarok is yet upon us
This song would be so much better if it was all in faroese.
Yeah but I guess they had to switch to get more fancy rhymes..
I dono because i duno faroese
Why, because your english speaking ass has a superficial cultural fetish for words you can't understand, so the poet should limit themselves for you? Grow up.
@@shadowrunner138 No, It sounds more organic in their native tongue
The lyrics are simply poignant at this point - good to understand them.
You know iirc so many think of viking axes and think "COOL!", but the truth is the axe and spear were (relatively) common mans weapons, men of stature in the nordic lands had custom swords made for them, even named them and wrote poems and sagas about them
i love this"römtömtöm smörrebröt"^^^^^^^^ the best band i've heard the last years
Here is the tricky part. The Prose Edda was written in the 13th century. Over 300 years AFTER the practice of Norse Cosmology as a religion ceased in its last stronghold of Iceland. Snorri was a scholar monk. This is why you see so many christian references in the Prose Edda. He was relaying the stories filtered through his xtian viewpoint that had been passed down over several generations via Oral Tradition.
(Part 2)
I think that has been the first time that I have ever been referred to as 'sir' on the internet. Hell, I don't ever remember being called that, internet or otherwise. :P
listen to this by the fire. as it burns. i think..i lost my lifes war. the battle to keep her. i could not win. i was defeated. by a woman that could not speak. put me up against a fleet of men. i'd die trying to kill them all. put me up against a woman. i can be defeated. but left living. living with the defeat. we are bound to battle to eternity.
00:14 this is how you sing in lonely missery. heartbroken of your defeat. nods.. licking your wounds that do not ever seem to heal
HAIL ODIN BROTHERS!!!!!!!!!
Hail!
ah old gold track
and fenrir isn't captured with ropes at the two first times but with chain who 's called loeding and dromi . he was captured with a ruban called gleipnir and it was created by an elve nammed skimir and he was the freyr messenger
Thanks ^^
Faroese. An old and nice language that we in Scandinavia once spoke. Or another dialect of Norwegian/Swedish/Danish.
The Poetic Edda was COMPILED from manuscript fragments towards the end of the 13th century. The fragments PRE-DATED the Prose Edda. The Poetic Edda fragments area copies of older manuscripts. Týr was listed as the son of Hymir in the Poetic Edda. Keep up with me......
(Part 4)
Excellent.......good heavy beyond England and USA...
the point i'm making is that the lyrics shown are the correct lyrics, if they were translated they'd be incorrect since it's almost, if not completely, impossible to translate a song without changing the lyrics.
the uploader never claimed to provide the translation, only the lyrics and they did that with 100% accuracy aside from that one misspelled word in the beginning (which they corrected in the description even though the misspelled version is still in the video)
EPIC!
No, they're singing Faroese. Faroese is considered an Insular Nordic language due to the Faroe Islands being isolated. (Minus the Dutch trying to push it out) It descends from Old West Norse along with Icelandic, Norwegian and the extinct Norn. Gaelic is a different as it descends from Insular Celtic (Scottish Gaelic, Irish, Welsh, Manx, Breton and Cornish), but eons ago they shared a common ancestor - Indo-European
as a pagan/witch and viking descendant, i fucking love this song and band! thanks for sharing!
amen brother, amen
i understand allot of this since im icelandic and this is very similar
I didn't know that. Then again, I'm kind of/really rusty on European history.
But you're saying that the inclusion of Faroese make this more dramatic, when in said context? I can definitely see that as a reason, and looking at it that way makes a lot of sense.
Doesn't Skeggold mean Axe-age?
Yes, it does... Skálmöld means "Sword-age"
Well said
good lord i love that game
Ragnorak has not come upon us yet brothers, does Thor not still light up the sky?
No one exactly knows, though most of us feel it has not come yet. I do not think it has, and most agree on that. Different theories are around, however.
I can't understand it either, but you don't need to understand lyrics to enjoy the music. Most of the music I listen to isn't in English, the only language I know, but I still listen to the songs because they are good.
Silence, old myth, ancient subject, revenge and hatred named, jealousy-fire.
On the battlefields, hope dies, high before Helheim's lattice, Garm barks.
Windage, vargage has arrived.
Beardage, lawlessness suddenly is gone.
Carry forth soliderclothes, marked of much conflict, armor and shining sword, and forth on the field ride.
Come what come must, let go of everything, for long have I this day, in my mind hidden.
These guys are very impressive. As a general rule I am a Deathcore/Death Metal/Goregrind fan, but this shit is amazing.
Sweden here, hail to our real claimors and ancestors. Hail Valhall.
good song and band!
Zu geil :-D
Epic!
Nice song!
The only way you could have had a relative fight in Ragnarok, and be alive today to tell the tale, would you aren't even human. The only humans who survive Ragnarok just hid in a tree the whole time.
But oh well, the legend changes where you go, so I'm not going to try and disprove you.
@MrRiverman81 so the language they use in some songs is their islands language? i looked a little at their homeland, looks like a pretty awesome place.
Yep.
I think would have problems wwith the thrilled r, I can´t it so good, but I will try it, thanks!
love föreyjen language, i understand the lyrics (in video) 100% Týr forever!!! fróm iceland
Que los dioses bendigan a esta hermosa banda....y que Odin jamas los abandone !! 💪💪💪💀
I want this played at my funeral
I'm learning Swedish, it's suprisingly similiar to English, being that most of the dialect is more or less similiar but spelt very different due to us Saxons moving away before written forms were created. It's like English people learning German, only the spelling is the hard part. Germans should be able to grasp it easier, good luck man!
Majority yes but there are still the few of us that do not obsess about ourselves.
Sutr is a flame giant from Muspell who will burn all nine of the worlds with his flaming sword during the course of Ragnarok.