What Norse Music of the Viking Age Sounded Like - feat. Ibn Fadlan

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  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2024
  • This is a very basic, general and introductory overview of what little we do know of the music of Scandinavia during the Viking Age.
    Here is the link to the Ensemble Mare Balticum's recordings which I mention in the video, in which you will hear historically and archeologically informed reconstructions of what Norse music may likely have sounded like using scientific methodology (it's mostly the first ten minutes that deals with the Viking age, as the rest is centred on post-Christianisation Scandinavian music, I especially recommend starting at the 7th minute as the first parts are only demonstrations of war horns and military calls using lurs):
    • Drømde mik en drøm i n...
    Here is also my humble attempts in which I illustrate all the historical elements talked about in this video, from the instrumentation to the heterophonic, and heptatonic-diatonic melodic framework with pentatonic tendencies:
    Lyre improvisation:
    • Lyre - Norse Music
    Thrymskvida Song:
    • Þrymskviða - Old Norse...
    This is my previous video on the subject of overtone throat singing in Norse culture:
    • Did “Vikings” Have Ove...
    Sources:
    "What did they sound like? Reconstructing the music of the Viking Age by Chihiro Larissa Tsukamoto"
    www.academia.edu/31493503/Wha...
    "People and Their Soundscape in Viking-Age Scandinavia Critical Reflections in a Music-Archaeological Perspective" by Cajsa S. Lund
    www.academia.edu/31773185/Caj...
    00:00 Intro
    01:58 The “Viking” genre isn’t historical
    04:45 What we do know: the instruments
    10:20 The Norse were not culturally separate from the rest of Northern Europe
    14:46 Heptatonic and diatonic music
    16:44 Pentatonic music
    18:18 Heterophony
    22:06 Conclusion
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 904

  • @faryafaraji
    @faryafaraji  Před rokem +238

    AUDIO EXAMPLES OF PLAUSIBLE RECONSTRUCTIONS OF NORSE MUSIC BELOW:
    This is a very basic, general and introductory overview of what little we do know of the music of Scandinavia during the Viking Age.
    Here is the link to the Ensemble Mare Balticum's recordings which I mention in the video, in which you will hear historically and archeologically informed reconstructions of what Norse music may likely have sounded like using scientific methodology (it's mostly the first ten minutes that deals with the Viking age, as the rest is centred on post-Christianisation Scandinavian music, I especially recommend starting at the 7th minute as the first parts are only demonstrations of war horns and military calls using lurs):
    czcams.com/video/g8N3eG0u_OU/video.html
    Here is also my humble attempts in which I illustrate all the historical elements talked about in this video, from the instrumentation to the heterophonic, and heptatonic-diatonic melodic framework with pentatonic tendencies:
    Lyre improvisation:
    czcams.com/video/CfYfdb0oHfE/video.html
    Thrymskvida Song:
    czcams.com/video/wtTPbkvxY6k/video.html
    This is my previous video on the subject of overtone throat singing in Norse culture:
    czcams.com/video/gr9586Dlq4E/video.html
    Sources:
    "What did they sound like? Reconstructing the music of the Viking Age by Chihiro Larissa Tsukamoto"
    www.academia.edu/31493503/What_did_they_sound_like_Reconstructing_the_music_of_the_Viking_Age
    "People and Their Soundscape in Viking-Age Scandinavia Critical Reflections in a Music-Archaeological Perspective" by Cajsa S. Lund
    www.academia.edu/31773185/Cajsa_S_Lund_People_and_Their_Soundscape_in_Viking_Age_Scandinavia_Critical_Reflections_in_a_Music_Archaeological_Perspective_Studien_zur_Musikarch%C3%A4ologie_VII
    00:00 Intro
    01:58 The “Viking” genre isn’t historical
    04:45 What we do know: the instruments
    10:54 The Norse were not culturally separate from the rest of Northern Europe
    15:20 Heptatonic and diatonic music
    17:20 Pentatonic music
    18:52 Heterophony
    22:40 Conclusion

    • @ZugzugZugzugson
      @ZugzugZugzugson Před rokem +2

      i thought your arab accent was spot on lol
      should have thrown in a "Bismillah" or two XD

    • @Drunkenst3v3
      @Drunkenst3v3 Před rokem +2

      Really enjoyed the video and the information relayed, thank you for putting in the work to present it to us. As an aside, the first time I heard the Sámi language, and songs I immediately thought of North American Indigenous language and song, more specifically North Central U.S. to Northern Canada. It's not an exact match, but the sound is similar to my ear. The clothing and color patterns of their clothes and items are also similar. Have you listened to much of the language and song of North American Indigenous people?

    • @Divig
      @Divig Před rokem +2

      To me there are 2 songs from the Ensemble Mare Balticum link that reminds me of what I would associate with a bit older traditional folk music from Sweden.
      The very first song, the one played on bone flute (starts at 00.00), sounds very much like the kind of melodies I would hear when people played cow horn at "fäbodar". There were gatherings to show the traditional fäbod-life where people would show kulning and play cow horns.
      Then the song Grímur Á Miðalnesi around 47 minutes in, this is a faeroese folk song. And if I remember right it is one of the kvaðdansur, and could be seriously old.

    • @tikimillie
      @tikimillie Před 2 měsíci

      Are you in front of a green screen or are your actually sacrificing your toes for our sake?
      (Also why are you named after a car, i’m new here)

    • @ysteinberg5084
      @ysteinberg5084 Před 23 dny

      As a Norwegian schooled in old Norwegian instrument making I think I can provide some insight from the Norwegian perspective. Our folk music is distinguished from the other Nordic countries in that the most common scale used is based on the "willow flute" . It has two interlocking natural tone scales which gives you a scale so cool the Vikings definitely must have liked it. And the oldest Norwegian folk songs I know uses the scale. There's still people in the dark, remote forests that keep teaching the old songs and ways of singing them..

  • @robinrehlinghaus1944
    @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem +1771

    Our favourite Iranian Greek Norse Romanian Spanish Arabic Bulgarian Roman French Canadian back at it again

  • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
    @aldrinmilespartosa1578 Před rokem +1548

    An Iranian man acting as a middle ages's typical Arabian sholar lost on Scandinavia yet actually on Canadian wilderness drenched in snow. Perfect!

    • @Dyadactic
      @Dyadactic Před rokem +36

      Quite historically accurate

    • @g.b.1375
      @g.b.1375 Před rokem +42

      Not only that, he's talking to a small furry animal. (not putting this down, I loved it)

    • @wwisaacson4807
      @wwisaacson4807 Před rokem +18

      Also loons when there is snow, so must be early spring.

    • @annagora8696
      @annagora8696 Před rokem +4

      Tropic Tunder :)

    • @magnuslundstedt2659
      @magnuslundstedt2659 Před rokem +9

      I just wonder how you can see that it is Canadian background and not Scandinavian?
      (To me it very much look like my neighbourhood)

  • @albertvonhabsburg
    @albertvonhabsburg Před rokem +839

    He is Greek,
    He is Arabic,
    But most importantly he can tell us about the norse music.

    • @ianlilley2577
      @ianlilley2577 Před rokem +2

      He's partly Greek??

    • @Tar.o
      @Tar.o Před rokem

      @@ianlilley2577 All greeks are arabic

    • @midnightblue3285
      @midnightblue3285 Před rokem +4

      He is not greek, he is form eastern region cultures

    • @midnightblue3285
      @midnightblue3285 Před rokem

      @@ianlilley2577 no

    • @Tar.o
      @Tar.o Před rokem +27

      @@midnightblue3285 Cool, not everyday I see people from eastern region cultures

  • @randomsocknr.3334
    @randomsocknr.3334 Před rokem +288

    "Throat-singing while 360 noscoping the anglo-saxons with two axes"
    Lmao, made my Day

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +59

      I just love the image of a T-posing Viking spinning at the speed of light with two axes and slicing entire armies that way

    • @heilmodrhinnheimski
      @heilmodrhinnheimski Před 2 měsíci +7

      Average Dane-axe user in Chivalry 2

    • @Williamthe8490
      @Williamthe8490 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Mlg

    • @OceanBloke
      @OceanBloke Před 2 měsíci +11

      -noscoping- *NorseScoping* 😂😂😂

    • @IsengardMordor
      @IsengardMordor Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@OceanBloke loool

  • @MrHazz111
    @MrHazz111 Před rokem +259

    "They were tall as date palms, painted from head to toe in strange markings, with strange leather armor with studded iron bolts for no reason. Their hair is even more bewildering, shaved at the sides but jutting out like a chicken crest with an unecessary amount of braids otherwise. Their clothes seem all entirely grey or brown and devoid of color, not to mention covered in shit. There is a blue mist that oppresses these lands, and only Allah knows why. The heathens never even wear helmets to battle, but are successful in every fight. Their swords were forged in witchcraft for I have seen them slice through mail and helm as though they were made of butter."
    -An actual account by Ibn Fadlan

    • @eid8fkebe7f27ejdjdjduyhsvqhwu2
      @eid8fkebe7f27ejdjdjduyhsvqhwu2 Před rokem +59

      xD Be careful, not everyone might pick up the satire.

    • @huriale1617
      @huriale1617 Před rokem +8

      Excellent aha

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +99

      Lol I actually began reading this seriously and it took me a few seconds to understand what was going on 😂

    • @sean668
      @sean668 Před rokem +3

      Lmaoo

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem +15

      @@faryafaraji Same, it seems so similar in style to what Romans thought of 'Barbarians'

  • @andersjjensen
    @andersjjensen Před rokem +366

    As a Danish history buff I just want to say THANK YOU for calling out the atrocities "Hollywood" has done to the image of Scandinavia in the Viking period. Also, to anyone who don't know, the people of the same lands in the same times who never went on raids or trading trips were not Vikings. To "go viking" was an activity. Not a title or a culture in and of itself.

    • @galadballcrusher8182
      @galadballcrusher8182 Před rokem +34

      Yeahhh i know i kept trying tell people for years they were called norsemen or norse, viking was just a profession...raider and some only did temporarilly. And i am Greek.

    • @hitrapperandartistdababy
      @hitrapperandartistdababy Před 11 měsíci +8

      As a fellow dane, may I recommend a show your danish genes would absolutely love? You oughta check out Vinland Saga.

    • @Zeagods-CyberShadow
      @Zeagods-CyberShadow Před 9 měsíci +11

      As a Faroese person im also glad that this video tells about that we are very different musically. We the Faroese are have things like Chain dance and Singing Kvæði which has been a thing for us for hundreds of years and ive never heard that anyone else in Scandinavia still do it today

    • @bluesdealer
      @bluesdealer Před 6 měsíci

      It’s also the wave edgy neo-pagans who have grudges against their Christian parents and use that identity to rebel, yet their only concept comes from Hollywood and videogames 😆

    • @Schmorgus
      @Schmorgus Před 2 měsíci +6

      @@hitrapperandartistdababy "Vinland Saga is a Japanese historical manga series written and illustrated by Makoto Yukimura."
      Really? Modernized mumbo jumbo about the Nordic people written by someone from the other side of the planet :P

  • @lucimicle5657
    @lucimicle5657 Před rokem +325

    Some say Ibn Fadlan is still wondering the north. It's a cool story that I am sure he would call tragic.

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +117

      Must be a pretty chill guy by now

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 Před rokem +6

      Wondering and wandering are different words with different meanings. Go back to elementary school, and try not to fail this time.

    • @vixendoe6943
      @vixendoe6943 Před rokem +47

      @@slappy8941 and many times spell check will hijack the typed word before you are even aware of it, cyber bullying is not cool.

    • @ooohscary
      @ooohscary Před rokem +14

      ​@@slappy8941 normal people don't care

    • @flysolo100
      @flysolo100 Před rokem +18

      @@slappy8941 Anyone with a minimal English education can appreciate Luci Micle’s inadvertent play on words without stumbling over the word wonder, as the writer’s intent is obvious. Maybe you are the one here who needs to dedicate more time to reading…and etiquette

  • @SoulOfTheDesert
    @SoulOfTheDesert Před rokem +326

    *Arabic version of Farya Faraji added to collection* This is one of the many reasons why you are the best music composer, your likeability is limitless. You are also one of the few who, in addition to putting passion into your content, have the pleasure of sharing knowledge with all of us. Even if it is music belonging to my enemies I will watch this video because I already know that there will be interesting things, since music it is a universal way of communication.

    • @theoneandonlydetraebean8286
      @theoneandonlydetraebean8286 Před rokem +23

      Collecting Farya variants like pokemon

    • @SoulOfTheDesert
      @SoulOfTheDesert Před rokem +6

      @@theoneandonlydetraebean8286 yes, it's quite funny

    • @davefletch3063
      @davefletch3063 Před rokem +7

      The only enemies are within ourselves

    • @snail1720
      @snail1720 Před 11 měsíci

      How can they be an enemy when Vikings and Romans never fought?

    • @SoulOfTheDesert
      @SoulOfTheDesert Před 11 měsíci

      @@snail1720 haha yes I know, since they are northern people similar to the Germans let's consider them enemies

  • @TheHalflingLad
    @TheHalflingLad Před rokem +41

    That Ibn Fadlan impression needs to be reuploaded as a separate soundbite. Such meme potential!

  • @erlinggaratun6726
    @erlinggaratun6726 Před rokem +45

    On bowed instruments: there are clear indications in archaeological finds from the 7th and 8th century in Norway and Sweden that there was close contact with central eurasian nomads in the iron age/migration age. Horse gear in turkish style and horse burials etc.

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +17

      Good point, I focused mostly on a Mediterranean source but one to the east and the steppes would make sense too

    • @raidkoast
      @raidkoast Před měsícem +3

      @@faryafaraji Being Swedish I remember something of being taught in history class that while old norseare most know for their viking raids into Europe, they had a (now) lesser known trade network that was pretty damn huge for it's time in the east. The kinda stuff that eventually led to Kiev being founded around year 400.
      Correction after a short wiki dive. Kiev was probably founded 400 CE by trade between the east and Scandinavia, this is a few hundred years before the "Viking age" which began around 800 CE.

  • @heronwireo1085
    @heronwireo1085 Před rokem +100

    Thank you for the excellent lesson. What separated the Nordic peoples and made them the Vikings (an occupation, not an ethnic group, being related to 'riever') was not their weapons, tactics, clothes, music, or alphabet, but their ships. The flat-bottomed, wide, double-teardrop ships could sail ocean coasts, be dragged or even carried short distances by small groups, and rowed or sailed anywhere there was two feet of water. This made it a latter-day helicopter, enabling attacks by surprise on settlements where the terrain would normally prevent them. When rievers can appear from nowhere, pillage and burn, and (most critically) be gone before resistance can organize, that will certainly bestow a mystique as a separate kind of creature. The fact that in every other way they are like their neighbors would get lost.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před rokem +8

      Wasn't it Saxon King Alfred the Great who built and maintained a navy himself?
      With their own ships serving as early warning lookouts and also to cut off any raiders' escape route, the Viking longship advantage was finally negated.
      It is striking in all of human history, that nations without much of a naval tradition, can catch up within a generation to build and operate a very effective (French) or even superior navy of their own (Romans).

    • @heronwireo1085
      @heronwireo1085 Před rokem +8

      @@AudieHolland It's absolutely true that technological advantages diminish over time as those on the losing end adapt to them. The Brits in World War II put radar on the rear of their bombers to detect fighters. It worked very well, for a while. Then the Germans learned to jam the radar, then follow it. In a short time it was a life-saver, then useless, then a liability.

    • @elasticharmony
      @elasticharmony Před rokem +5

      This is a very standard break down. I don't go with the ghost occupation view. They had their own kings and their own ceremony. There was also something about ships also, they have ships they dug up which were iron lined and not flat, and once you include Normans as Vikings you have to leave the simple communal raids theory.
      Vikings were their own culture and lived along the sea traveled and had their own kings. The common people of the north were cow herders and just lived in those places.

    • @vladvalo
      @vladvalo Před 18 dny

      Same copy and paste of " it was an occupation"

  • @karitauring7361
    @karitauring7361 Před 8 měsíci +73

    I also agree that the oldest unbroken tradition of Scandinavia vocals is the women's calling tradition. I was able to study Iron Age bone flutes this past summer. Between bone flutes, cow and goat horns and neverlur, and women's vocal music I pretty much have it all! ;)
    Honestly I don't think they used drums. Since there is no mention of it in later sagas and Edda, no pictorial or artistic portrayal, and no archeological evidence. We use staff and stick for rhythm in Minnesotan Iron Age musical re-enactment. We also use the iron jangles in ritual music. I think Loki's "beating on the vett" is about staff rhythm on the barrel lid or coffin box lid. We added a cross stick that we call tein...so, stav and tein.
    Great information here! Thank you for your work and generous sharing.

    • @Dejawolfs
      @Dejawolfs Před 2 měsíci +3

      in norwegian traditional music from the 1800s, there is "trampetakt" where you stamp the floor to keep the rythm. the sami drum tho is a VERY old traditional instrument, and it has been found all the way from the south to the north, AND the viking age.

    • @karitauring7361
      @karitauring7361 Před 2 měsíci +1

      yes! in traditional dance we rely on the fiddler's foot while the hardingfele can sometimes be hard to follow. Yes the Sami drum is very old and they lived all over Norway - but the Indo-European Norsemen did not use it in mystical practice. There is no mention of it in any Edda, Saga, or grave find of the völur or other spiritual or religious figure - @@Dejawolfs

    • @KazeinHD
      @KazeinHD Před měsícem

      Drums were present in Sami populations, under the name "runebomme" in Norwegian. Our earliest written source of this is from 1100-ish, so we're not entirely sure how far back they go or if there was any overlap of such a fashion between cultures. I wouldn't rule out drums, but as you say, there's little evidence to confirm it.

    • @Dejawolfs
      @Dejawolfs Před měsícem +2

      @@KazeinHD there is archeological evidence dating further back.

    • @Dejawolfs
      @Dejawolfs Před měsícem +2

      @@KazeinHD well. it seems to me that drums had become associated with the devil, and unchristian.
      the runebomme is directly connected to pagan magical rituals.
      the carolingians doesn't seem to have used drums, yet, they were a revival of the western-roman empire, which had used drums, the tympanum, which itself derived from an ancient greek instrument.
      it seems strange that the romans, which had such a large influence culturally through the iron trade on norway, not to mention the rest of the world, did not also have some influence musically.

  • @secretarchivesofthevatican
    @secretarchivesofthevatican Před rokem +148

    Excellent. Einar Selvik doesn't say anything different from what you say about Wardruna's music. Also, his own interest is really in pre-Viking era cultures. I'd love to hear the two of you in conversation!

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +107

      Definitely, these bands have always been very open about the nature of their music. Any of the blame concerning how people think this music is historical lies on the audience, not on them; they’ve never mislead anyone and have provided us with incredible music over the years (that said I’m probably biased because I’m a massive Einar Sevik fanboy haha)

    • @elsakristina2689
      @elsakristina2689 Před rokem +8

      Einar is awesome

    • @sykotikmommy
      @sykotikmommy Před rokem +6

      Einar is an amazing artist!

    • @MatildeVallespinCasas
      @MatildeVallespinCasas Před 2 měsíci +3

      It's the fans we should fear

    • @KybernetikSchmiede
      @KybernetikSchmiede Před 2 měsíci

      Sigurbodi is historical

  • @VS-kf5qw
    @VS-kf5qw Před rokem +131

    That expectations vs. reality rugpull at 11:50 was absolutely savage. I think the modern "viking folk" genre is like a spiritual successor to the Norwegian black metal scene... You start with edgelord middle class teenagers looking for something pagan and primal to shock society, and a few decades later you've got very serious throat-singing white dudes with mullets, playing music that also has a clear yearning to convey something primal and "alien". You hit the nail on the head pointing out that a lot of these groups aren't trying to be historical- more than a few are very open about that. They're not going for a reconstruction so much as a feeling or an artistic idea- but even those are still ideas that are very colored in by familiar medieval tropes.

    • @RashFever26
      @RashFever26 Před rokem +22

      Not only a spiritual successor, an actual successor/offspring. Wardruna's Selvik and Gaahl were both in Gorgoroth, and countless nordic folk artists overlap with black metal.

    • @pst5345
      @pst5345 Před rokem

      it is clearly an artistic expression of the romanticised view of the savage people.
      The image of the noble savage always works in pop culture.

    • @prestonhebb1380
      @prestonhebb1380 Před rokem +5

      We may know that they're going for an artistic play on "Viking/pagan" tropes, but my experience with fans of this genre is that it's being taken as literal historical representation of the culture/music.
      It's cashing in on the average Joe who just got done binge watching Vikings on Netflix and now wants to channel their inner Ragnar.
      And imho the music sucks 😂

    • @GabAssbreaker
      @GabAssbreaker Před rokem +1

      ​@@prestonhebb1380 thats so true, specially among nerds (video game nerds, fantasy nerds, anime nerds, etc), they don't care about history or culture, they only care about things that a child would find "Bad ass".
      Folk Metal has always sounded "fake" to me, and these "not Metal" folk ensembles of today still carry some of that "fakeness" for me. Like they trying way too hard to sound ancient and esoteric.

    • @hrafnagu9243
      @hrafnagu9243 Před rokem +1

      ​@@pst5345 Savage?

  • @tokskallnklokskalln1578
    @tokskallnklokskalln1578 Před rokem +54

    And there are many old songs and melodies in Scandinavian folk music that have survived to this day, which probably have their roots far back in time

    • @pineapplepenumbra
      @pineapplepenumbra Před rokem

      It's the songs and melodies that have their roots in the far future that one needs to worry about.

    • @sykotikmommy
      @sykotikmommy Před rokem +1

      That doesn't mean they came from the viking age though, especially since the Christian church and rulers made our ancient animistic ways illegal.

    • @pineapplepenumbra
      @pineapplepenumbra Před rokem +1

      @@sykotikmommy And yet, ironically, they worship a Satanic character (rather, that should be plural, as the bible has multiple gods, but not the trinity they pretend I'm referring to).

    • @ankiking
      @ankiking Před rokem +16

      @@sykotikmommy Like much of Christian religion, they just overlayed their tradition, holidays etc. on top of standing pagan ones, so it is likely that the lyrics would change, but the type of music would remain similar.

    • @sykotikmommy
      @sykotikmommy Před rokem

      @@ankiking very good point.

  • @ashenen2278
    @ashenen2278 Před rokem +76

    About the Norse (and the Slavs and Finnic) getting the bowed instruments directly from the Byzantians. There was this old bowed instrument, the gudok, that was used in Rus (at least in Novgorod for sure). As far as I could find out, there is evidenve from the 10th and 11th century of fiddle-like instruments being used in Novgorod at least. And interestengly, it was lost for some time, but it was preserved by the Finnic Komi, who were had a cultural exchange with the Novgorodians (the Ilmen Slovenians) for a pretty long time. The Komi call it the sigudõk btw
    Also, my impression was that people were also scared of the Norse for not being Christian. There was something similar with the Hungarians when they just appeared (at the same time), maybe even seen as a reminiscent of the Huns

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem +1

      Don't Hungarians have some cultural connections to Huns? Like in myth?

    • @ashenen2278
      @ashenen2278 Před rokem +3

      @@robinrehlinghaus1944 Well, both used to be steppe nomads and raided Middle Europe

    • @ingratus8160
      @ingratus8160 Před rokem +10

      @@robinrehlinghaus1944 They were called the Magyars (which many still call them including Hungarians themselves) and they migrated from central asia like a lot, and I mean a lot, of different tribes and steppe people during the invasion of the Huns. They all used to be Tengri at that point in history and were culturally very similar because of that and the nomadic lifestyle.

    • @seanvandiijk2889
      @seanvandiijk2889 Před rokem

      @@robinrehlinghaus1944 are you joking? All slavs are basically the result of a persian woman that was assaulted by a mongol or a hun, haha. They think they are europeans but even with their aryan features they cannot fool anyone these neanderthals.

    • @robinrehlinghaus1944
      @robinrehlinghaus1944 Před rokem

      @@seanvandiijk2889 Come again?

  • @ToqTheWise
    @ToqTheWise Před rokem +88

    I think groups like Wardruna are sort of like the Scandinavian version of A Tribe Called Red. ATCR make modern electronica music but they utilized Native American instrumentation and vocal styles as a way to keep these things alive while still making it interesting to a modern audience.

    • @alchemyfarie
      @alchemyfarie Před rokem +9

      This! I can also plug Otyken as a Russian/si eria example of the same thing. It's so cool that we can blend cultures together with music

    • @vincentmystad8492
      @vincentmystad8492 Před rokem +24

      I don't know how traditional the indigenous elements of ATCR are, but Wardruna has very little/almost nothing in common with Scandinavian folk music (same with the costumes and face paint and all that), it's more straightforwardly new age/fantasy. nothing wrong with that, but it's definitly not a fusion of tradition and modernity, it's a wholly modern riff on the contemporary fantasy viking.

  • @HolyPineCone
    @HolyPineCone Před rokem +48

    What a great and informative video! Einar Selvik even says himself that his music is not authentic of the time, but rather builds on it in a modern sense, since no one really knows what the music sounded like back then anyway. And the throat singing always stuck out as weird to me. I still headbang to the modern takes on Viking music though 😁 anyway, this video goes well together with what my history teachers taught about the vikings back in school, but it takes it a few steps further. I'm Swedish so Viking stuff is part of the basic school curriculum.

  • @Draezon
    @Draezon Před rokem +32

    It had to be said. Modern pop culture adaptations, unfortunately, are seen as factual in the minds of a lot of people. Great video, as always Aḥmad ibn Faḍlān ibn al-ʿAbbās ibn Rāšid ibn Ḥammād, AKA Antonio Banderas from the 13th Warrior

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +13

      Totally agreed, the weight of pop culture often takes over factual reality
      from: Aḥmad ibn Faḍlān ibn al-ʿAbbās ibn Rāšid ibn Ḥammād, AKA Antonio Banderas from the 13th Warrior

    • @jacobhargiss3839
      @jacobhargiss3839 Před rokem

      Pretty much all modern culteral understandings of vikings are wrong. Why would our interpretation of their music be right?

  • @mitchellminer9597
    @mitchellminer9597 Před rokem +11

    Great video.
    I think it was Bernard Cornwell that had a character ask, "Are they viking?" The answer was, "No, they are trading." It emphasized that the Vikings were just traveling traders around Northern Europe who occasionally did some extra-sharp dealing. Later, of course, they followed the money, but they took their families along.

  • @kxs7267
    @kxs7267 Před rokem +15

    It's such a pleasure to listen to someone who so obviously knows their subject, and a bonus when their presentation is as engaging as yours. Fascinating and entertaining - plus I learnt a lot! Thank you!

  • @theoriginalkyttyn7724
    @theoriginalkyttyn7724 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I know Heilung or Wardruna isn't reproduction of historically accurate however, I do like them. Wagner's Flight of the Valkyries is only iconic to me because of Apocalypse Now. I have a very strong interest in actual and historically accurate music because it seems to me a window into the cultures of my ancestors. I really appreciate your efforts to bring forth actuality. Thank you. You gained a new subscriber.

  • @kingkwan6713
    @kingkwan6713 Před rokem +16

    That Drip is top tier ngl. You are class incarnate Farya, keep doing what you do

  • @_de_reve
    @_de_reve Před rokem +17

    as a researcher myself (in a different field - art history) possessing a big amount of curiosity and affection for music history.... this was totally enlightening and fun to watch. thank you. i love it when fellow researchers diffuse their own knowledge for others so freely on this plattform! also in love with the format, the jokes and the sources provided! bravo!!✨👏

  • @YaSSuke
    @YaSSuke Před rokem +10

    I mostly started watching your videos to have something I can talk about with my brother, but now I just really like your content and feel like it's time well spent on this platform.

  • @ZephirumUpload
    @ZephirumUpload Před rokem +18

    My thinking is: if you want to know what the most traditional sounds are for a culture, look at lullabies, the things we sing to kids.
    Media always want to make things exotic, but honestly, I think "twinkle twinkle little star" or the Dutch "In de maneschijn" is probably what music sounded like back then and it's fine.

    • @hellomate639
      @hellomate639 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I'd take it a step broader, though, and say that lullabies are a good starting point to understand the musical language of a culture.
      Then you try to connect with the religion and personality of the people, but for real.

  • @christianmarstrand9864
    @christianmarstrand9864 Před 5 dny +2

    It's so nice to hear a clever person presenting anything on the Web.

  • @HeriJoensen
    @HeriJoensen Před rokem +13

    Don’t forget about the (mostly) pentatonic nature of the Faroese skjaldur tradition. Very interesting video.

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +5

      Great point, I should have mentionned those!

  • @archimedes2
    @archimedes2 Před rokem +29

    I lost it at the beginning XD

  • @GabbyMcGabberson
    @GabbyMcGabberson Před rokem +3

    Awesome! I am excited to follow your growing musical library!

  • @shovelhead56
    @shovelhead56 Před rokem +1

    So enjoyed this video! Happened upon it while browsing. Your narrative, expertise and HUMOR were fantastic. Look forward to watching other videos in your library🤙

  • @ThulrVOdinsson
    @ThulrVOdinsson Před rokem +1

    Wonderful video! I love the clarity and depth of exploration and look forward to the rest of the series on Scandinavian music! Thanks!

  • @lovebaltazar4610
    @lovebaltazar4610 Před rokem +11

    Thanks for sharing this knowledge, hope to see more norse inspired music too!

  • @Norther56
    @Norther56 Před 2 měsíci +1

    So pleased you retained the opening; showing a humorous side is a great way to win fans/viewers. I'll certainly be back for more. 🙂

  • @mixvideos616
    @mixvideos616 Před rokem +1

    It Was so interesting! Thanks for sharing. Your videos always open new doors to different music worlds.

  • @Umirua
    @Umirua Před 10 měsíci +9

    Yeah this is pretty much what I thought was the case. Nice to hear a historian confirm the instruments is where the historical accuracy ends. Maybe one day in the future our descendants can utilise time travel to hear see what it all sounded like

  • @a.v.j5664
    @a.v.j5664 Před rokem +103

    This is the closest you’ve come to talking about traditional balto-finnic music lol. Also cool video, i didn’t know that the tagalharpa/jouhikko is considered more karelian than scandinavian!

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +48

      Yeah it’s mainly a Karelian/Finnish instrument; it has no known usage historically within Scandinavia outside of the modern neo-folk genre :)

    • @lovebaltazar4610
      @lovebaltazar4610 Před rokem +16

      Interestingly though, it is also a traditional instrument in Estonia among swedish-estonians in particular, and is sometimes referred to as a "swedish kannel" over there. So if we assume the swedes brought it there, it raises the question why it never became popular in sweden? It's not easy to find much info on it online, but there's apparently a book that wikipedia links to that talks about it (The Rough Guide to World Music)

    • @varangjar1544
      @varangjar1544 Před rokem +8

      An almost exact instrument exists in the Shetlands called the gue. It's a bowed lyre, and seems to have been introduced during the "Viking Age" by Norse settlers, as well as the language, which evolved into norn, which was spoken in the area until relatively recently. The word fiddle in english was also introduced from norse fiðla.
      I personally feel that due to it's similarity, the jouhikko was probably introduced by scandinavians, and maintained in Karelia.

    • @a.v.j5664
      @a.v.j5664 Před rokem +5

      @@varangjar1544 it is propable that the scandinavians may yabe introduced atleast the predecessor of the modern day jouhikko to the karelians and finns (maybe they got it from trade along the volga when they met nomadic peoples like the bulgars?). Also i really hope that norn can be revived

    • @faryafaraji
      @faryafaraji  Před rokem +17

      @@lovebaltazar4610 I’d only say we should be careful when it comes to nomenclature, almost every time a culture names something after another culture, it’s not an indication of its origins. Were we to take the name Flamenco at face value, we’d assume the musical style came from the Netherlands, because Flamenco means “Flemish/Fleming,” but obviously that’s not the case, and its roots are instead Ibero-Andalusian rather than Flemish.
      In most of these cases, it’s always that an arbritary association was formed between the element and that foreign culture. Of course the “Swedish” part can actually mean it’s from Sweden, but the possibility of it being a “Flamenco” case is also an option to be considered. At the end of the day, no evidence of bowed instruments has been found in Viking Age Scandinavia. It’s possible that the instrument is called Swedish because the Swedish community in Estonia began using it in Estonia, and their consistent usage generated an association with that community, from which point was called Swedish.

  • @michaelignatius2526
    @michaelignatius2526 Před rokem +4

    Love your videos on music history! Keep it up. Thank you

  • @lesfleurs9781
    @lesfleurs9781 Před rokem +2

    Thank you so much for this incredible content. Love everything you do!

  • @Mr.Skeleton.
    @Mr.Skeleton. Před rokem +34

    I really appreciate your authenticity and effort you put into your content. Much respect!
    Btw 9:50 The Lur sounds like it could come from the Celtic peoples and 9:57 the Jaw Harp is the most tribal sounding instrument in all of mankind in my opinion. Something about that frequency chills me in ways that feel primal.

  • @chadhill455
    @chadhill455 Před rokem +4

    This was both very funny, entertaining, and information. Definitely earned a subscription

  • @stunhbtaken
    @stunhbtaken Před rokem +3

    I just happened upon your channel because of this video. Thank you so much!

  • @TruckerMike089
    @TruckerMike089 Před rokem +3

    This was awesome and highly educational. I enjoy your music and the educational experience out of your videos.

  • @Nabium
    @Nabium Před rokem +12

    If you want to find a dead-sure example of how Norse/Viking music sounded like, I do give it to you that we _do_ have one example. And that is Norwegian kved and stev singing.
    The reason I feel confident in that is that if you go to Ireland and Scotland, you'll find a very similar way of singing called Sean-Nos which they claim dates back to at least the 1300s. And there's some written evidence that kved dates back to old Norse as well. Sean-nos and kved/stev is basically the same style, just in two different languages.
    The contact between Ireland/Scotland and Norway was at the greatest during the viking times. A large part of mitochondrial DNA in Western Norway and Iceland is of Irish origin due to the contact (eh-hem) that existed back then. They brought a lot of women back. And there's Norse influence on the gaelic language, from that very period. The most likely reason why this style of singing only exist in Ireland, Scotland and Norway is in my mind from the contact they had back then, as this contact was gradually lost, and since we know both kved and sean-nos dates about that far back. I do not think sean-nos could have made it to Norway, or kved could have made it to Ireland, any later than the viking age just because there wasn't all that great a contact between Ireland and Norway after ca 1200.
    Where it originated who knows, my guess probably in Ireland/Scotland, but if so it still was a music style the vikings/norse would have sung.
    Here's an example of how it sounds like in Norwegian: czcams.com/video/VtWPTO1duyE/video.html
    And here's an example of how it sounds like in Gaelic: czcams.com/video/To8vz3V3kEQ/video.html
    There you go. That's what viking music would have sounded like. You're welcome.

    • @EuanWhitehead
      @EuanWhitehead Před rokem +1

      Just checked those out that was amazing.

    • @heidifarstadkvalheim4952
      @heidifarstadkvalheim4952 Před rokem

      Thank you! Interesting- I will try to find some examples off Sean - nos 🤗🙏❤️. As a person from the west coast of Norway with a DNA with 34% irish- without a clue were it comes from.. so this is interesting

  • @erikleif1178
    @erikleif1178 Před rokem +4

    Thanks for the knoledge Farya, love your content my dude

  • @wombatiferous
    @wombatiferous Před 2 měsíci +2

    Fantastic video, and love the loon in the background throwing in periodic eerie wailing!

  • @kjt16
    @kjt16 Před rokem +1

    Thanks so much for this video and for leaving your sources- I'm writing a music history paper on pretty much the same subject and this was really helpful overview

  • @nunyaargo9629
    @nunyaargo9629 Před rokem +4

    Tyvm for giving an honest explanation of my ancestors music! Love the videos!

  • @lindseywade2087
    @lindseywade2087 Před rokem +23

    I like to picture old Norse music as more “lighthearted” and joyous after a long day of daily life raising families on the land and sea…..similar to how traditional Irish Celtic music is….I have yet to hear a truly sad “traditional sounding” Irish song…..much like I have yet to hear a sad Mexican Polka or Brazilian Jazz tune ! 🤣 🪗 🇲🇽🌮
    Love your brutally yet respectful take on the reality of traditional or speculative ancient musics…subscribed! 👍 ☘️🐸🌼🦆

    • @EmilReiko
      @EmilReiko Před rokem +5

      Traditional Scandinavian folkmusic is almost the oppsite of Irish, its more often than not - not jolly at all. It tend to be something in the lines of: "Three boys are lost, years later three sisters are raped and murdered on their way to church, the three murderers go to the sisters parents disguised as pilgrims for lodging, and bed the mother before its discovered that they murdered the sisters and then in the chaos its revealed that they where infact the lost sons, and they raped and killed their sisters (and fucked their mother)... Then more ppl dies violent deaths...

    • @hollyingraham3980
      @hollyingraham3980 Před rokem +2

      Sad Irish traditional song.
      The Croppy Boy.
      Even if you don't know the story or lyrics. Centuries of lost wars gave them plenty of mournful songs, but they're not the ones you play to have a good time at the pub.

    • @skellagyook
      @skellagyook Před 2 měsíci

      Traditional Irish sean nos music can be pretty sad.

    • @hellomate639
      @hellomate639 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@EmilReiko Yea....
      There is a quiet heaviness about Scandinavians. The loud, boisterous, cheat beating Vikings are nearly certainly false.
      Those wild Celts are projecting themselves onto us.
      One thing I note about modern Scandinavians is that they often actually strike me as creative and off the wall in their own unique way. And theres a sort of deadpan humor, but with a lot of snark. I.e. at a hotel in Berlin, someone hit the elevator button too fast when it was full and a Norweigian guy on the elevator said "first time with elevator?" And Scandinavians all make fun of their neighbors.
      But also I suspect there was a sense of spreading their own way of life, taming and controlling new areas.
      My mostly Swedish dad is a really odd person. His humor is definitely on the "wtf even is that" spectrum.
      Personality traits I get from him that make me think of what Vikings were actually like are things like tending to prepare for situations such that the chance of success is very high, as well as a mindset of seeking unorthodox methods of getting ahead, or trying to find new clever ways of doing things. It's like "find what works and do that, fuck all the people talking about this wrong stupid way of doing it"

  • @Ramngrim
    @Ramngrim Před měsícem

    Thank you! I like this, a down to Earth, sensible description of what we know, what we can't know, and what we reasonably can guess. Kudos from Norway.

  • @Ushabtii
    @Ushabtii Před rokem +34

    Well, we dont listen Wardruna and Heilung for "historical accuracy". Their music is an modern evolution of ancient music. Wich is good as it is.
    I'm really impressed by your dedication and knowledge about music and history it's always interesting
    This is what I love with our era. We can look back at history and amplify it with all the knowledge we gather from the whole world.

    • @anonymouslyopinionated656
      @anonymouslyopinionated656 Před 9 měsíci +1

      it's only a modern evolution of ancient music in the way that most music is an evolution of older roots. nothing about it is particularly more historical to the setting.

  • @viktoria8299
    @viktoria8299 Před rokem +4

    I love ur videos. Ur so authentic and sympathetic n ur jokes come so natural 😊

  • @wappenschmied
    @wappenschmied Před rokem +4

    Thanks for the great content - it’s the first video I’ve seen from you but I’m gonna check out more (hope it doesn’t get too technical, I enjoy music but don’t know shit)! ✨
    While the music of the mentioned bands is very dear to me I also think it’s important to keep in mind that they are just bringing aspects of the past into a shape that is not only more enjoyable for modern listeners but also scratch that itch of people to “reject modernity” and give them a (romanticized) concept of roots to connect to.

  • @Mikhail_Ganchenko
    @Mikhail_Ganchenko Před rokem +1

    What an awesome job! Thank you for this video. You've just opened for me a huge new sphere of information.

  • @Teramis
    @Teramis Před rokem +1

    What a wonderful channel you have! Very informative, and entertaining as well. I appreciate your sense of humor and love the perspective you bring to this subject (and in other vids as well.) Thanks for all the work you put into this. Subscribing now!

  • @heidim7732
    @heidim7732 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for the information and for the humour. Loved it.

  • @anotherwanderer1999
    @anotherwanderer1999 Před 2 měsíci

    the Ensemble video you've linked was intense my brother, thank you.

  • @CJVS995
    @CJVS995 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I love your genuine interest in different culture's music and why they play what they play! Thats true passion.

  • @philsavage6186
    @philsavage6186 Před rokem +5

    Excellent as usual. God bless you dear friend

  • @beefcakepantiehoes
    @beefcakepantiehoes Před rokem +24

    Hey Farya, please do a video on Irish Sean Nos singing one day! You’re videos are an amazing contribution to ethnomusicology and I think more people need to hear about Irish singing and it’s potentially mysterious origins :)

    • @quain5063
      @quain5063 Před rokem +1

      Yea there are too little ethnomusicology content on youtube - I'm hoping to contribute one day if I actually have the time to make videos :)

    • @quain5063
      @quain5063 Před rokem +1

      agus is breá liom Sean Nós

    • @Rebellescum
      @Rebellescum Před rokem

      Keening would be a good one too.

  • @einar6229
    @einar6229 Před rokem +1

    Excellent video, a great depth of knowledge put forward in a very concise way, i could listen for hours, clearly the tinding out, preservation and telling of one of the most important parts of our history is not just an interest, but a passion to you, i would love to listen to a conversation between yourself and Dr Crawford!
    Take my thumbs up and subscription sir, ... Now, i shall go and binge watch your video library.
    P.S. the intro and outro were hilarious :D

  • @natetully287
    @natetully287 Před měsícem

    I love this channel so much. It's so darn educational!

  • @losingmymind611
    @losingmymind611 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I don't know how I got here but this video is fascinating and your fit is rad.

  • @OneFlyingTonk
    @OneFlyingTonk Před rokem +16

    Amazing start, certainly one of the arabic accents of all time. Also nice kaftan.

  • @Halfskeggi
    @Halfskeggi Před rokem

    Very informative, loved listening to this and I definitely laughed at your sense of humor.

  • @ncorva
    @ncorva Před 2 měsíci

    So, once a working photographer! That explains the gorgeous framing.
    Love your content, very rich knowledge eloquently explained.

  • @Galaick
    @Galaick Před 7 měsíci +5

    This is exactly the kind of video I was looking for. I'm a really big fan of exactly as you say, Wardruna and Heilung, but part of me wondered how Norse it really is, because it sounds plausible to our ears, but there's just no way we could ever know exactly.

  • @nattoralikk
    @nattoralikk Před rokem +8

    Great video as usual man. Still waiting for some Karelian Kalevala-esque music though! Also would be cool to see some Karelian joik as all you ever see online is Sami joik. How on earth you weren't freezing recording this I have no idea

  • @danafawadleh3160
    @danafawadleh3160 Před rokem +1

    You are talented Farya that's obvious 🤩 thank you for the information

  • @metalyogawithsteph
    @metalyogawithsteph Před rokem +1

    I love your dedication to understanding. I have heard all of those norse "metal" influenced bands, and ive always wondered how close it even was to true Norse- whatever it is that we actually know. I listened to one of your remade songs, and its beautiful. Definitely subscribed

  • @AnEverfreeRat
    @AnEverfreeRat Před rokem +5

    "having two axes and 360 no-scoping anglo-saxons" is my favorite quote of the week.

  • @marcusaetius9309
    @marcusaetius9309 Před rokem +5

    You are a Montrealer? I subscribed a while back for the music but having a brother Montrealer makes it even better!
    Cheers from an ex-West Island boy 👍🏻

  • @spankygray
    @spankygray Před rokem

    I just found your channel and I really appreciate the depth of your analysis and quality of your videos. I'm looking forward to delving into your channel!

  • @kelvinnguyen6048
    @kelvinnguyen6048 Před rokem

    You're so entertaining bro. Thank you for the history lessons 😊

  • @mystra13
    @mystra13 Před rokem +6

    This was quite interesting. Something I hope you go into more in the next video is that the "viking" bands you spoke about never claimed to be that. The music Wardruna writes is their interpretation of Nordic folk and shamanic texts along with just plain ambient music. Heilung are pretty much the same vein but more Germanic.

  • @iberius9937
    @iberius9937 Před rokem +9

    Excellent talk! Someone cast this man as Ibn Fahlan in a historically accurate remake of "The 13th Warrior".

  • @nostalji75
    @nostalji75 Před měsícem

    DUDE it took me 15 seconds of your intro to leave you a subscribe. I never subbed so quickly, but based on what I saw (in 15 sec.) I am confident Ill love your channel!

  • @Stefanoitch
    @Stefanoitch Před rokem

    First 20 seconds of the video and I pressed the subscribe button. Thats some great sense of humor man

  • @Silikone
    @Silikone Před rokem +3

    Excellent video. I'm hoping to one day see an in-depth dive into how instruments were tuned in ancient times long before the advent of 12-tone equal temperament.

  • @anthonyholton2886
    @anthonyholton2886 Před rokem +2

    This was excellent. Thank you for an historically based assessment of what we know about the music, which isn't a lot.

  • @puffinlittle
    @puffinlittle Před rokem

    Greetings, Thank you for your video. This is the first of your videos I've seen. I'll be watching more.
    And thank you for using a good mic and a WIND SOCK !!!!!! Very few CZcamsrs use them even in heavy wind. Thank you, thank you. On to more of your videos. pax, PL

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 Před 7 měsíci

    A delightfully informative video made even more delightful by the music of Canadian wildlife in the background.

  • @patriciahallfors8850
    @patriciahallfors8850 Před měsícem +4

    Is no one gonna mention the howling wolves somewhere in the background?

  • @howiethebarbarian1498
    @howiethebarbarian1498 Před rokem +7

    This video blew my mind away with all the musical history I didn’t know! Always love learning new things!
    To me, I always treated modern Norse music or neofolk as a “reformation” of the historical music and not a resurrection of it. Cause to me music is constantly evolving as it did throughout history. Like martial arts or folklore they change along with the times as they are past on from generation to generation. Even during the Viking Age what was music to a Norseman in 793ad was probably a lot different from music to a Norseman in 900ad given they are pretty much a century apart. Tho bands like Wardruna, Heilung and Skald are not historical, they are the continuation of traditional folk music and bring modern people a closer connection to the culture.

  • @h0rn3d_h1st0r1an
    @h0rn3d_h1st0r1an Před rokem +1

    Got my sub. You're now one of my most favorite ytbers Farya.

  • @markinglese3874
    @markinglese3874 Před rokem +1

    This so deep! Wow! You are truly awesome.

  • @QuestionTheTruth
    @QuestionTheTruth Před měsícem +3

    The opening was funny. I'm from Sweden, the easiest way to actually look into the music would probably be Iceland, since they still speak closest to what people sounded like in the middle ages, we also have a small part of Sweden that wrote with the futhark up until just a hundred years or so ago.

  • @paulastefania5019
    @paulastefania5019 Před rokem +13

    The lur has been around since the Bronze Age, but back then it was made out of copper alloy. It is interesting to know that the people used that musical instrument in "war-like" contexts and they thought the sound of brazen instruments resemble the sounds of thunder and earthquakes(all related to the gods they worshipped). I wonder if there is a link between this information and the use of lur in the Viking age.

    • @arjantjeee
      @arjantjeee Před rokem +3

      I have a lot of information about the lur. We still practise the old tradition in Twente and it's a proto-germanic tradition that has survived 😊 there are archeological findings from the early ironage from Denmark that contain all the elements of our tradition as how we still celebrate it today in the eastern Netherlands. The tradition almost disapeared during ww2 but it's now making a revival and it's getting more popular again amongst younger people.
      The lur played a shamanic role in pre Christian Europe. In Sweden they practise kulning which is connected to the same tradition as it was to cause an echo to appear. People though the echo were spirits answering your call, so when people were about to pass, the spirits would be called and they would answer to guide the person who was dying into the spirit world. It was done to make your presence known, to attract the good spirits and ward off the bad ones.
      In Twente during midwinter we still play the lur (midwinterhoorn) above a well so the echos reach far throughout the whole area. The echo is called "the ancients call" and it's played with a warming drink and good company. After the player is done playing, the neighboring neighborhoods now answer the call letting the player know that he is not alone. So they play back n forth. This stems from the echo that was the spirit answering the call of the lurplayer, letting him know he was in good company.
      By playing across the land people asked the bad spirits that would take life away to leave and to ask the good spirits to seep new life back into the earth again so the daylight may return and spring may appear for a new cycle.
      It was the transformative magic of yuletide/joelentied/jultid and with that death was seen as the beginning of new life and not as the end.
      Joelen in Dutch and low Saxon still means "to howl."
      Also wolves would answer the lur's call as well and together with the high pitched howling of Kulning, this tradition is the origin of the Mythological creatures of the white women/Tuatha de Dannan (these were the Völva/Veleda), the goddess Danu/Tan(m) (Tamfana) and Nerthus, hellhound and the banshees (from the time when the British isles were still connected to Doggerland.)
      It's very likely that the lur was originally the shamanic instrument of the ancient Völva to communicate with, and guide the spirits.
      But with this I'm talking about proto Germanic and proto Indo-European times. The oldest lurs were cowhorns or horns carved out of treestumps. (In Twente we still play the treestumps, only in the town of Markelo they still use the cowhorn.)
      For the medieval Vikings this had developed to the call to the Valkyries to pick up the dead and bring them to Valhalla/Walhalla.

  • @joshuaperkins9916
    @joshuaperkins9916 Před měsícem

    This is a really good video. I really appreciate your thorough approach and looking at things from all angles. As someone who grew up in the guitar business, who is a musician and obsessed with history, I started digging deeper in the last few years on Western and Northern European music history. It actually started for me along side early American music and the Appalachia, and then brought me back to Europe.
    What I do feel is that some of Cecil Sharps work in rhe more isolated parts of Britain could hold some similarities to the Norse. Also the Highlands have strong Norwegian ties, such as hardanger fiddle. I realize I’m talking in some different time periods here, but some things in folk traditions tend to stick around for quite a while. Such as the reconstructed documented Anatolian scale , (I believe it was Anatolia, or close by )major Phrygian scale from 3000 years ago. That scale has been pretty wide spread throughout parts of the Middle East and Europe for a long time.
    Anyway, there seems to be evidence of bowed lyre playing in Wales dating back to around 600 AD. Some speculating an independent development, maybe maybe not, but non the less that dates back pretty far and regional playing styles really set the tone. Then you have the discovery of two lyre bridges in Scotland dating back around 2500 years. Their have been as you know a good number Germanic lyres found that date well into the first millennium AD as well a Scrythian helmet depiction of a similar lyre.
    The roughly 3000 year old bronze Germanic Lurs, and later wood examples I’ve heard have a Mixolydian series to my ears. Bottom line I would say in terms of musical scales, pentatonics, Mixolydian, Dorian and aeolian, including various gapped version and shifting between them, such as thirds would be my guess for old Norse, based off of the traditions near by. And of corse untempered with some micro tonal elements, like with the trad rural British singers. On the other end, I’ve also read about ancient accounts of the use diads in some areas of Northern European traditional vocal music, and perhaps instrumental.
    Thanks again for your hard work. Incidentally not a bad Arab accent, I got a kick out of it anyway
    Best

  • @codyyoung5636
    @codyyoung5636 Před rokem

    I learnt a whole bunch here. Thanks man, you got a sub!

  • @dnkal2875
    @dnkal2875 Před rokem +8

    Man I love your education videos.

  • @sturlamolden
    @sturlamolden Před měsícem +3

    When talking about Norse music we should not forget scaldic poetry. While also a form of poetry, it was also a musical genre called quads. This is the type of music most frequently described in the sagas. We have quads surviving from the late medieval, and it is possibly the best approximation to what norse music sounded like. I will post some examples.

    • @sturlamolden
      @sturlamolden Před měsícem

      Draumkvedet (dream quad) czcams.com/video/_pyNyV0pRvQ/video.html

    • @sturlamolden
      @sturlamolden Před měsícem

      Bergatrollets frieri (an old Germanic myth, same as Beowulf and Grendel), Swedish version czcams.com/video/X_BpmQqErks/video.html

    • @sturlamolden
      @sturlamolden Před měsícem

      Scaldic poetry to king Harold Hardrada czcams.com/video/6cQI6XdHPDY/video.htmlsi=acocOad5CDors-GR

    • @sturlamolden
      @sturlamolden Před 17 dny

      Draumkvedet
      m.czcams.com/video/gQnqd_Mm3I0/video.html

  • @slappy8941
    @slappy8941 Před rokem +2

    I just found your channel, and I can't tell you how much I appreciate such a unique perspective as yours! You are quite literally a breath of fresh air on the subject.

  • @maggpiprime954
    @maggpiprime954 Před rokem

    I wish I had some talent as a musician, but at least I can appreciate the history of music when random snippets show up on my home page with just as much enthusiasm!
    Subscribed! 🤩

  • @cristianbaranga5255
    @cristianbaranga5255 Před rokem +3

    You are a master of your own craft!

  • @cranklabexplosion-labcentr8245

    Wait… Vikings didn’t play melodic death metal? Pousours.

  • @crappusmaximus1268
    @crappusmaximus1268 Před rokem +2

    This is gonna be so great!

  • @lucareviews9760
    @lucareviews9760 Před rokem

    Yet another great video farya

  • @miastupid7911
    @miastupid7911 Před rokem +9

    Lebanese weddings are the absolute best! You made laugh today, which was greatly needed after being glued to watching the utter destruction going on right now in the region.