Hedningarna - Täss'on Nainen

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  • čas přidán 30. 12. 2011
  • Täss'on Nainen by Hedningarna from their 1994 album Trä.
    Translation from lyrics.wikia.com.
    Background painting by Robert Wilhelm Ekman (1808-1873), "Ilmatar" (1860).
    The subject of this painting is the beginning of the Kalevala, the birth of the world, and the Finnish goddess Ilmatar.
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 101

  • @mistouko
    @mistouko Před 4 lety +10

    I saw them twice in Portugal. Still one of my favorite bands.

  • @oscargarciamiguel6745
    @oscargarciamiguel6745 Před rokem +4

    Música folk sobresaliente. Espero que perdure eternamente. Un saludo a tod@s desde España.

  • @thorvalld
    @thorvalld Před 5 lety +8

    Whenever I listen to this, I feel power raging...

  • @chimgeebaatar7966
    @chimgeebaatar7966 Před 4 lety +10

    The Hu brought me here. Beautiful tune and I love it. Greeting from mongolia

    • @urbankotto9685
      @urbankotto9685 Před rokem

      I love The hu.Try out the Swedish band Avatar.Not the hu but funnier.

  • @IljaThePerson
    @IljaThePerson Před 11 lety +16

    This is mesmerizing...

    • @leonschmidt4265
      @leonschmidt4265 Před 11 měsíci

      When singing I was sitting with crossed legs and moving forth and back with my upper body. It is so relaxing because it is one whole sooth breathing out with focus on the moment.

  • @martonjuhasz1544
    @martonjuhasz1544 Před 4 lety +11

    wow :O this gave me goosebumps, lots of love from hungary

  • @Espada500
    @Espada500 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I rememmber having this song on my Mp3❤❤

  • @nicolas__788
    @nicolas__788 Před 4 lety +19

    Fun fact: the word hedningarna means ''the pagans'' in swedish

    • @moisuomi
      @moisuomi Před 3 lety +1

      Meaning any pagan even Egyptian

    • @Carolinenor
      @Carolinenor Před 2 lety +2

      Heathens. People of the heathen grasslands, herders.

  • @Guitar101Ramstein
    @Guitar101Ramstein Před 12 lety +7

    One of my favorite songs they have done, and still is since 1994.

  • @RZAJW
    @RZAJW Před 7 lety +6

    The last minute and a half gives me so much fucking shivers ..

  • @gaialunerousse9288
    @gaialunerousse9288 Před 7 lety +8

    Un chant sorcier d'une grande puissance.

  • @Joonavainio
    @Joonavainio Před 10 lety +20

    Yup. Synti is a perverted loanword from the "sin" of the Indo-European languages. Here it means indeed synty (birth).
    The spellsong is about Ilmatar who gave birth to the world and Väinämöinen, the first man. Impregnated by the sea and the wind.
    The tuuli/tuli (wind/fire) is a recurring pun in their songs with multiple other meanings, too. As in "came", etc.

    • @freddiejupiter1833
      @freddiejupiter1833 Před 5 lety +1

      the concept of synti/sin is christian and precedes pagan culture this music trying to portray.

    • @finnicpatriot6399
      @finnicpatriot6399 Před 5 lety

      Ilmatar is not even real, Lönnrot came up with it. Not part of the original authentic poetry.

    • @worldtv5848
      @worldtv5848 Před rokem

      @@finnicpatriot6399 what is original authentic poetry, some examples?

    • @finnicpatriot6399
      @finnicpatriot6399 Před rokem

      @@worldtv5848 The actual collected poems and not the edited compilation? Is that not obvious? SKVR (Suomen Kansan Vanhat Runot) is authentic, Kalevala isn't.

    • @ripa30
      @ripa30 Před rokem +1

      Gandalf = Väinämöinen ?

  • @pixelmangler
    @pixelmangler Před 8 lety +21

    Wow! Another fine video presentation from reindeerdream. Hedningarna are really powerful and serious to listen to. Since I commented other work created by you, I was fortunate in visiting and spending time in Finland. My eyes were opened to a civil people and society with a very well developed sense of humour. Serial conversation was a first for me and it made complete sense. My reaction to my visit was that I wanted to go and live in Finland immediately. I will hopefully find time to return to your beautiful country, assuming you are a Finn.

  • @trappaskunk
    @trappaskunk Před 7 lety +57

    Sing this during Sauna for full effect.

  • @rakhanthanatos
    @rakhanthanatos Před 11 lety +14

    Fucking love Hedningarna.

  • @aarnilapsi9336
    @aarnilapsi9336 Před 5 lety +29

    The song is actually about controlling the sea, as the sea is associated with many Goddesses and feminine power.
    I chanted this while swimming in the Mediterranean Sea and I recommend it!

    • @davidus9702
      @davidus9702 Před 4 lety +3

      But it is also very harsh and masculine. We have kings of the sea, not queens that rule. Poseidon, Njord, etc...

    • @pyromorph6540
      @pyromorph6540 Před 3 lety +6

      @@davidus9702 Ahti

    • @davidus9702
      @davidus9702 Před 3 lety +1

      @@pyromorph6540 Thanks, I didn't know about Ahti!

    • @finnicpatriot6399
      @finnicpatriot6399 Před rokem +3

      @@pyromorph6540 Ahti is a king, Väinämöinen is the God of waters.

    • @scythianking7315
      @scythianking7315 Před rokem

      Isn't the Ocean almost always associated with Gods and the Masculine?
      Water and Sky are usually male.
      Fire and Earth usually Female

  • @Atheneastro
    @Atheneastro Před 5 lety +2

    Awesome!

  • @ChuckDeFuque
    @ChuckDeFuque Před rokem +3

    Täss'on nainen tuulen tuoma
    Tuulen tuoma ve'en vetämä
    Meren aaltojen ajama
    Meren tyrskyn työntelemä
    Kuin mie käynen laulamahan
    Laulan mie meren mesiksi
    Suoloiksi meren somerot
    Meren hiekat hernehiksi
    Yhen vyöni vyötännällä
    Yhen paitani panolla
    Solkeni solittamalla
    Polkimeni painamalla
    Nouse luontoni lovesta
    Syntini syvästä maasta
    Syntini syvästä maasta
    Haavan alta haltiainen.

  • @Joonavainio
    @Joonavainio Před 10 lety +29

    Oh, and in the Karelian dialect "synti" may also be a an imperative of "get born".
    As always, Finnish spellsongs are full of puns. But otherwise a nice translation.

    • @kalevala29
      @kalevala29 Před 5 lety

      Is Karelian different from Finnish?

    • @user-fm1rg4iy6r
      @user-fm1rg4iy6r Před 4 lety +2

      @@kalevala29 Karelian and Finnish are from the same language family, have a alot of common words, and sound really similar, but are different nevertheless. A person speaking Finnish and a person speaking Karelian would have some difficulties understanding each other, but it is possible. I'd say it's way more similar to Finnish than Estonian.

    • @mikkolappalainen_
      @mikkolappalainen_ Před 4 lety +2

      @@user-fm1rg4iy6r Finnish is strange language in many ways, because there is also dialects in modern Finnish, that are heavily different. The capital slang and lifetime Savonian might have almost similar problems in understanding eachother.

    • @finnicpatriot6399
      @finnicpatriot6399 Před rokem

      @@user-fm1rg4iy6r It's a dialect

  • @ChuckDeFuque
    @ChuckDeFuque Před rokem +2

    Translation by Google Translate, anything wrong it is their fault!
    Here is the woman brought by the wind
    Brought by the wind, pulled by the water
    Driven by the waves of the sea
    Pushed by the sea's cod
    Like I'm going to sing
    I sing the honey of the sea
    Salts from the sea
    The sands of the sea into peas
    One belt at the waist
    With one of my shirts
    Snapping my buckle
    By pressing my pedal
    Get up from my nature slot
    My sin from the deep earth
    My sin from the deep earth
    Elf under the wound.

    • @ChuckDeFuque
      @ChuckDeFuque Před 8 měsíci

      My pleasure.@PirkkaPekkaErareika-dn2wi

    • @EneriGiilaan
      @EneriGiilaan Před měsícem

      One common translation mistake here - they are singing about birth/origins not sin.
      Another one is *probably* the 'wound' - I guess the last line should be:
      An elf from under an aspen (tree).

  •  Před 11 lety +4

    Uf, jsou to ale šamani!!)

  • @thelightning1919
    @thelightning1919 Před 2 lety +3

    0:01 - 0:30 this part is so good I would like to hear sounds like this

  • @theexistentialist.5530
    @theexistentialist.5530 Před 5 lety +2

    Wow

  • @EneriGiilaan
    @EneriGiilaan Před 11 lety +30

    There is probably a translation error here. AFAIK in general "synti" in Kalevalean poetry doesn't mean "sin" but "birth" ("synty" in modern Finnish).
    "Sin" is a "modern" Christian concept - and of course "birth" makes much more sense here in any case.

    • @alarik36
      @alarik36 Před 6 lety +1

      Eneri Giilaan Then it could be a chant that is asking Ilmatar and groundcreatures, who live under the aspenroot for a easy delivery/less pain etc..

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo Před 6 lety +1

      Sin is not a modern concept, it was in Judaism before Christianity was born.
      And actually it has been known the world over 1000s of years.
      It's the debt you owe someone, when you wrong him or her.
      That's why people in the religions seek to appeace God or gods.
      That's what we try when we hurt someone we're in contact with - we try to compensate.
      We can also you words like debt, mistake, bad, fault, wrong, evil.
      My bad etc. = My sin.

    • @freddiejupiter1833
      @freddiejupiter1833 Před 5 lety

      judaic culture is still very recent compared to ancient post ice-age finno-ugric cultures

    • @Fear_the_Nog
      @Fear_the_Nog Před 5 lety

      @@freddiejupiter1833 there were no "finno ugric" cultures during the last ice age. In fact, one can argue that truly anatomically modern humans hadn't reached Europe at that time. Cro-Magnons, perhaps, who were completely unrelated to Finns. No, Hebrew culture has been attested to at least the first millennium BC. Whereas Finno-Ugric culture had no recorded historical records, until at the earliest, the early middle ages. you can say that Finns were much more primitive and hence give off the appeal of being more ancient, but truth is Judaic culture was there long before the Finns even split off of the Sami.

    • @finnicpatriot6399
      @finnicpatriot6399 Před 5 lety +7

      @@Fear_the_Nog Finno-Ugric cultures have existed long before written record, as shown by archeology. Metallurgy had been achieved thousands of years BC. Not sure how peoples with advanced metallurgy, oral tradition, high sense of hygiene etc could be called primitive.

  • @fr4nbl
    @fr4nbl Před 9 lety +14

    Song in elven qenya :)

    • @CyanWyrmie
      @CyanWyrmie Před 5 lety +5

      Speaking of Tolkien, the suffix -tar is feminine in Finnish. Keep that in mind next time you read about Eru Iluvatar creating the world with the ainur or Sauron disguising as Annatar

  • @rickleblanc8900
    @rickleblanc8900 Před 4 lety +10

    Never heard this band before. Very tribal, chanting native American-style music with a strong European celtic feel. Don't know how else to describe this. Hypnotic as fuck

    • @uadhlagash7280
      @uadhlagash7280 Před 4 lety +17

      This is neither Native American nor Celtic. It is distinctively Finnish, and based on Karelian singing. Completely European, but nothing to do with the Celts. It's Finno-Ugric.

    • @pyromorph6540
      @pyromorph6540 Před 2 lety +2

      @@uadhlagash7280 Probably refrencing the style of music.

    • @scythianking7315
      @scythianking7315 Před rokem +6

      Oh boy here we go again. No it is NOT Native American in any way, and it doesn't even sound similiar to Native American music. Pure European Folk music
      You people have been so brainwashed you can't recognize that Europe has it's own Culture and music, it's sad. EVERY video related to European Folk music is full of people commenting how it sounds NatiVe AmeriCan or AfriCan. It's getting old.

  • @gunaybil630
    @gunaybil630 Před 11 lety +3

    best

  • @user-gy3rn1st6l
    @user-gy3rn1st6l Před 2 lety +2

    🙂👍

  • @int19h
    @int19h Před 6 lety +4

    Somebody needs to make a theremin cover of this.

  • @bloedearse5320
    @bloedearse5320 Před 8 lety +9

    Wyśmienite

  • @eimeta1948
    @eimeta1948 Před 4 lety

    Nainen tässä on Ilmatar.
    Nainen here is Ilmatar

  • @user-fs3ib6qc9b
    @user-fs3ib6qc9b Před 2 lety

    Hail FREYJA !!!!!!!!

    • @statostheman
      @statostheman Před rokem +2

      She is Ilmatar. You can say she is mother earth.

  • @Voondubah
    @Voondubah Před 4 lety +1

    x0.50 speed O_O

  • @Transterra55
    @Transterra55 Před 3 lety +4

    Makes my Scandinavian DNA spin around like a proper pagan...

    • @moisuomi
      @moisuomi Před 3 lety +4

      This isn’t Scandinavian don’t you dare say we are Scandinavian you 😡

    • @pyromorph6540
      @pyromorph6540 Před 3 lety +2

      It's Uralic

    • @scythianking7315
      @scythianking7315 Před rokem

      @@moisuomi Yes, it is!
      Finland is in Scandinavia, and the population's DNA is, and always has been, a majority Scandinavian(Germanic), with the rest being mostly Eastern European(Baltic and Slavic), then to a smaller degree Eurasian(Uralic).
      So, yes, they absolutely are "Scandinavian", with a small amount of Uralic influence

    • @moisuomi
      @moisuomi Před rokem +1

      @@scythianking7315 We have more Baltic ancestry than you would expect. Very similar to Estonians. Are Estonians Scandinavian? FUCK NO

    • @leonschmidt4265
      @leonschmidt4265 Před 11 měsíci

      I am on the way of finding out where my roots are. Idk, I could sing pretty fluent while singing Finnish for the first time. I cannot even speak the language. I believe it could be in my DNA. Looking forward to the test.
      Quote from comments:
      talvetar3385: "yes, that is one example. It is synty, birth. And it all about the Kundalini energy rising all way up to the crown chakra for shamanistic purposes. This is a spell. It does not mean only sexual energy. It is also haon alta haltijainen. The energy is rising from the earth, metaforia for ground chakra, Hako is a tree already fallen down. So the energy is rising from Mother earth."

  • @tp-vz7od
    @tp-vz7od Před 5 lety

    Täss´on miäs vm 1947

  • @valentine7276
    @valentine7276 Před 3 lety +2

    kaipaan niitä päiviä...

  • @redgreen6436
    @redgreen6436 Před 3 lety +1

    Arvoton lunttu jolla ei oo sanomista mihinkään.

  • @talvetar3385
    @talvetar3385 Před 3 lety

    These lyrics are funnily wrong 😂

    • @EneriGiilaan
      @EneriGiilaan Před 3 lety +3

      Old Finnish folk poetry - quite hard to translate exactly. One big mistake - the term 'synti' is translated as 'sin'. Sin is not a concept that belongs to the ancient Finnish world view. The meaning here is 'birth': syntini = syntyni = my birth or my origins.

    • @talvetar3385
      @talvetar3385 Před 3 lety +1

      @@EneriGiilaan yes, that is one example. It is synty, birth. And it all about the Kundalini energy rising all way up to the crown chakra for shamanistic purposes. This is a spell. It does not mean only sexual energy. It is also haon alta haltijainen. The energy is rising from the earth, metaforia for ground chakra, Hako is a tree already fallen down. So the energy is rising from Mother earth.

    • @EneriGiilaan
      @EneriGiilaan Před 3 lety +5

      @@talvetar3385
      Hmmmm ... I guess I agree in principle . However I must say that I find it kind of baffling or even objectionable if you try to combine concepts of ancient Finnish shamanistic world view system with some totally alien - like 'chakras'. It seems as appropriate as mixing the concept of ''sin' in to the mix..

    • @talvetar3385
      @talvetar3385 Před 3 lety

      @@EneriGiilaan oh I am sorry. But it is all about that, spirituality, like shamanism anywhere Else in the world. The spell is about rising Kundalini energy. When it stays in lower chakras,, so it is only sexual energy. Fysiologia fact too. 💚

    • @leonschmidt4265
      @leonschmidt4265 Před 11 měsíci

      @@talvetar3385 Thank you very much. This is very interesting to me. I am a practicioner of this spiritual practicion. Awesome to read about this randomely. All the best on your paths!