Nyckelharpa is NOT Viking & other myths debunked - Scandi Folk Nerd

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  • čas přidán 7. 08. 2024
  • A beginner's guide and basic info for interested people about the Swedish nyckelharpa. A bit of History, the clichés usually associated to it and why they are wrong, and I hope a lot of motivation and inspiration for playing it, practicing it, loving it.
    GEWA nyckelharpa bow by Thomann : www.thomann.de/gb/gewa_nyckel...
    00:00 Intro
    01:11 1. Nyckelharpa is Viking
    05:03 2. Nordic Ancestry Required
    06:07 3. Look At My New Cool Thing
    09:22 4. The Nyckelharpa Stand
    11:46 5. Stick + 3 Horsehairs = Bow
    13:05 6. Tuning is for Dummies
    14:30 7. Cleaning is for Dummies
    15:26 8. Thou Shall Only Play Swedish Music
    17:40 9. Upper Keyboard = Decoration
    19:42 10. Teachers are for Dummies
    Nyckelharpa and 4-rows keyboard by Jean-Claude Condi (Mirecourt, France).
    FB group "All Nyckelharpa. All the time." : / 348406222443
    Support my music and my videos on Patreon : / emeliewaldken​
    Listen and support on Bandcamp : emeliewaldken.bandcamp.com/​
    Facebook : / ​
    Instagram : / ​
    Homepage : www.emeliewaldken.net/​
    Spotify : open.spotify.com/artist/3ecxq...
    Music in the intro : "Fossegrimen" av Magnus Stinnerbom, on my previous band Knep's second album "Hallingrr" : knep.weebly.com/shop​
    Recorded april 2021 in Uppland, Sweden.
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Komentáře • 57

  • @Stibsyt
    @Stibsyt Před 3 lety +13

    I've been playing the fiddle for 50 years and now into my my third year of playing the nyckelharpa and I can honestly say your presentation didn't waste a word, and not even in your native language too! I was nodding in agreement with your observations all the way through. What a star you are - such a beautifully-balanced, knowledgeable, wise and funny insight into playing this remarkable instrument but actually also as a comment on playing music on any instrument. Thank you so much for taking the time and effort to pass on your wisdom - and that is the right word - in such an engaging and inspirational way. Tack så mycket!

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety +6

      Thank you very much for this nice comment. I did my best to cover points I find important in different ways and to transmit inspiration and tips that can help musicians understand the instrument better and become better at playing it. Glad my words can be applied to other instruments aswell !

    • @songoftheblackunicorn666
      @songoftheblackunicorn666 Před 2 lety +1

      I am a violin busker who has transitioned to doing my own bowings fingerings and stylistic changes and some fiddle tunes how hard is it to add nickelharpa to your skill set. Could a nomad realistically maintain one.

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 Před 2 lety +1

      yes, I sometimes forget that English is her 2nd or 3rd language.

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety +1

      @@songoftheblackunicorn666 Maintenance isn't too high on nyckleharpas actually, mostly tuning and a bit of care for tangents sometimes (and accepting the occasional buzzing sounds !)... given that your instrument is a decent one !
      Nyckelharpa requires some time to adjust fiddle playing. The two instruments are very close in terms of logic but the holding is quite a nightmare, the left hand changes string in the opposite direction as on a violin and both bow & keyboard are a very different feeling and technique.

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety +3

      ​@@reineh3477 French : mothertongue
      German : 2nd language but forgot a lot
      English : 3rd
      Swedish : 4th

  • @Cactus521
    @Cactus521 Před 2 lety

    Fun video to enjoy. I became a touring gospel choir singer in 1969 as a small boy, we made albums, toured the mountain provinces of Canada and the US from the California Coast to Illinois. Our choir was from the Napa Valley, influenced greatly by Europe, which I have traveled to eight times between '77 and '17 though I did not make it as far north as Sweden since my vacations were influenced by my interest in my Spanish/Italian roots. I do have some Lithuanian in me, 25 pct, on my maternal grandmother's side, hence my interest in your musical history of this instrument.
    I play a Yamaha DX7 module on a Chromebook--many such old synths can be installed and played for free on modern touch screen laptops and Chromebooks, giving those interested in music a resource to play.
    Musicians, just plain wonderful, warm people like you, inspire so many. I have been a teacher since 1989, and you are much better than I was at your age--I am learning from your videos new techniques to reach my audience, I am a teacher of hotel business systems and booking systems, and I recommend to those I mentor to watch videos like yours, since musicians have a talent for teaching given their audience is as varied in age as ours is.
    You speak like my daughter, she is 22 now, a world history major working towards her masters and she hopes to become a foreign diplomat and travel like I have overseas in my career.
    One thing I loved about having a child, was as she grew, in the modern world I live in, she could teach me new ways a Daddy could cope with the rapid change of our world, while cherishing the wonderful history of our world in which music has woven an incredible beat and story.
    allpoetry.com/John_Cillis

  • @hannafiddler
    @hannafiddler Před 3 lety +2

    Another great video, dear Emelie! You addressed pretty much all of the things that rub me the wrong way, and a few more besides!

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you dear Hanna, I knew you would prolly nod at several of these =) Missing talking about these and much else with you in person ! And playing ! And dancing !

  • @islamadam8502
    @islamadam8502 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi! I'm not sure that you're going to read this but I found your channel recently and it introduced me to the nyckelharpa for the first time. I'm not a musician but I can imagine how much time and effort you put into mastering that complex yet lovely instrument in order to perform so greatly as you do👍 😎
    I agree with you that it's not a nice thing to reduce the history of a whole country to one period or a single ethnic group, which reminds me of how many people in the world reduce the history of my country (Egypt) to the times of the pharaohs as if nothing happened after! Clearly it's called Ancient Egypt because it seized to exist by the end of the ancient times, and since Egypt still exists then it isn't a surprise that lots of things happened in the following centuries!
    Finally if I may say I like your classic wearing style and long plait, I believe that taking care of one's hair is a sign of a true lady.

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety

      Thank you for this nice message ! And yes, I can very much imagine how annoying it can be that people reduce the entire history of Egypt to only the Pharaos' time ! That's so many centuries ago, and there have been Egyptians all the time since then ^^'

  • @christianwolkersdorfer3820

    Thanks, for all your efforts to tell the world what a nice instrument it is :-) And how important historical knowledge is ;-)

  • @yeoldfart8762
    @yeoldfart8762 Před 3 lety

    Well done! You said what needed saying much better than I could ever say. I play music because I love playing music. I post music of me and my friends on CZcams to share with friends. I don't worry about sounding perfect as long as we sound like it's fun. I'm always learning. Started when I was 10 and I'm now 67. The first time I saw a CZcams of yours you were playing Celtic tunes. It was beautiful.

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety

      Thank you very much, this video took me a long time to formulate in a good way actually. And yes, playing music should be done and talked about because WE LOVE IT, not because of some cool-effect one gets by showing an instrument around (apparently some study demonstrated that a guy with a guitar case on his back was deemed more attractive by most women than when he was not wearing the case ^^' We're not out of the problem yet).

  • @zekecastelli7256
    @zekecastelli7256 Před 3 lety

    I’ve had the privilege of being able to have quite a lot of carefully considered design input into the construction of my nyckelharpa (I actually took some inspiration from your instrument for the design of the tailpiece and the large melodic tuning pegs). It’s nearly finished and my heart is beaming! Despite being in total agreement with what you said about posting on social media, you can bet I’ll still post a pic on Instagram of my completed nyckelharpa with absolute pride and joy and nerdiness!

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety

      Oh so nice that you're soon getting your nyckelharpa !! As said in the video, there is nothing wrong per se about being happy and excited and sharing a pic or three on social media - it's just that for some people that ego-boost comes before and in place of the actual, real-life, musical joy - and I find it quite sad. In your case be sure to send me a pic too (am curious about the design now) ;)

    • @zekecastelli7256
      @zekecastelli7256 Před 3 lety

      @@EmelieWaldken Yes, this is super sad. I sort of went through this myself with the guitar when I was younger. Got into it for the wrong reasons, because it was ‘cool’. I did still really enjoy it, but there was a bit of ego-boost attached and my desire to make music with that particular instrument wasn’t so strong. It was more an external gratification. I didn’t feel it so much from the inside. In retrospect, I know now that there was a deeper yearning to be able to play folk music with other folk musicians. I didn’t know this until recently, twenty years later.
      My relationship with violin and nyckelharpa is totally different to my younger self and guitar. Violin and nyckelharpa, I’ve come to realise, are the thing I’ve been waiting for my entire life. They are the reason I am here, my purpose. It took me a very long time to find it and now that I have, I cherish it. So, for me it is something that rises from my feet up through my bones and out from my heart. I almost feel like I can call myself a musician because I really feel it’s who I am, although maybe I haven’t quite earned the title just yet.
      I’ll send you photos of my nyckelharpa when she is complete (soon!) :)
      A large part of my ancestry is Italian, so it was really great to hear that the nyckelharpa has sprung up in Italy in its history!

  • @tim5cad203
    @tim5cad203 Před 3 lety +1

    I was hoping that the chat would have stayed open a little longer. I would love to have a conversation with you about the area your from. too bad my brain is not functioning at the moment to type in responses and questions without sounding like an idiot. I love your videos and the work that you do. It has inspired me to get to know more about the folk music in my own country as well as across the ocean

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety

      Well you can always write me an email or PM on my FB page. To answer your questions, I am from Geneva in Switzerland, then I moved around a bit and for now settled in Sweden.

  • @pagophilus
    @pagophilus Před 3 lety +1

    Re climbing up the keys, I notice many Swedish instruments have keys made in such a way that you can recognise "white notes" vs "black notes". Some other people have more simple markings, e.g. they only mark a few notes. My current nyckelharpa is deficient in the it has an inverted keybox and the high string is on the bottom row, so you can't see what you're doing, though I can see from the other end which key is moving, and that helps a bit, but still looking forward to my new instrument.

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety

      Yes most nyckelharpas have these markings, I personally have more simple ones (the white/black notes piano-like concept just doesn't work for me).
      It sounds like you have a Tord Johansson harpa, aka an inverted keyboard, that's really cool, I've heard about these but never seen one in person ! But yes, I guess these have their tricky things too... Open keyboards as yours seems to be (that you can see the key sticking out when you press it, tell me if I got that right) and as I have myself are a great feature, I always recommend it. It's so much better for the neck !

  • @KarlEchtermeyer
    @KarlEchtermeyer Před rokem +2

    Not just the Nyckelharpa gets the Viking treatment. One “maker” (and I use the term loosely) of hurdy-gurdies has tried to market his instruments as simultaneously Viking and Celtic… Sigh.

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před rokem +1

      I know, I'm in gurdy circles too... Why do people have to use wrong labels all the time, instead of appreciating things for what they ARE instead of what they aren't ?? Gurdies are already great, no need to add wrong labels on them...

  • @Looking4usefulStuff
    @Looking4usefulStuff Před 2 lety +1

    It was amusing watching it; thank you for posting it! Given that varieties of the instrument were found across all of Europe, Eric Sahlström basically turned it into a Swedish instrument by merely playing a forgotten instrument:)

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety +1

      Well it had been played only in Sweden for a few centuries already... Sahlström just popularized the chromatic keyboard invented by August Bohlin.

    • @Looking4usefulStuff
      @Looking4usefulStuff Před 2 lety

      @@EmelieWaldken Ah, ok. That was a hiatus in my knowledge then. But thanks for the info!

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety

      @@Looking4usefulStuff It's easy to jump over time in our thoughts, I constantly forget there's been a 17th century ^^

    • @Looking4usefulStuff
      @Looking4usefulStuff Před 2 lety

      @@EmelieWaldken Actually, I am quite green when it comes to knowledge about the nyckelharpa. However, I do understand that something from Sweden doesn't necessarily come from either Vikings or IKEA;)

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety

      @@Looking4usefulStuff Then you're ahead of many already ;)

  • @reineh3477
    @reineh3477 Před 2 lety

    Vikings:
    An interest I got. Often when I speak with others I have to spend a lot of time crushing a lot of myths and misconceptions people have.
    Music:
    I like playing guitar and I agree with what you say. Practice and speak with/listen to people that are better than you. And always check if your instrument are in tune.
    Teachers can be very good especially in the beginning so you don't learn the wrong technique.
    People on social media that picture after picture holding an instrument they obviously don't know how to play are so annoying.

  • @PsychedelicChameleon
    @PsychedelicChameleon Před 3 lety

    "Just take time to be nerdy and happy about it!"
    Also your nyckelharpa has a beautiful scarf/sash!

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes it was woven by a friend of mine, with my favourite colours, and my mom and best friend have their own.

  • @maggiepie8810
    @maggiepie8810 Před rokem

    The Tagelharpa might be an early predecessor to the nyckelharpa, but that would be the kind of instrument that the vikings had.

  • @yeasstt
    @yeasstt Před rokem +1

    Do you happen to have a buyers guide for the nyckelharpa? It's an instrument I've always been interested in (and actually got the chance to play over the summer when I saw one at a music shop).
    I'm not aware of what to look for or what would be a deal breaker with the nyckelharpa, as I've never owned a mechanical instrument

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před rokem

      I do actually www.emeliewaldken.net/nyckelharpabuilders

    • @vyzuqui
      @vyzuqui Před rokem

      @@EmelieWaldken Are there any builders that you know of who (could) build nyckelharpa's for left-handed persons? (I live in Belgium)

    • @AmedeeVanGasse
      @AmedeeVanGasse Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@vyzuqui Johan Hertogs is a Belgian builder, you could ask him?

  • @robinterkzer8128
    @robinterkzer8128 Před 2 lety

    Marvellous !

  • @janehinks6387
    @janehinks6387 Před 3 lety

    A hurdy gurdy! 🤩
    Excellent vid thanks!

    • @Coteoki
      @Coteoki Před 3 lety

      A nyckelharpa and a hurdy gurdy are two different instruments

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety +3

      @@Coteoki Absolutely but there's a gurdy in the background =)

    • @janehinks6387
      @janehinks6387 Před 3 lety

      @@EmelieWaldken Yes, I play a Hurdy Gurdy so that is why I pointed it out. One day I might even get a Nyckelharpa😊

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety

      @@janehinks6387 I guessed you're a gurdist, for spotting this one in the background ;) Hope you get a nyckelharpa too, let me know when/if it happens !

  • @noelplouffe6245
    @noelplouffe6245 Před 2 lety

    thank you

  • @EmilReiko
    @EmilReiko Před 2 lety

    Did the ehhhmmm... proto-nyckelharpe grow out of the Hurdy Gurdy or visa versa... they kinda seem related on medieval iconography

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety +1

      Not that we know of. There is a similarity in the way of thinking about the keyboard principle, but the logic is quite different. They might be related (good ideas travel !) but nothing certain.

  • @michaelblaney4461
    @michaelblaney4461 Před 2 lety +1

    Looks like a baroque bow.
    Viking instruments like my 5 string Bass?😊

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 2 lety

      Nyckelharpa bows come in many shapes actually, the traditional ones are very curved, more modern ones are either similar to a cello's or baroque-typed aka pointy.

  • @AmedeeVanGasse
    @AmedeeVanGasse Před 8 měsíci

    Nr.8: yeah tell that to Boris K... 😀😀😀😀

  • @tim5cad203
    @tim5cad203 Před 3 lety +1

    YAY I am the first one to comment!!! :)

    • @gurdybusker49
      @gurdybusker49 Před 3 lety

      Wonderful presentation! Thank you so much! It is always a pleasure to listen to you playing and giving information on the history of the songs, their origin etc. I am two years into playing the Nyckelharpa, that I got in person ftom Jean Cloud Condi and I am happy we share the same builder and bow maker .I love playing and have learned many lovely tunes that I try to perfect and working on the best sound possible to create on my Nyckelharpa. I am a gurd it’s as you mentioned in a comment, for 40 years and now I take Swedish tunes and transpose them to fit my Gurdy .. but also the baroque tunes of the Hurdy Gurdy is beautiful on the Nyckelharpa. My husband played the Gurdy these days and I acompony him with the Nyckelharpa.
      So much to learn!!! You are right about that! Thanks again!🎶💕

  • @Ailasor
    @Ailasor Před 3 lety +2

    finns are not scandinavian, and viking where a"job". not the name for all people living in scandinavia..

    • @EmelieWaldken
      @EmelieWaldken  Před 3 lety +5

      I think it's more complex than that actually. Historically, Finns and Sami were indeed not of Scandinavian ancestry, as "Scandinavian" denoted a people, not a place.
      Nowadays however, "Scandinavia" has shifted meaning quite a bit, as it can mean the Scandi peninsula but also the Nordic countries (SE, NO, DK, FI, IS). It is not linked to a people anymore, this also because of the fact that there's been so much mixing (I think of the Swedish presence in Finland for centuries, for example).
      I personally use the term Scandinavia(n) to refer to the Scandinavian peninsula first, and then Danemark, Finland and Iceland too, as they form a historical and cultural group with the Swedes and Norwegians.
      But I know, it's a mess ^^

    • @AmedeeVanGasse
      @AmedeeVanGasse Před 8 měsíci

      @@EmelieWaldken and then there's Estonia that wants to get into Nordics. 😀
      In terms of musical traditions at least, I would say yes. We play Estonian tunes at our scandi sessions.

  • @AmedeeVanGasse
    @AmedeeVanGasse Před 8 měsíci

    "Getting out FIRST nyckelharpa"...
    Hehe... expensive hobby though...

  • @user3141592635
    @user3141592635 Před 2 lety

    Oh, you are trying to be more PK.