Gjallarhorn is a Finnish band that performs world music with roots in the folk music of Finland and Sweden. The group was formed in 1994. The band's music echoes the ancient folk music tradition of Scandinavia with medieval ballads, minuets, prayers in runo-metric chanting and ancient Icelandic rímur epics in a modern way. The group is named after the Gjallarhorn associated with the god Heimdallr from the Norse mythology. The band hails from Ostrobothnia, a Swedish-speaking region on the west coast of Finland, one of the four regions of the historical province of Ostrobothnia and the only region in Finland outside Aland where more people speak Swedish than Finnish. The music of the band remains Swedish in character. Most of their repertoire is the acoustic folk music of these Swedish-speaking Finns, from the unique minuets and ballads that have only survived in Ostrobothnia, to the old traditional waltzes. The didgeridoo and sub-contrabass recorder offer an underlying drone, a technique shared by some other Nordic bands such as Garmarna. Also notable is their use of the hardanger fiddle and Jenny Wilhelms' kulning, a high-pitched, wordless vocal technique based on traditional Scandinavian cattle-herding calls. From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gjallarhorn_(band)
DIVERSE AND ECLECTIC FUN FOR YOUR EARS - 60s to 90s rock, prog, psychedelia, folk music, folk rock, world music, experimental, doom metal, strange and creative music videos, deep cuts and more!
-
Maldito - Live from Deutschlandfunk Kammermusiksaal 2025 - Part 1 Maldito - Live from Deutschlandfunk Kammermusiksaal 2025 - Part 2 It...
-
Right after a band’s name, how a group comes together and not only grows, but sustains—and in the case of folk trio The Wailin’ Jennys, sust...
-
Meet the Band: Fatal Flaw The band: Joel Reader (voice, bass) is a recent transplant from San Francisco; Zack Wells (guitar, voice) and Josh...
-
At the end of 2021, the Danish heavy rock band Timechild released their debut album “And Yet It Moves”, and received top reviews and big pra...
-
“Radical folk,” “subversive folk,” or “chameleonic sounds” are expressions that Uxu Kalhus, whose name is a kind of phonetic transcription o...
