16099 shaares
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folk
Avec plein d'invités, comme Warren Ellis (Nick Cave) ou Stephen O’Malley (Sunn o))) )
« Inspired by the harsh conditions of the High Arctic, @tagaq was commissioned by #London's National Maritime Museum (@RMGreenwich) to create a soundtrack for their permanent Polar Worlds exhibit. » (https://twitter.com/SixShooterR/status/1103381766021238784)
Dommage qu'il soit pas dispo sur Bandcamp :(
Dommage qu'il soit pas dispo sur Bandcamp :(
Ya le live d'Eivør aussi qui vient de sortir aujourd'hui :)
Folk rock mongol. Ça a l'air d'être un groupe récent, ils n'ont que 2 pistes sur leur bandcamp https://thehuband.bandcamp.com/
« À vrai dire, à la découverte du groupe, j’ai eu une certaine appréhension, une peur de retrouver leur musique sur des sites identitaires, se revendiquant comme des gardiens d’une tradition occidentale qui s’opposerait à toutes les autres. Mais non, rien de tel chez Heilung. Nulle démarche identitaire ici. Nulle revendication d’une culture supérieure, occidentale ou autre. Au contraire, il y a plutôt une hybridation entre une volonté de recherche musicale, ethnographique et l’envie de diffuser une sensation de bien-être à l’auditoire en le reconnectant avec sa nature profonde. La profession de foi que le groupe déclame avant tout récital atteste d’ailleurs de sa volonté de rassembler. »
Tout pareil, j'ai eu exactement la même appréhension à la découverte du groupe. Et du coup, j'ai fait quelques recherches d'éventuelles connexions fachos avant de partager un premier morceau sur mon shaarli. Mais j'ai rien trouvé et j'ai fait confiance au texte qui ouvre le concert et qui est en description de toutes les vidéos : « Remember, that we all are brothers - All people, beasts, trees and stone and wind »
Tout pareil, j'ai eu exactement la même appréhension à la découverte du groupe. Et du coup, j'ai fait quelques recherches d'éventuelles connexions fachos avant de partager un premier morceau sur mon shaarli. Mais j'ai rien trouvé et j'ai fait confiance au texte qui ouvre le concert et qui est en description de toutes les vidéos : « Remember, that we all are brothers - All people, beasts, trees and stone and wind »
C'est assez intense mine de. Très techno quelque part sur la 2nde partie. Peut-être que c'est ce sur quoi iels dansaient dans les boites de nuit germaniques du 9e siècle 🤔🙃
Dans les commentaires :
« The chant they are singing 5 minutes in is the end of the second of the Merseburg Incantations, the oldest known pieces of Old German literature, dating back to the 9th or 10th century (maybe even 2nd to 5th century, still being debated in the scientific community) »
« I asked my husband if we could blast this while burning our large burn pile in the back yard. He said no, the neighbors might think we’re sacrificing someone. Lol »
^^
(Par contre les commentaires du genre "les jeunes™ maintenant ils écoutent que du rap blablabla" -> poubelle)
EDIT : « Anyone else feeling like its trance music without the electronic component? Puts me in the mood of forest rave party »
Dans les commentaires :
« The chant they are singing 5 minutes in is the end of the second of the Merseburg Incantations, the oldest known pieces of Old German literature, dating back to the 9th or 10th century (maybe even 2nd to 5th century, still being debated in the scientific community) »
« I asked my husband if we could blast this while burning our large burn pile in the back yard. He said no, the neighbors might think we’re sacrificing someone. Lol »
^^
(Par contre les commentaires du genre "les jeunes™ maintenant ils écoutent que du rap blablabla" -> poubelle)
EDIT : « Anyone else feeling like its trance music without the electronic component? Puts me in the mood of forest rave party »
Dans les commentaires :
« For those who are confused on the time frame of what this is representing, it's not necessarily "Vikings," and more or less not Neolithic.
It's Proto-Germanic she's singing here, and in most of their music. It's Pre-Migration Period, 600 years before the Vikings, ~1st Century CE til ~550 when Elder Futhark broke into Younger Futhark. It's based on historical linguistic reconstruction and snippets of text found archeologically and through Tacitus & Saxo Grammaticus, some of which were carved in runes on bone fragments, or described pejoratively by Latin writers, who described the throat singing as like "howling dogs," when it would sound provisionally like in this video, inferred by the Sammi, Mongol, Indigenous Greenland, and Faroese traditions which survived the ages relatively unchanged.
Then they kinda do this English language "rap," which is based on descriptions of Galdralag and Seiðalag -- no surviving examples of which exist outside of very, very scant snippets in the Poetic and Prose Edda, and in descriptions by Saxo Grammaticus and possibly by Tacitus. The low growling and hissing, the forked fingers, is based on descriptions of Seiðr magic. That kind of image survived in the inspiration of "witches" which Christians were afraid of deeply, who were real people practicing a similar indigenous artform, and came to become an abstracted meme of its own that evolved & mutated into the 21st century in a vague smear of pop culture idioms. »
« For those who are confused on the time frame of what this is representing, it's not necessarily "Vikings," and more or less not Neolithic.
It's Proto-Germanic she's singing here, and in most of their music. It's Pre-Migration Period, 600 years before the Vikings, ~1st Century CE til ~550 when Elder Futhark broke into Younger Futhark. It's based on historical linguistic reconstruction and snippets of text found archeologically and through Tacitus & Saxo Grammaticus, some of which were carved in runes on bone fragments, or described pejoratively by Latin writers, who described the throat singing as like "howling dogs," when it would sound provisionally like in this video, inferred by the Sammi, Mongol, Indigenous Greenland, and Faroese traditions which survived the ages relatively unchanged.
Then they kinda do this English language "rap," which is based on descriptions of Galdralag and Seiðalag -- no surviving examples of which exist outside of very, very scant snippets in the Poetic and Prose Edda, and in descriptions by Saxo Grammaticus and possibly by Tacitus. The low growling and hissing, the forked fingers, is based on descriptions of Seiðr magic. That kind of image survived in the inspiration of "witches" which Christians were afraid of deeply, who were real people practicing a similar indigenous artform, and came to become an abstracted meme of its own that evolved & mutated into the 21st century in a vague smear of pop culture idioms. »
<3
Le concert complet (57min) de la vidéo postée là https://links.nekoblog.org/?_lRolQ
La musique traditionnelle mongole <3
EDIT : Dans les commentaires :
« You cant go wrong with folk music. If it survived thousands of years, theres something in it. »
« By the same token, we are probably lucky not to understand the lyrics as they might not be so superior to the "love you babe oh yeah" that we too often hear on western radio..... ;) »
:D
EDIT : Dans les commentaires :
« You cant go wrong with folk music. If it survived thousands of years, theres something in it. »
« By the same token, we are probably lucky not to understand the lyrics as they might not be so superior to the "love you babe oh yeah" that we too often hear on western radio..... ;) »
:D
Et https://phurpa.bandcamp.com/ (via Z)