Folkesange
“Folk tales help us be human, they bring us guidance,” Amalie Bruun tells Apple Music. “The archetypes \[of humanity\] are in these folk tales, and that’s why we still listen to this music. It’s why they were passed down from generation to generation.” The Danish black metal/dark folk artist known as Myrkur (the Icelandic word for “darkness”) has always drawn on old Scandinavian stories, and on *Folkesange*, she focuses on them entirely. The album is half original songs, half reinterpretations of ancient stories and folk music. “Kris\[toffer Rygg, producer\] and I wanted to create an authentic folk record, but not a dirty museum piece,” she says. “We wanted lots of space, like being in nature, where you have the space to breathe. We wanted it to be cinematic and epic.” In her track-by-track guide below, Bruun discusses motherhood, Norse mythology, immense personal loss, and more of the stories on *Folkesange*. **Ella** “The opening is a heartbeat drum sound. We wanted to capture that at the start. I’d found out I was pregnant three days into the recording of this album, so I was thinking a lot about heartbeats and hoping to hear one—which I did. \[Falling pregnant\] wasn’t planned, and nothing changed in terms of recording, but it changed me spiritually and mentally, and had a big effect on the outcome of this album.” **Fager som en Ros** “It means ‘as beautiful as a rose.’ It\'s this traditional Swedish folk song that I\'ve performed for years and I just adore that song. It\'s classic folk, and it sounds a bit evil, but it\'s also a romantic song about a young couple. The last verse is so sinister, about how things were in the olden days—\[the couple\] have to consummate their marriage in a bed in the middle of the floor with everyone watching. It’s classic, weird human behavior, right?” **Leaves of Yggdrasil** “It’s an ode to Norse mythology and my Scandinavian roots. I felt like writing a modern version of a medieval Anglo-Saxon folk song, because I just love those Celtic, English, Scottish songs. Plus the lyrics are folk-tale-esque, but they\'re also from my own life—at the time, I was separated from my husband. It was very hard, so I wrote this song.” **Ramund** “Ramund is an old Danish folk tale and one of the most famous ones here. So covering it or interpreting it is almost like, ‘You? One more?’ But I\'ve always loved that song. The story about this arrogant warrior guy who goes against all these trolls and he ends up taking the emperor\'s daughter and decapitating the emperor. It\'s like a hero tale, a legend, but I just think it has this sense of humor and this barbarianism that I think is really great.” **Tor i Helheim** “One of the sagas of the Icelandic Edda was reinterpreted in the Romantic era by the national poet of Denmark, Oehlenschläger. I love the reinterpretation, so I wanted to create a melody for it, and that\'s what that became. Tor and Loke go on a quest and they end up in Hel’s underworld—she’s the queen of the underworld, the personification of death. And it’s just the conversation they have with her. And they need her to help them and give them directions. All the furniture down there is made of bones and skeletons, it’s quite creepy, it’s just great. And I’ve always found there’s humor when it involves Loke and Tor. Loke is a trickster and Tor is a god, a hero, he’s also a little clumsy. And Hel, she\'s ice-cold, half dead.” **Svea** “I wrote it on the nyckelharpa, the national instrument of Sweden. I listen to a lot of Swedish folk music, and polska is a type of folk song that they have. This is my ode to that. It’s really just the rhythm of that specific type of folk. Stefan \[Brisland-Ferner\] is an incredible musician, and he plays viola on it. His band, Garmarna, is a very influential Swedish folk band, and he just took it to a whole different level on the recording. We recorded it live, and his feels—the swing, the beat, where he lands on the notes—you can just tell it runs in his blood. I love it.” **Harpens Kraft** “It\'s one of many ballads about the power of the magical harp that they wrote back then. It\'s another one of those subjects that just keeps coming back and you can interpret it as you will. I heard it when I was much younger, in a Danish folk song from the ’70s, and I just couldn\'t believe how great it was. I love that call-response thing in folk music where the choir answers me. We wanted to create this sort of ghostly environment, a ghostly feeling, especially with the vocals, to match the lyrics.” **Gammelkäring** “It’s about this old wise woman of the town, a little bit of a witch; she’s respected by some and ridiculed by others. And she’s talking nonsense. It almost has a nursery rhyme feel to it for me, more than being anything serious. I just love the melody.” **House Carpenter** “Since I was a child I thought this song was very, very powerful and beautiful. And as I\'ve grown older, as a woman, I like the message of the song—but I did skip some verses at the end, where they go to Hell. I wanted to leave it more open, because \[those verses\] give it a Christian feel that I didn\'t really care to include. The story is about this woman, she probably had a decent marriage with an honest man, a house carpenter, and then she gets approached by a rich and powerful man and she gets blinded by the wealth. So she just leaves her husband and children behind. And then, of course, it doesn\'t go well for her. When we play it at concerts, I always say, ‘Women, you should stay with your house carpenter.’” **Reiar** “It’s almost like the more Nordic, brutish version of \'House Carpenter.\' The Viking version of that! He just drinks too much Brennivín, he\'s just a little too much, this guy. He slams the table and the whole house is falling down. He takes his wife, he takes his bride how he will.” **Gudernes Vilje** “I was very reluctant to put this song on the record because I knew I was going to have to talk about this again. But it’s very important to me. And if I\'m an artist, then why would I stay away from that? That\'s exactly my job. Before I got pregnant with the baby I have now, I lost a pregnancy. You get this gift given to you, but then it gets taken away very brutally. Sometimes the only way to survive these types of events is to accept that it\'s completely out of your control. It was written more or less the day the miscarriage happened. And then two months later, I was pregnant with Otto, my boy. That doesn\'t necessarily heal the wound, but it\'s something. It was difficult when I recorded the song, because I had Otto in my belly and I was thinking of this other baby that never happened. A lot of women have written to me after this came out as a single, saying they were very moved, because so many of us have been through it, but we don\'t talk about it. It’s like we’re afraid to talk about it or even think about it, but that only makes it harder to sit alone with this pain. And we feel very silly. How can I grieve something that never was? I’ve realized this is simply part of being a woman. It\'s not a sickness, but it is a burden we bear because we are the ones who magically create human beings.” **Vinter** “I wrote this some years ago. I was sitting inside, it was snowing outside, and I was just looking at snowflakes and the light reflecting back. I don’t know, the song just came out. It sounded like memories, the concept of a memory, whether it was childhood or maybe it\'s a memory that never happened, but that\'s what that song sounds like to me. \[The end of the album\] is the only place that it could go, really. This is a very Northern European way of living, but I live according to the seasons. Accepting and respecting them is the best way to live. And winter is at the end, it closes the book. I felt that was a good way of ending the record too.”
Amalie Bruun has always paved her own path, challenging underground preconceptions of heavy metal ever since the release of her debut Myrkur EP in 2014. Her first two full-length studio albums, 2015’s M and 2017’s Mareridt, recast black metal in the most personal yet expansive of terms, their blending of Amalie’s Danish folk roots with tempestuous internal struggles breathing new life into a subgenre whose followers can be rigidly possessive. With the release of her new album, Folkesange, Amalie Bruun has set out to journey into the very heart of the Scandinavian culture that marked her childhood. Folkesange relinquishes black metal for a refined yet far-reaching evocation of traditional folk, combining songs ancient and new to sublimely resonant effect. After the nightmare-induced visions that wrought themselves throughout Mareridt, Folkesange offers an emotional sanctuary, a means to reconnect to something permanent and nature-aligned. It’s an awareness that’s become deeply bound to the album’s organic, regenerative spirit, from the opening track Ella’s heartbeat, frame-drum percussion and crystalline vocals that become the grounding for a rapt, richly textured awakening, to the gentle carousel of the closing Vinter, with its nostalgia-steeped connotations of seasonal, snowfall-bewitched awe. Storytelling, rites of passage, and the invocation of a continuity that passes through time and generation are all part of folk music’s tapestry, and Folkesange taps into all these currents in their most essential form. In part a purist’s approach to the genre, free from over-interpretation and fusion, the use of traditional instruments throughout, such as nyckelharpa, lyre, and mandola offer a deeper, more tactile connection to their source, an unbroken line of communication back to the past. But the album is no museum piece; it resonates in the here and now, aided by the spacious production of Heilung member and musical collaborator Christopher Juul. Cinematic yet intimate, Folkesange exists in a state of boundless reverie, bourne by string-led drones, cyclical, elegiac rhythms and Amalie’s frictionless voice, all carrier signals for deep-rooted, ancestral memories, and associations felt on an elemental level. It’s a binding of the otherworldly and the earthy that echoes the the subject matter of many of the tales themselves. Written by Amalie, Leaves Of Yggdrasil’s medieval cadences bind tragic love story and mythology, full of both fairytale wonder and deeply human foible. Tor i Helheim, its dreamily persistent rhythm redolent of both innocence and encroachment, is based on a poem from the Icelandic Eddas, relating a journey into the underworld of Hel where the sparse nature of the accompaniment becomes the medium that carries you along in its thrall. An immersive experience in its own right, but also belonging to a wider, pagan folk-based renaissance that has attracted a devoted following worldwide, Folkesange answers a need that has become ever more pressing in turbulent times. A zeroing in on a resonance that is both intrinsic and enduring, it’s a rediscovery of personal grounding, and an experience that reaches beyond culture to remind us of a shared, deeply rooted inheritance. A tuning fork that binds the personal and the universal, Folkesange is a reminder that the most transcendent experiences are those closest to home. (Words by Jonathan Selzer)
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