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laglegt · 2 months
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lost-in-the-fission · 11 months
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islandiis · 2 years
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🎵 !!
actions prompts | accepting (pls I beg)
🎵   - for my muse to catch yours singing in secret .
[He has a habit of talking to himself when he's alone, and it often drifts into singing or humming quietly. Truly, he doesn't even realise he's doing it most of the time, and today is no exception — standing over the coffee machine and singing in Icelandic under his breath, an indie-folk song he's had in his head for days now.]
[But the sudden realization he isn't alone, when he finishes his coffee and catches sight of someone in the doorway, has him jolting. Subsequently he spills hot coffee onto his hand and hisses a curse, setting his cup back down and shaking his hand off to try and alleviate the sting. When he looks up again, an intense red has spread across his cheeks and the bridge of his nose, and he almost looks guilty.]
I— H-hello, I— [He's awfully embarrassed, reaching up with his unscalded hand to hide his face a bit!!] I'm sorry. Uh, coffee? Are you waiting for the coffee machine, or...?
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Werewolves in Scandinavian folklore
Forget all that you thought you knew about werewolves; this post is about Scandinavian werewolves, and they are quite different from the werewolves you can find in modern pop culture.
First of all, Scandinavian werewolves aren't necessarily wolves. According to Isof (the Swedish Institute for Language and Folklore), people transformed into the type of carnivorous animals that could be found within the local region. In southern Sweden, people turned into dogs, in central Sweden they usually turned into wolves, and in the northern parts of the country, people often took the shape of a bear. There are also stories of people turning into other animals, for example wolverines, but these are far less common. In Norway, it seems like people mainly turned into bears or wolves.
There are many regional names for werewolves:
hamnvarg (hamr wolf)
hamnbjörn (hamr bear)
hamløper (hamr runner)
fähusbjörn (cattle house bear)
knivskedsbjörn (knife sheath bear)
lappbjörn (racial slur¹ + bear)
manulv (man wolf)
manvarg (man wolf)
mankuse (man devil?²)
marulv (mare wolf)
vittvarg (vittra + wolf)
The act of being a werewolf could also be described like
gå björn (walk [around like a] bear)
gå i björn (walk in bear [hamr])
spå i björn ('divinate in bear'³)
löpa i björn (run in bear [hamr])
gå i björnham (walk in bear hamr)
vänd till björn (turn [in]to [a] bear)
(In cases where the person turned into a wolf, it would of course be called "löpa i varg" etc.)
(In standard Swedish, werewolf is 'varulv,' which means 'man wolf.')
"Stundum i vargs ham"
In Strengleikar (which probably was created around 1250), the Norwegian translator of Bisclaretz ljóð/ Bisclavret has added his personal experience to the story. In his childhood, he had known of a rich farmer who was "hamskiftisk" (a shapeshifter). "Stundum var han maðr. Stundum i vargs ham." ('Sometimes he was a man. Sometimes [he was] in wolf hamr.')
Three legs
"The werewolf looked like a large, shaggy dog with fiery red eyes, and who was running on three legs. The person who [...] has the tragic fate of trotting around at night as a werewolf, was transformed as soon as he fell asleep in the evening, [in such a way that] one of his arms turned into a tail, the other one a leg, and the head was made pointy like a wolf's head, and after [the transformation] was completed, he jumped, on his three legs, out of the bed, and began his horrid night walks."
- Nicolovius, Folklivet i Skytts härad
Now is probably a good time for me to mention that Scandinavian werewolves don't spread the curse by biting people. So put that notion aside for the rest of this read.
In Scandinavian folklore, people turn into werewolves because of magic. Werewolf transformation can be divided into two groups: voluntary and involuntary transformations.
Voluntary Transformations
The voluntary transformations usually involve magical objects - a belt, a salve, the skin of an animal etc. Many sägner talk about belts that were made of human skin. But any old belt made of human skin wouldn't suffice - oh no! The crafting process included several magical rituals, performed under the right circumstances, by the right kind of person. It must also be used correctly, or it won't work. The older generations often made sure to teach the younger about these (and other) rituals and spells before their confirmation. If people had "learned some of God's words" before they learned the traditional spells and rituals, the magic wouldn't be as powerful.
Some examples of voluntary transformations:
"If they put on a bear skin or wolf skin, they could turn into bears or wolves. They threw off the skin when they wanted to become human again."
Västra Emterviks socken, Värmland, Sweden
"[At Vargkluggbacka] there lived a merchant from Tukkum, Estonia, who had a wolf skin and inhabited [the shape of] a wolf, until they shot him dead. It didn't work until they made a bullet out of a button that was made from inherited silver."
Runö, Saaremaa, Estonia
"I don't know of any other werewolves than the one that spent a whole year hunting in Transtrand and Lima in Dalarna. They shot it here in this area on a Christmas morning. An old man had made a bullet from his wife's wedding ring, and that was the bullet that killed [the bear]. [....] It was a boy who had turned into a bear. It is said that they found the knife and the belt inside of the [bear] skin."
Dalby, Värmland, Sweden
"Some men had a bear skin [that they would] crawl into."
Mora, Dalarna, Sweden
People would typically want to become a werewolf so that they could get revenge. Therefore, they often turned into the animal that would cause the most harm.
Another reason could be starvation - people who didn't have enough to eat would allegedly turn into bears. (This explanation is very uncommon.)
The voluntary transformations could usually be reversed by performing the transformation ritual again, but - you guessed it - in reverse. People who shape shifted with the help of an animal skin would simply remove it when they wanted to return to their human form.
People who turned themselves into werewolves often went mad.
Involuntary Transformations
Involuntary transformations could happen for a number of reasons. It could be the result of a curse. These types of curses are common in medieval ballads, as well as in sägner. However, the most popular cure in the ballads (drinking the life blood of a family member) is almost unheard of in sägner. But the belief that a werewolf can lift the curse by eating a fetus from a pregnant woman can be found in medieval ballads and sägner alike.
In the ballad of the enchanted knight (Den förtrollade riddaren), the two gory cures are combined:
[A stepmother abuses her step son, and the turns him into a wolf and tells him to go live in the forest. He ambushes her and pulls her off the horse]:
"Then I with resentment / ripped the fetus out of her body.
When I had drunk my brother's blood / I turned into a good and noble knight."
In the Danish version of this story, the werewolf/protagonist is a young maiden. She rips her unborn brother out of the stepmother's womb, and then runs into the forest with the baby. But she doesn't kill him:
"I bit him in his pinky toe / [because I wanted] him to be baptized and christened."
It is said that a pregnant woman who got attacked by a werewolf could save herself by throwing a piece of clothing at the beast. The werewolf had to rip the garment to shreds, which hopefully would give the woman enough time to escape.
This is seemingly what the maiden is trying to do in the medieval ballad The Werewolf (Varulven):
[The maiden is going to meet her beloved in the forest. They have had premarital sex, and the maiden is pregnant. In the forest, she is attacked by a (were)wolf]:
"Dear wolf, don't bite me. / I will give you my silken sark.
- I don't care about your silken sark / Your young life and blood has to go."
[The maiden keeps pleading for her life, but the wolf refuses to listen. She climbs into an oak tree. The wolf digs up all the roots of the oak, and the tree falls over. The maiden screams. Her beloved hears this, and saddles his horse. But even though he is riding "a little faster than the bird was flying," it is too late]:
"On his way to the blooming grove, / he meets the wolf with the fetus in its mouth."
A band called Garmarna has recorded a version of this ballad (that doesn't include the verse about the fetus):
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The belief that werewolves attacked pregnant women was so well established that some versions of these ballads don't even mention pregnancy or fetuses.
With this in mind, it's no wonder that many pregnant women didn't want to leave their homes alone, but would insist on bringing a man with them for protection:
"Werewolves were considered to be particularly dangerous to pregnant women, who they wanted to rip apart; and because of this, such women rarely dared to go out in the dark without being accompanied by a male person."
- Nicolovius, Folklivet i Skytts härad
But in some sägner, the werewolf (or rather: werebear) doesn't harm the fetus, because the werebear can break the curse by raising the child that it has ripped from the womb.
According to Dagligt liv i Norden i det sekstende århundrede by Troels Troels-Lund, this was a telltale sign that the bear was a transformed human:
"Rigtige Bjørne var derimod kendelige paa, at de med største Velbehag aad Fostret."
(Loosely translated: "Real bears, on the other hand, could be recognised by the fact that they ate the fetus with great pleasure.")
That being said, there are plenty of stories about real bears ripping fetuses out of the womb and raising them as their own.
Scandinavian folklore is diverse, and a little bit contradictory.
Other werewolf cures include:
telling the werewolf that they are a werewolf
calling them by their real name
showing them compassion and giving them food
hitting them across their mouth
convincing the person who turned them into a werewolf to lift the curse
destroying the magical objects that had been used to turn them into a werewolf (in case such things had been used)
In some cases, the curse is lifted automatically after a certain amount of time (usually seven years):
"The old woman in Sofigården turned her own son into a wolf. She was angry that he felt compassion for the wolves. When they were hungry, and approached [the house], he usually made sure that they got something to eat. One time he fed them a cat. Then the mother came and said: 'You will be allowed to [stay] with them too." He was transformed into a wolf, and traveled with the wolf pack. He was gone for seven years. Then he came [back] to Sofigården. When he walked through the door, the wolf skin fell from him. The mother took it and burned it. But then the boy started digging in the ashes and howled like a wolf. When it was the time of Christmas Eve, a throng of wolves came to the farm. When the boy saw the wolf pack, he cried and went out to them. He understood the language of the wolves. He took the largest goat and carried it out to them. Since it was Christmas Eve, his mother didn't scold him for it. The animals on that farm never ran the risk of being killed by wolves."
Norra Finnskoga, Värmland, Sweden
Xenophobia
Many sägner about werewolf curses are xenophobic. The Sami, as well as Finns, are often accused of turning people into werewolves:
"He got [the curse of being] transformed into a wolf in Finland. He obviously must have spoken with some Finnish woman and been cursed [by her]. He had to be a wolf until someone called him by his real name. His name was Lasse. His wife waited for him, but he never returned back home. One time, the wife was baking. Then she saw a wolf outside [the house]. She went out with her baker's peel to scare away [the wolf]. 'Why are you roaming around here?" she said, "Shoo on you, Lasse!" Then the man appeared in front of her. He was released from [the curse], but the tail was still on him, it never disappeared. Someone from Appuna told me. It is said to have happened during her grandmother's lifetime."
Högby socken, Östergötland, Sweden
"My aunt told me so many times about the one time, when she was standing by the Mösch lake, and she saw a wolf on the other side [of the lake] who was looking at her in a cunning way. My aunt was young back then. She said: 'Poor you, Per, are you standing there?' Then the wolf cloak fell from him, and he went around the lake and thanked her. It was [racial slur for Sami people] hags who turned people into critters. [People] could turn into wolves, and have to be with other wolves, and when they killed an animal, they had to eat, even though they didn't want to."
Älgarås socken, Västergötland, Sweden
The Sami and Finns were thought to have the ability to talk to animals. The story from Värmland that I have already quoted continues:
"There where wolves everywhere around here a long time ago, they came from the place where the Finns lived, they were wearing [animal skins] (transformed from humans!) Then a Finn came down here once, and when I told him how I dreaded the many wolves, he sent them back to the place they came from."
Västra Emterviks socken, Värmland, Sweden
The Roma people could also be accused of cursing people and turning them into werewolves:
"[...] a group of g*psies appears, and an old woman, who is their leader, enters [the house] and begs insolently. She is rejected and threatens [the tailor], but is driven out with a cane. Then she hits [the tailor] three times on the head with her magical wand, and he turns into a wolf and runs howling into the forest."
- En mycket märkwärdig Historia om en Wandringsman som i sjuttonde seklet blef, i tio års tid, förvandlad till en Warg. Mycket förunderlig att läsa (1846), as told by Ella Odstedt in Varulven i svensk tradition (1943)
These beliefs are racist, and they are understood and identified as such in Scandinavian discourse.
However, it is important to keep in mind that the folklore surrounding werewolves is older than the racist narratives that have since become a part of it. The xenophobia can often be traced back to specific historical events, like wars or societal changes. After a war with Russia, people in Sweden accused the Russians of turning Swedish soldiers into wolves and then sending them to terrorise Swedish farmers...
Werewolves tales that mention the Sami or Finns are more common in the northern parts of Scandinavia.
In some sägner, a Sami farmhand/servant/similar turns into a wolf or a bear at night, eats the livestock of the farmer who hired him, and then turns back into a human and goes back to sleep in his bed in the farmhouse.
It should be noted that members of any marginalized community could be accused of turning people into werewolves. This is a friendly reminder that the term vargamor is a slur in this context. The way it's currently being used on Tumblr has no basis in Scandinavian folklore.
But yeah. When society is destabilised, or things change, or when people feel scared, it's always handy to have a scapegoat.
Since the majority of my followers aren't from Scandinavia, let me give you some historical context:
Most people were either farmers or city dwellers (living in one place, not moving around)
The Bible (allegedly) tells people to live and work as farmers
Therefore, traveling people are not Good Christians™️
Criminals could literally be sentenced to "be driven out of town"
Which sort of explains why people didn't trust travelers
The world was also divided into cultivated land (where humans lived) and the wilderness (where animals and magical beings resided)
Travelers, or people who lived outside of the "human" realm were looked upon with suspicion
The Sami usually lived in "the wilderness"
So did many of the Finns who migrated to Sweden in the 17th century (they started cultivating forest land)
The Roma people traveled (because they weren't allowed to stay anywhere, basically)
Poor people often had to live in huts in or close to the forest
Lots of poor people also had to wander around and beg for food, clothes, shelter and so on
You cannot separate our folklore from our history - they are intertwined
Anyway, werewolves...
People who had been turned into werewolves, but then had the curse lifted, could still understand what the animals were saying. A different version of the story of the cursed tailor goes:
"A human could be forced to take the shape of an animal. It happened through someone else's magical arts. It is said that there was a tailor who got transformed into a wolf. But once the curse was broken, and he had become a human again, he understood the howls of the wolves. One night, he and the farmer who he was sewing for stood out on the porch and talked. Then the wolves started howling in the forest. "How the wolves howl! I wonder what they're saying?" said the farmer. "Oh, they said that they're going to kill your white mare tonight, so you should probably bring her home," the tailor said. But the farmer didn't listen to him, and left the mare out in the enclosure for the night. But in the morning, the wolves had been there killed her."
Lenhovda socken, Småland, Sverige
As mentioned in the sägen from Älgarås, [most] people could no longer control their own actions when they had turned into werewolves. This made them dangerous to the people around them:
"They didn't know where [Gråbein-Arne] came from. But there was still a rumour that said that he was a werewolf - that [someone] had cursed him in such a way that he sometimes turned into a wolf. And then he could become a danger to both humans and animals. One day, when Arne and a maid were harvesting hay together, he felt that the curse was coming over him. Therefore he warned the girl that he had to climb up in a tree. And no later than she had climbed the tree, Arne threw his scythe and clothing, and slipped into a wolf hamr, started howling like a wolf, and set off into the forest. It wasn't too long before he returned, in human form, put on his clothes again, and continued his work. But he told the girl that she had escaped up into the tree at the last minute, because when he had his wolf hours, he couldn't stop himself from ripping apart every living [thing]. After this kind of wolf hours, he was pale and limp, so it probably tool its toll on him. But otherwise he was compliant and friendly."
Tresfjord, Møre og Romsdal fylke, Norway
The notion that people could sense the transformation before it happened is quite widespread:
"At the farmer H---- [...], a beggar entered one night, who with the permission of the [farmer and his wife] lied down to rest on the bench next to the tile stove, while the farmer, his wife, and the servants, worked in candlelight; but as soon as [the begger] had fallen asleep, he yelled in his sleep: 'here grows a tail'; which made everyone who was present jump to their feet, as they knew that these words always⁴ preceded the horrible transformation, and watched in terror, as a large, thre-legged werewolf snuck out of the house."
- Nicolovius, Folklivet i Skytts härad
Interestingly enough, a sägen from Asarum, Blekinge (Sweden) states that "such a förhamning ('changing of hamn') didn't pose a threat to livestock, but to women."
"Through the Light-Headedness of the Mother"
Curses weren't the only thing that could turn people into werewolves. In southern Sweden, it was believed that you could make your labor process less painful if you crawled under a mare, gave birth to the baby on a spot where a mare had rolled around, or if you crawled through a horse harness or the foetal membrane of a foal. By doing this, giving birth would be just as easy for you as [people thought] it was for a horse. However, this practice was frowned upon, as it was believed that it harmed the unborn child. If it was a boy, it would become a werewolf. (If it was a girl, it would become a mare.)
(The mother would be blamed for all kinds of birth defects - real or imagined. Don't look a hare in the face while you're pregnant, or your child will have a cleft lip...)
As I have already mentioned in a post about cats, it was believed that a newborn baby would become a werewolf if a cat stared at the babies crib. And if a cat walked under a coffin, and then under a bed where someone was giving birth, this would also turn the child into a werewolf.
According to Isof, certain physical characteristics could be a sign of someone being a werewolf: monobrows and bushy eyebrows, worn down or damaged teeth, facial scars, a lack of beard or body hair... If a person didn't have a shadow, that was a clear sign. If people ran up stairs or hills on all fours, they were probably werewolves. People who were tired during the day were also suspected of being werewolves.
The full moon isn't mentioned in Scandinavian sägner about werewolves. It is common for the transformation to happen at night, but it could also happen during the day. Some werewolves would transform every evening, others would have specific days, months, or times of the year (like Christmas). Some, like the boy from Sofigården mentioned above, would be werewolves for years.⁵ In other cases, they were cursed for life.
Killing a Werewolf
It was hard, almost impossible, to kill a werewolf:
"A [person] who walked in bear hamr was almost invulnerable."
Lima, Dalarna, Sweden
This was especially true for werewolves who had transformed voluntarily. During the transformation ritual, they would mention all human weapons, which would make the weapons ineffective and harmless.
Werewolves could be killed with silver bullets, or with ammunition containing pages from a psalmody, communion wafers, or other sacred [Christian] things.
Sometimes the werewolf was killed by a (seemingly random) household object that they forgot to mention during the transformation ritual. In one sägen, the werewolf is killed with a flax rippler.
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Flax rippler, Nordiska museet
However, killing the beast wouldn't necessarily break the curse:
"If you shot a werewolf, he would die, because [the bullet] hit the person, and the hamr would stay [intact], [and therefore] nobody would know that it was a human [that had been shot]."
Älghult, Småland, Sweden
The plethora of phrases used to describe the hamr concept suggests that different regions/people had their own (local) take on it. (I will probably make a separate post about this eventually.)
Gender
Even though it is more common for men to become werewolves, there are some cases of women being transformed:
"[...] but still I remember that in my youth, there was a horrid old woman who was said to sometimes 'löpa björn' ('run bear'= turn into a bear), and who for that reason was called Biörngäntan ('the bear girl⁶').
- Glysisvallur by Olof Broman, Hälsingland
"A sägen has been told in Rissätra, about how someone from the village once shot a woman who had 'worn [a] bear hamr.' It was revealed because the she-bear had braided hair like a woman."
Rissätra, Dalarna, Sweden
This post is getting ridiculously long, so let's end it with an incredibly vague story:
"In Russia it is quite common for the entire wedding entourage to be turned into wolves, and afterwards, you can recognize the bridal couple by the white wreaths around their necks."
Ormsö, Läänemmaa, Estonia
TL;DR Scandinavian werewolves
Appear in the shape of wolves, bears, dogs, or wolverines, depending on the region
Usually have three legs
They aren't affected by the full moon
But it's common that they transform at night
They don't spread the curse by biting people
People become werewolves because of magic - their own or someone else's
There are many different ways to break the curse
¹This name probably comes from the belief that the Sami people were able to turn people into animals. You should under no circumstances refer to anyone (or anything) Sami using the word "lapp." However, "lapp" can also mean something like "a small piece of a flat material" (like paper or fabric); a note or a patch. You need to look at the context. This is especially true for compound words - "lapptäcke" just means quilt...
²Kuse has many translations. It could also mean wolf, thug, insect... (SAOB)
³But what this really means is "using magic to transform into a bear"
⁴This obviously isn't true for all of Scandinavia (or even Skåne). Folklore is very diverse and inconsistent.
⁵Usually seven years, according to Isof.
⁶Alternatively: the bear spinster
Sources:
Isof
Ella Odstedt: Varulven i svensk folktradition
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highclasstrashposts · 2 months
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Very Belated Music Opinions (with links)
Top 10 albums that came out in 2023 (in no particular order):
1. STRUGGLER by Genesis Owusu
favorite song: Leaving the Light
2. Happiness (Without a Catch) by Bug Hunter
favorite song: Coward
3. MID AIR by Paris Texas
Favorite song: Everybody's Safe Until ...
4. blómi by Susnne Sundfør
favorite song: leikara ljóð
5. HELLMODE by Jeff Rosenstock
favorite song: I WANNA BE WRONG
6. The Rise And Fall of a Midwest Princess by Chapell Roan
favorite song: Femininomenon
7. Girl with Fish by feeble little horse
favorite song: Steamroller
8. 3D Country by Geese
favorite song: Demote
9. All of This Will End by Indigo de Souza
favorite song: Smog
10. 93696 by Liturgy
favorite song: 93696
Here's 10 hours of music I like.
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knightofleo · 4 months
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Susanne Sundfør | leikara ljóð
This is my final call This is my final call for you Give me, give me, give me shock treatment Give me, give me, give me shock treatment Break the ice, and drown me Take me high, take me high To the depths of your soul I may be walking on water But still I'm stumbling in the reeds
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suleskerry · 5 months
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Idk if leikara ljóð will be my number one on spotify (I think ethel has that one cornered) but it's definitely the most like. individual auditory journey aesthetically pleasing to ME
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Another ask game from @ofstormsandfire, this time for a song starting with each letter of my url... and what a long url it is. This is what I get for stubbornly refusing to alter my url or icon since joining the site eight years ago.
I'm also going above and beyond on this one and saying who the relevant blorbo and their show is for each one, if any. Because what else are favorite songs for, but thinking about blorbos?
The Adventure of a Lifetime, by Peter Crowley
Hopes & Dreams, by Brunuhville
Eternity Served Cold, from Homestuck. Relevant blorbo: Asvoria from Dragonlance.
Gea, by Zaria
Réquiem para un Ángel, by Réquiem para un Ángel
Eye of the Storm, by Aviators. Relevant blorbo: Yang from RWBY.
Ascension, by Miracle of Sound
The Wonders Still Awaiting, by Xandria
Asher Bara, by Shalsheles
נעימת מלאכים, by חיים ישראל (it's a stretch, I know, but I couldn't find a better one for N)
Daughters of Chaos, by Motoi Sakuraba (Dark Souls 1 OST). Relevant blorbo: Quela from Dark Souls 1.
Perfect, by Miracle of Sound. Relevant blorbos: Caprica Six, Angel Six, and Pegasus Six from Battlestar Galactica.
Only Us, by Miracle of Sound. Relevant blorbo: Salem from RWBY.
We Rise, by Aviators. Relevant blorbo: everyone from Elden Ring.
Epilogue, by Motoi Sakuraba and Yuka Kitamura (OST for a hypothetical game that thankfully was never made)
Requiem for the Light, by Keldian
Fallen Leaves, by Miracle of Sound. Relevant blorbo: everyone from Elden Ring, again.
Unembraced, by Xandria. Relevant blorbo: Radagon from Elden Ring.
Ljóð í sand, by Árstíðir
Verse, by Alec Holowka (Aquaria OST)
Embers, by Max Richter. Relevant blorbo: Gwyndolin from Dark Souls 1.
Reach for the Summit, by Lena Raine (Celeste OST)
Symphony No. 1 (part 2, part 3), by Amberian Dawn
Your Stories I'll Remember, by Xandria. Relevant blorbo: Hope from my friends, who thought making me come up with 24 songs like this was a good idea.
I'm not going to subject anyone in particular to this one, but anyone who sees this is welcome to consider yourself tagged if you so desire.
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wearileigh · 2 years
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L?
Leaving Eden (live version) -- Antimatter
Lone -- Chelsea Wolfe
The Last One I Made -- Pim Stones
Lágnætti -- Sólstafir
Ljóð í sand -- Árstíðir
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tannerhendricks · 24 days
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Listen to "leikara ljóð - Edit" on TIDAL
Check out this track on TIDAL: "leikara ljóð" by Susanne Sundfør https://tidal.com/track/282334148
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laglegt · 9 days
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somethingswell · 8 months
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Til eru fræ (There are seeds) - Icelandic to English
There are seeds which receive this sentence: To fall to the Earth, but never become flowers. Too, there are ships which never reach land, and verdant lands which sink into the sea, and hopes which lose their wings, and lips which are never kissed, and lovers who never meet, and dreams which never come true.
There are poems which live and die at once, and small children who never become men.
(poem by Davíð Stefánsson, 1924 // translated by me)
Original
Til eru fræ, sem fengu þennan dóm: Að falla í jörð, en verða aldrei blóm. Eins eru skip, sem aldrei landi ná, og iðgræn lönd, er sökkva í djúpin blá, og von sem hefur vængi sína misst, og varir, sem að aldrei geta kysst, og elskendur, sem aldrei geta mæst og aldrei geta sumir draumar ræst.
Til eru ljóð, sem lifna og deyja í senn, og lítil börn, sem aldrei verða menn.
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la-zu-li · 1 year
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piasgermany · 1 year
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[Album] Susanne Sundfør kündigt neues Album "blómi" an!
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Die norwegische Singer/Songwriterin Susanne Sundfør kündigt ihr sechstes Album "blómi" an, das am 28. April 2023 über Bella Union erscheinen wird. Beits jetzt stellt sie mit "alyosha" und "leikara ljóð" zwei neue Songs vor.
Fünf Jahre nachdem Sundfør ihre Karriere mit dem Folk-inspirierten, emotionalen Album "Music for People In Trouble" persönlich neu definiert hat, taucht die Künstlerin und Produzentin auf dem gefühlvollen "blómi" noch tiefer in ihre eigene Mythologie ein. Blómi bedeutet auf Nordisch "erblühen" und vereint spezielle Aspekte von Susannes Lebensgeschichte als frischgebackene Mutter zu einem lebensbejahenden Werk, das sich von allen ihren bisherigen Veröffentlichungen unterscheidet. Sundfør schrieb "blómi" dabei vor allem als Liebesbrief an ihre kleine Tochter in einer zunehmend instabileren Welt. “I want this album to be an antidote to the darkness that dominates our culture today. I want to show that there’s another way to see reality, if one dares to take the leap of hoping for a more beautiful world.”
Als Vorboten teilt Sundfør die beiden Songs "alyosha" und "leikara ljóð", die die nordische Sprache und Mythologie miteinder verknüpfen und sich dabei auch vom russischen Schriftsteller Dostojewski inspirieren lassen. “Written to my husband“, erzählt Susanne. “Alyosha represents the ultimate good human being in Dostoevsky’s world. Someone who is in harmony with himself and the world, a deeply spiritual person, in love with mankind, and who always believes in our ability to do good.”
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Tracklist "blómi": 01. orð vǫlu 02. ashera's song 03. blómi 04. rūnā 05. fare thee well 06. leikara Ijóð 07. alyosha 08. ṣānnu yārru lī 09. náttsǫngr 10. orð hjartans
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undri72 · 1 year
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Ég á frænda sem er svo frægur að það var búin til bronsstytta af honum sem einhver sá ástæðu til að stela. Þorsteinn Valdimarsson, stundum nefndur skáld gróandans og gleðinnar, dvaldi oft og reglulega í tjaldi í Hallormsstaðaskógi þar sem styttan af honum stóð um árabil. Ég þekkti hann sem Steina frænda eða Steina bróður eins og amma kallaði hann alltaf. Ég var ekki nema 5 ára þegar hann dó svo kynni mín voru í gegnum sögur og ljóð sem hann skildi eftir sig og amma sagði mér. Og þau voru ekki fá, amma gat alltaf flutt ljóð eftir frænda sem hæfði tilefninu og hún kunni þau öll utanbókar. Ég minnist frænda míns í dag vegna ljóðs sem ég rakst á í fallegri bók þar sem Vigdís Finnbogadóttir telur sín uppáhalds ljóð, en frændi á þar fjögur. Margir þekkja hann sem skáldið sem kynnti limruformið fyrir Íslendingum og hér er skínandi dæmi um það. Guð varp handfylli' af sandi út í hyl; þá var heimurinn orðinn til með sandi af gæðum - nema seðlum og kvæðum; þar kom Satan og andvakan til. - Þorsteinn Valdimarsson https://www.instagram.com/p/Ckn2A9-IdWY/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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