Language: Danish (Dansk), English
Genre: Nordic Folk
Label Number: RR7426
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© 2020 Relapse Records
AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek
Produced by Christopher Juul of traditional European folk collective Heilung, Folkesange opens with "Ella," a sweeping, Gothic-styled ballad writ majestic by Myrkur's stacked and layered choral harmonies that meld classical formalism to raw folk. "Leaves of Yggdrasil" is quite sparse with droning nyckelharpa and piano in a spectral waltz. The warmth and calm provided by the acoustic instruments frame Myrkur's singing as intimate and immense, sometimes simultaneously. "Tor i Helheim" makes full use of kulning. The song's melody bears resemblance to Celtic and Anglo-Saxon songs of the 17th century. Juul's production is modern; he separates everything in the studio and adds just a ghostly hint of reverb, creating warmth and immediacy around and under Bruun's voice. One of the set's biggest surprises is the reading of Bob Dylan's "House Carpenter" a 1961 outtake released by the songwriter on Rare & Unreleased: The Bootleg Series, Vols. 1-3. With strummed lyre, nyckelharpa, organic percussion, and mandola, its sense of adventure, doomed romance, and passion defines the lyric. The album's final two songs, "Guderness Vilge" and "Vinter," showcase two distinct sides of folk experimentalism. In the former it's the juxtaposition of Bruun's multi-tracked soprano, droning nyckelharpa, fingerpicked mandola, and deep-tuned frame drums carrying out a sad processional as time itself seems to slip. In the latter, a crystalline piano and wordless vocals deliver a formless minimal -- almost impressionistic -- ballad. Myrkur's Folkesange is a balm for the soul, a stark and heartfelt offering of solace and comfort amid chaos and darkness; its warmth, resonance, tenderness, and lucidity envelope the listener in reveries of nature, mysticism, and love.
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