Viking metal
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Viking metal | |
Stylistic origins | |
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Cultural origins |
Late 1980s, Scandinavia
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Typical instruments | |
Mainstream popularity | Minor, although with a strong underground following worldwide |
Other topics | |
Bands - Norse mythology - Norse paganism |
Viking metal is a term used in reference to heavy metal music closely related to black metal and folk metal, which has a dramatic emphasis on Norse mythology, Norse paganism, and the life and times of Northern and Central Europeans prior to the Christianization of Scandinavia. It is disputed whether Viking metal can be considered a standalone metal subgenre or exists merely as an ideological off-shoot of other subgenres. Viking metal artists may perform in a primarily black metal or folk metal style, and as a result, terms such as "Viking black metal" and "Viking folk metal" are sometimes used to distinguish between approaches within the genre[citation needed].
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[edit] Characteristics
Common among Viking metal is a reverence for pagan Germanic, or specifically Viking, culture with a rejection of contemporary Christianity and disdain for the Christianization of Northern Europe in favor of a pre-Christian and pre-Muslim Pagan society. Thus, most Viking metal bands are derived from Finnish, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and German black metal groups, and are native Scandinavians and Germans, often associating themselves with pagan and Ásatrú beliefs.
However, Viking metal bands do not exclusively sing about Vikings. For example, Thyrfing recently discarded their Viking lyrical themes, and a band such as Swedish band Unleashed who predominantly hail their Middle Aged ancestry lyrically do not fall under the Viking metal category.
The musical definition of Viking metal is wide and substantially varied. Its most common roots are black metal, folk metal and thrash metal. It should be noted that these are not mandatory; Tyr do not have black metal elements, Bathory do not have clear folk metal sounds and Kampfar do not utilise any blatant thrash metal influence. The Viking metal sound usually contrasts the abrasive with the melodic, functions with hypnotic and mesmerising or bold and punchy guitar, proud shouts, growls and or clean singing. A keyboard is optional and usually plays a style akin to symphonic metal with more of an adventuring texture, or placed on top of an aggressive guitar riff. More commonly, Viking metal bands are featuring relations of progressive metal into their music, such as Moonsorrow.
The music is often highly romanticized and epic in composition and sound, reflecting tradition (usually Viking life) itself, and creates an atmosphere rich both in Germanic heroic and metal music tradition. While some bands sing in English to reach a wider audience, many write lyrics in their own native languages (Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish or Icelandic) or archaic versions thereof.
[edit] History
Viking metal may be traced to its references to Nordic gods and warfare. The first group to use an early version of Viking metal was Led Zeppelin with songs like "Immigrant Song" and "No Quarter" with references to famous Vikings and Viking gods. But the first heavy metal band to combine all the elements typical of the genre was Yngwie J. Malmsteen's Rising Force with the song "I Am a Viking" in the 1985 album Marching Out. The first entire album to be dominated by such an ideology and musical reference can be traced to the Swedish black metal band Bathory, with the release of their fourth album in 1988, Blood Fire Death. The album blended the aesthetics of black metal with an atmosphere of war and Norse mythology. Quorthon (the leader of Bathory) explains some of the philosophy behind the musical and lyrical changes from black metal to Viking metal in Bathory on the official website.[1]
Bathory would continue on to innovate the genre further with their next release in 1990, titled Hammerheart. The album further explored the romantic elements of the previous album, and experimented with Scandinavian folk instruments and musical form. Along with Skyclad's The Wayward Sons of Mother Earth, Hammerheart helped form the metal subgenre folk metal. The album is regarded by many as an important and influential release in Viking metal's history.
[edit] Confusion with Nazism
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Some Viking metal fanbases, such as the online Viking metal broadcasting channel Valhala Radio, have experienced actions from anti-Nazi groups. Valhalla Radio has been forced to put up a disclaimer on their site that clarifies that neither they nor Viking metal is linked to Nazism or racism.
The link between Norse mythology and Nazism is generally thought to originate in the years of the Second World War. Use of Norse symbolism was used to construct a Scandinavian nationalism based on their common Viking heritage. This symbolism was so extensively used that even today, some people falsely associate symbols such as Thor's hammer, the sun-cross, Oseberg-art, etc. with Nazism.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
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