#BandcampFriday, trying out Corvus Corax, Hüetære, Ursprung. #NeverSpotify #OldNorse #Heathensky #VikingMusic

Well, hopefully this is a nice surprise, assuming you all like vikings!

https://youtu.be/e2kNbC-TdLE

#Youtube #Youtubemusic #Aimusic #music #vikingmusic

Keel Against the Storm

YouTube
Had a killer pow-wow with Vince Millett of Secret Archives of the Vatican. We talked Elowen, previewed An Age Undreamed Of, broke the rules on Viking tunes, and teased the next VVSS chapter: Sellsword. Beats, blades & blood.
🎧 https://vikingsvssamurai.com/elowen-an-age-undreamed-of-a-pow-wow-with-vince-millet-of-the-secret-archives-of-the-vatican/
#VVSS #Elowen #VikingMusic #Sellsword #CinematicBeats
Elowen & An Age Undreamed Of: A Pow-Wow with Vince Millett of The Secret Archives of the Vatican

Diving into Secret Archives of the Vatican's latest: Elowen & An Age Undreamed Of. Plus, a chat about Viking tunes & a sneak peek into VIKINGS vs SAMURAI's "Sellsword." Stay tuned! 🎶

VIKINGS vs SAMURAI

Another round of #BandcampFriday—and setting my VPN to California to turn back the clock. This time it's #Forndom, #Herkunft, #Munknorr, and a favorite song by #Songleikr. Rounding out my collection of #VikingMusic, chipping away at my wishlist.

And as always, #NeverSpotify.

Mørketsland by protoU & Oljus is a sonic war cry. Ritual drums, deep drone, forest echoes — , primal. Old gods toast with mead. New gods run for cover.
https://vikingsvssamurai.com/morketsland-by-protou-oljus/
#DarkAmbient #VikingMusic #OldGods
M​ø​rketsland by ProtoU & Oljus

protoU & Oljus drop M​ø​rketsland, a Viking-inspired dark ambient album. Ritual drumming, deep drone, echoes through dark forests and underground caves.

VIKINGS vs SAMURAI
We talked with Oljus and ProtoU about Mørketsland, their Viking-inspired dark ambient album born of ancient echoes, Uppsala ruins, and Vivaldi’s ghost. This collab is deep, doomy, and damn near mythic.
#Mørketsland #ProtoU #Oljus #DarkAmbient #VikingMusic
🔗 https://vikingsvssamurai.com/interview-with-oljus-and-protou/
Interview with Oljus and protoU

We chat about how the album came to be, how they collaborated, and the influence of Uppsala and Vivaldi's The Four Seasons.

VIKINGS vs SAMURAI
Another Danish Nat’l Symphony #orchestra, featuring Eivør, performing a Pagan, Norse piece that reminds one of the powerful ‘witches of the north’. This is some powerful stuff. A strong, female voice accompanied by drum and orchestra. #music #VikingMusic #Eivør https://youtu.be/Ne4kFBmDsXY?si=rX8M-FeOaQ9Hufgw
TRØLLABUNDIN // Eivør & Danish National Symphony Orchestra (Live)

YouTube

Danheim – Heimferd Review

By Mystikus Hugebeard

Ah, the Viking Age. One of the most mythologized eras in history, and a bottomless well of inspiration for cool things like video games, shows, books, tattoos, and bad things like obsession over ancestral purity, shockingly racist ideologies, and lutefisk. But the best thing of all, and most importantly, music! Which leads us to Danheim (Literally “Danish Home”). Danheim is the solo Nordic folk project by Reidar Schæfer Olsen, and Heimferd is his first full album in four years, which might as well be an eternity. Danheim is usually very prolific, with eight albums released between 2017 and 2021, with about a gazillion singles released during and after those 4 years. Furthermore, Danheim is one of the more well-known Nordic folk artists; he has numerous collaborations with, to name a few, Gealdýr, Sigurboði, Heldom, and has, like Wardruna, been featured on the History Channel’s Vikings. In other words, Danheim is something of a titan of the genre—is Heimferd worth the wait?

Danheim’s music, and by extension Heimferd, is a sonic extension of the version of the Vikings that has embedded itself within people’s imagination and contemporary media: an intoxicating image of a powerful and mysterious people, plunged into a captivating world of violence and mysticism.1 Most might immediately connect Danheim’s sound to Wardruna (not unjustifiably), but that paints a rather flat picture. The music is cinematic in a way that calls to mind a less avant-garde Heilung, it vibrates with a slightly electronic, tribal weight that, at this point, belongs more to Danheim than any of his peers (but one might still compare it to Vígundr or Heldom), and it’s atmospheric and densely layered like, well, Wardruna. But I believe it’s the simple immediacy of Danheim’s that has made him the Nordic folk titan that he is. It’s just so easy to fall under the spell of electronically augmented droning chants set to the rhythm of deep, beating drums, heard in some form or another in nearly every song on Heimferd.

…and yet, there sadly wafts an air of shallowness across Heimferd. There is an unfulfilled relationship between Heimferd’s sound and its songwriting. Heimferd’s stellar production and the variety of instruments create a captivating soundscape, but so rarely do songs breathe or evolve in a way that gives the songs life. This is felt all throughout Heimferd. “Heljar Skuggar” and “Rúnmyrkr” each utilize engaging, distorted chants in the vein of Heilung, but feel stagnant, without peaks or valleys. Songs are often lacking in stakes or tension, the worst of which is heard in the lifeless “Valvejen” as it flits loosely between tagelharpa melodies and excessive downtime. For songs meant to sound almost hypnotic in their droning, much comes off as forgettable, like “Kominn Dagr” as it switches from monotone chanting into a toothless tagelharpa melody, neither section given ample time to grow or make an impact. Clearly, Danheim places a lot of emphasis on atmosphere, and Heimferd is indeed viking-y at a distance—but up close, there is little to sink your teeth into.

This is not always the case, however, with a handful of songs towering above the rest. The vocal-heavy closer, “Yggdrasil II” (a sequel to “Yggdrasil” from 2018’s Fridr), has a quiet majesty to its rhythmic and beautiful chorus. “Vindfari” is an unassuming song that really sneaks up on you, as the drums march behind a simple chanting melody with a peculiar, percussive vocal delivery to some words that adds unique character to the song. Heimferd’s best song is “Haukadalur,” though. This song moves and breathes like a living thing, as distant haggard exhalations augment a powerful beat which heralds a coarse, dancing tagelharpa. These songs have such richness to their melodies, making the most of Danheim’s accessible and engaging style. It feels as if this has been my experience with every Danheim album: two or three genuinely stellar tracks that speak of an artist capable of amazing things, surrounded by songs that sound great but leave little impression.

Danheim has ever been frustrating for me, and Heimferd reaffirms that feeling. His infectious soundscape sufficiently conjures a Viking-age atmosphere and energy, but with base songwriting that so rarely transforms the music into something lasting or impactful. It’s strange, because my first listen of Heimferd was the most positive one, and I think it’s because Danheim’s style of Nordic folk can be cathartic in a way not many other artists within the genre are. But on each subsequent spin, when I listen closer, probing, pleading for depth, I’m left wanting. Heimferd is the distilled essence of the modern perception of Vikings, but with little drama or tension. It’s fun, but ephemeral.

Rating: Mixed
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps
Label: Season of Mist
Websites: official | bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: October 31st, 2025

#25 #2025 #Danheim #DarkFolk #Gealdýr #Heilung #Heimferd #Heldom #Neofolk #NordicFolk #Oct25 #Review #Reviews #SeasonOfMist #Sigurbodi #Vigundr #VikingMusic #Wardruna

Gabríel Ólafs finds a forgotten Viking songbook & turns it into pure Icelandic magic. Lullabies for Piano and Cello drips with ancient soul—misty fjords, ghost melodies, and the hum of ancestral memory. Old world meets new keys.
#GabrielOlafs #VikingMusic #NeoClassical
🎻 https://vikingsvssamurai.com/ancient-viking-melodies-and-lullabies-for-piano-and-cello/
Danheim - "Stormdans" (Official Music Video)

YouTube