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The following was dumped into Gjallarhorn. You can have it :) - Haukur 12:24, 18 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Music group

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File:Http://www.gjallarhorn.com/Bild/Pictures/thumb-liljan.jpg Gjallarhorn is a quartet from Ostrobothnia, the Swedish speaking area of Finland. They are aggressively modern while still being very closely tied to both folk musical traditions and ancient mythology. The heart of the band is a mixture of fiddle, didgeridoo, percussion, mandola, fronted by the sometimes ethereal vocals of Jenny Wilhelms. Ranarop (Call of the Sea Witch) (Finlandia Innovator/Warner Finland) is an almost epic album, with a sweeping sound that proves how broad a stroke simple acoustic instruments can make.

Gjallarhorn was formed in 1994 on the west coast of Finland, in the Swedish speaking area, by Jenny Wilhelms, Christopher Öhman (viola, mandola) and Jacob Frankenhaeuser (didgeridoo).

The band started as a trio but became a quartet with percussion in 1996. The band has been a quartet ever since.

1997 the first CD Ranarop was released. The group was selected "Folk music group of the year 1997" and the cd was " Folk music cd of the year 1997" in Finland.

1998 the band started touring frequently on a professional basis with performances at international world, folk and jazz music festivals. Gjallarhorn has toured in Europe, USA, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Japan.

1999 Gjallarhorn collaborated with the female choir "Florakˆren". For the choirs 55th anniversary Jenny arranged the Gjallarhorn tunes for female voices.

2000 The second CD Sjofn was released. It was amongst others awarded the "La Monde de la Musique CHOC" and "Trad Magazine Bravos!" .

2002 The third CD Grimborg was released.

2003 The CD Grimborg was awarded the prestigious French "Academie Charles Cros" prize and Gjallarhorn was nominated for the music prize of the Nordic Council of Ministries in 2003.

2004 The band celebrated its 10th anniversary with a tour in Japan, Sweden and Finland. The celebration was also notified by the Swedish Cultural Fund of Finland, who selected the band with Jenny Wilhelms for their annual honor award, given to artists in different fields of cultural and educational work.

2005 the band started working on new material, with some changes. For many years the didgeridoo was the drone effect and bass of the band, both Jacob and Tommy had studied this in Australia.

Present members :

Jenny Wilhelms - lead vocal, violin, hardanger fiddle Adrian Jones - viola, mandola, kalimba Göran Månsson - various wind instruments Petter Berndalen - various percussion

Memebers over the years: Jenny Wilhelms, vocals, fiddles (1994 - ) Christopher ÷hman, viola, mandola (1994 - 2000) Jakob Frankenhaeuser, didgeridoo (1994-1996) David Lillkvist, percussion (1996-2002) Tommy Mansikka-Aho, slideridoo (1996-2004) Sara Puljula, percussion (2002-2003) Adrian Jones, viola, mandola (2000 - ) Petter Berndalen, percussion (2004 - ) Göran Månsson, flutes, recorders, sub contrabass recorder (2005 - )

pronunciation

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I made a stab at the pronunciation. It's Swedish, not Finnish. But I don't know where the stress is, and that affects the vowels. Needs correction. kwami (talk) 01:55, 19 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

This is how I'd pronounce it: . Michiexile (talk) 16:30, 10 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Sounds perfect to me. Since it's a Norse word the stress can only be like that. All Nordic words have the stress on the first syllable, only loan words have otherwise. I wonder weather the IPA for the Finnish-Swedish pronunciation should be given as well though? Lundgren8 08:46, 22 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]

The article say that their music "echoes the ancient folk music tradition of Scandinavia" but also that the group "performs world music with roots in the folk music of Finland and Sweden". There is a contradiction there, Finland is NOT a part of Scandinavia. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 90.237.13.71 (talk) 11:21, 31 March 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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