The Pagan Music List is a compilation of reviews of Pagan, Heathen, Esoteric, Animist, and related music that we listen to and love.
First started in 2019, the list is about to grow again. But first, we’ll be posting archived editions of the review here every week.
For each edition, we include embedded YouTube, Soundcloud, or Bandcamp links whenever possible for each artist, and we’ve also created a Spotify playlist of songs we’ve recommended (currently 12 hours long…and growing!).
If you are a Spotify listener, you can click on the embedded player to listen to the full updated playlist!
Laboratorium Piesni
Genre: Chant, Traditional (Slavic)
Recommended Album: Rosna
Website: http://laboratoriumpiesni.pl/en/
Laboratorium Piesni (Polish for “Song Laboratory”) is a female-run collective music project, founded in Poland in 2013. The vast majority of their songs are from Polish and Eastern European folk traditions, though they also incorporate other sources. They also host workshops to help people develop their voice and “awaken the human musicality.” Laboratorium Piesni’s primary musical focus is polyphony (multiple voices with little to no musical accompaniment), which is the dominant form of ritual and folk music for animist cultures, also surviving into Europe as a dominant form into the 1500’s. This music is also known as “acapella,” but many groups have moved away from this Christian label (“acapella” literally means, “in the way of the chapel”).
Rozna Livada is a traditional Slavic folk song. Common to innumerable songs from this region, it is a mourning song, in which a woman grieves the loss of her lover to war and invasion. It gained a new popularity during the independence wars against Yugoslavia. The song plays upon the word Rozna, which can mean both “dew” and “pearl,” depending on whether one is speaking Serbian, Croation, or Bosnian.
Dewy meadow, green grass,
dewy meadow, aman! aman!
green grass…The girl, she made strings of pearl
strings of pearl, aman! aman!
She wept upon the grassThe oppressors took away her dear one
the oppressors, aman! aman!
took away her dear one…
Also from the same album is Ой ляцелі жураўлі (Oh, the flying cranes), a haunting Belarusian folk song about the cycle of human life::
Oh the flying cranes,
They sat in a field on fertile land, ,
Yes, speaking of fertile fields,
Either better early,
Or better late
in the early planted fields,
There is growing rye, and wheat
And later on the fertile fields,
Are only weeds and bent grass…
Volkstrott
Genres: Rock, Punk, Medieval
Recommended Album: Todeskunst
Website: (none)
Volkstrott is what happens when you throw a violin and a bagpipe into a german punk band who’s just found out about the Black Plague. incredibly fun and tragically short-lived, Volkstrott only has two (hard to find) albums and very little internet presence.
Their most fun song deserves to be played really loud whenever you’re worried about the coming collapse of Empire. Wenn der Tot in der Stadt kommt:
Hurrah, Hurrah!
Death has arrived in the city,
and we are all invited!
And an equally fun song about being kidnapped by faeries, Reisst die Mauern ein
Let us seduce you, to silliness and dance
Only as long as the violin plays, with passion and elegance
As long as the music plays you are not alone
But when this dance ends, it will be even worse for you…
La Corte di Lunas
Genre: Rock, Medieval
Recommended Album: Ritual
Website: https://www.cortedilunas.com/
La Corte di Lunas (court of the moon) is an Italian medieval rock band who do some rather brilliantly creative covers as well as their own songs. Traditionally quite active in medieval music fests in Europe, they’re currently on hiatus (according to their website).
A great example of what I mean by “brillantly creative covers” is this song, a melange of a Blackmoor’s Night song (which uses the even older medieval French drinking song, Tourdion) with Metallica’s “Nothing Else Matters.”
And perhaps their best original song, Dream:
Valravn
Genre: Nordic Electronic/Pop
Recommended Album: Koder På Snor (or digital available via iTunes)
Website: none
A valravn in Danish lore is a raven that had consumed the flesh of humans and thus gained their knowledge and consciousness, and sometimes the ability to shapeshift into humans. Valravn’s music evokes this shapeshifting theme, imagining not what would happen if modern people re-interpreted ancient music, but what would happen if it were the other way around. Like Garmarna and other Scandanavian acts, Valravn made heavy use of both traditional and electronic instruments, but produced many more “danceable” tracks than others.
Valravn started as an acoustic folk band (Virelai), and performed from 2005-to 2013. In 2009, they said of their music: “Valravn aims at testing the extremes of Nordic roots music and their application here and now; in that process we are open to outside influences. The point of departure is on the cusp of something very ancient and something brand new.”
My favorite song of theirs is Kelling, a Faroese song about old age, heart-break, and dancing anyway…
Hag lies on the doorstep dead
Cannot eat neither butter nor bread
Love she bears in her breast
Cannot eat for self pityStand up and dance
Hag lies on the doorstep dead
Her heart is broken,
cannot dance
embrace her,
take her with youStand up and dance
Kroppar is another song in Faroese, a song of resistance:
Stand up
We have fallen
Stand up
Again, and again
She searches everywhere
Between light and shadow
The bodies are falling
But the light is coming
View Previous Editions:
Collection #1: Mari Boine, Garmarna, Alcest, and L’Ham De Foc, Poeta Magica