Showing posts with label Filarfolket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filarfolket. Show all posts

Sunday, March 15, 2026

FILARFOLKET – Utan tvekan (Amalthea, 1982)


Instrumental, Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

The second album from Filarfolket is an overall better effort than their debut ”Birfilarmusik från Malmö”. The format is largely the same: folk music with an open-eared approach, but they had become a stabilized unit by this time, and as a result, they had earned a greater self confidence which in turn made Filarfolket's vision clearer. It's emotionally more compound, with a few darker accent colours that makes ”Utan tvekan” a fuller experience. The high point is the vocal ”Magdalena” which would have fitted nicely on any Folk & Rackare album of your choice, in an arrangement featuring the deep, scary sound of Dan ”Gisen” Malmquist's contrabass clarinet.

If you choose between this one and the debut, the answer is hands down ”Utan tvekan”.

Gryningspolska 
Bosse Buses marsch  
Solpolska 

Thursday, February 19, 2026

FILARFOLKET – Birfilarmusik från Malmö (Amalthea, 1980)


Instrumental, Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

Originally named Birfilarna, they released one album as such, ”Än svänger det” in 1978. After reorganizing the group, they adopted their new name Filarfolket, and eventually enjoyed quite some success in the 80s. Maybe they're best known for properly launching the career of multi-instrumentalist Ale Möller who for a long time has been a go-to musician when you've needed any odd stringed instrument. Other notable Filarfolket members include Dan ”Gisen” Malmquist and for a while also first class fiddler Ellika Frisell.

Filarfolket have always been a good-natured lot, rarely digging into the darker side of Swedish traditional music. Instead they've always had a broad musical outlook, gladly interweaving musical elements from the entire world, from the Balkans all the way to Africa and Asia. Their curiousity for how musical traditions are connected and compatible was seemingly endless, and with high level skills to combine them seamlessly, they truly were a creative outfit.

With ”Birfilarmusik från Malmö” being their first album under the Filarfolket moniker, they hadn't yet developed their unprejudiced approach in full, but the typical Filarfolket moods are already set. The music's extremely well played, enthusiastic and warm at heart, but as I refer my folk music darker, it gets a bit too rosy-cheeked and cheerful for me.

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