Fantastisk video! Nyckelharpan äger. 👍 Jag är inte svensk, men jag studerade språket här i mitt hemland och det är alltid kul att lära sig mer om ert avlånga land.
Danke, Emelie, für diesen interessanten Ausflug in die Geschichte der Nyckelharpa! Schön, dass Du es trotz der Hindernisse geschafft hast. Alles gute, Christian.
Just stumbled upon your page while looking into traditional Swedish folk music. Your videos are great! Thank you so much for creating them and I look forward to more!
Thank you so much for this video I just found out about today and you have is the history that I love I can't wait to see what else I you do with this beautiful instrument I'm also looking to buy one myself
Many thanks Emelie - I was invcolved in UKJ/US folk revival and music since the 60's but have only just heard of this instrument - wish I'd heard it earlier/learned it. I especially like the Slangspolka you played by Gustav Anders in your other video on the plywood version of the Nykelharpa.
Thanks a lot ! This kind of format is sooooo much work than facecam ^^' not sure I'll do this often. But here I felt it was good to give as many pictures as possible !
My guess is it originated already from mounting keys on kemences/Cretan lyres from the Byzantine, where 2 strings are stopped by fingernails and one string act as a drone. It predates the viol family and would only be cousins with the rebec that have a fingerboard to stop the strings on.
Vilken superbra video det här är, ett stort tack för denna informativa & intressanta film :) Har alltid velat kunna spela nyckelharpa men spelar istället gitarr & bas av någon anledning 😅
Thank you for this history. I think it's a pity that the "standard" nyckelharpa is the 3-row tuned CGCA (uneven intervals). It makes sense though with folk music but less sense with chromatic and other music. I do see some people on TH-cam playing GDAE harpas and I've seen people with CGDA harpas. I personally have a Tord Johansson GDAE nyckelharpa from 2005 with more keys than the one on the picture you showed (I think it's 11,11,11,17). I visited him in his home, together with an English lady who acted as my translator, who also had one of his harpas. He also had other instruments on his wall, such as a 5-string CGDAE instrument with a fingerboard and sympathetic strings, slightly larger than a regular viola. (He also gave me several cassette tapes of him and his friends playing folk tunes. I don't currently have a cassette player to be able to listen to them or convert them to mp3 etc). My gripe with my harpa is that the G string is harsh on the keyed notes. The other strings are fine. One day, if I feel my playing is good enough, I may upgrade to a better 4-row harpa, either GDAE or CGDA as I have also taken a liking to violas. But it seems nobody builds nyckelharpas anymore with reverse fingering (violin-like finger patterns) as Tord Johansson did.
Indeed, I have only ever heard about Tord Johasson for the reversed keyboard concept. My guess is that it's not such a difficult adaptation when coming from fiddle/cello to learn to move the fingers the other direction than on fiddle/cello, it requires just a little practice (from my experience, changing the direction of the BOW, as when switching to cello from fiddle/nyckelharpa is MUCH harder). And I can imagine the reversed keyboard to be more complex to build. I personally prefer 4-rows nyckelharpas (and tuned CGDA because for the higher register I prefer the sound of fiddle and hardingfela) but there are so incredible musicians on 3-rows, so the traditional chromatic 3-rows is in my eyes not at all a "lesser" instrument.
They exist ! But they're prolly even harder to come by than usual ones. You might have to order one from a maker. Check also FB groups about nyckelharpas, people often announce instruments for sale in these. Good hunt.
@@ianrowe9337 Don't expect any good indtrument from Ebay !! Ask nyckelharpa players and builders, which you will find in communities - such as Facebook groups. Look for "All Nyckelharpa. All the time."
Nice video thank you 😊 but Jouhikko and Talharpa is played with the back of the fingers. Not the nails. In sweden it was also common to play with the part directly under your nail 😊
I wish to learn the Nyckelharpa since four years. I never had the money to buy one, as they are really expensive here in germany. But 350€ are a quite resonable price for trying out an instrument. So i will buy one I think. And if i fall in love with the playing i will wait until i can get one build one for my by a professional here in germany. 😊 Was for the nerdyharpa video but i got stuck in a playlist... whoopsie 😅
Something happened to the Nyckelharpa in 2010s. I noticed a much higher prevalence of Nyckelharpa videos, particularly revolving around The Grizzly Hills theme from World of Warcraft.
That's interesting ! I didn't follow the nyckelharpa scene as much back then as today, so I didn't notice it. I guess just one viral cover of a well-known theme can have a huge impact - or something along these lines =)
@@EmelieWaldken It gets more interesting, because there are more violinists trying to do Nyckelharpa solos as well. Some musicians with the Nyckelharpa are also doing classical music. I've seen quite a few with Bach.
Maybe I've overlooked it, but have you ever made a video about microtones in Scandinavian Folk music, like the use of neutral intervals? I find that fascinating, but can't seem to find satisfying sources.
@smuecke I haven't talked about that actually ! It's something I would love to nerd about one day, but I feel it's a subject I don't know half well enough to talk about - yet.
@@maandalen I know, I learned a great deal from him when he was guest teacher at Malung =) He's amazing. I'll ask him, thanks for the reminder about his knowledge !
Do you happen to know the name/source for the last polska that plays in the background before the video ends? I've heard it so many times now and for the life of me I can't find any info on it.
I wonder about something like a nyckelharpa, but in a symphonia box form factor - your left hand reaches over the instrument (hurdy gurdy style) so the sounding box can run the full length. The lack of a hurdy gurdy wheel would make it simpler to construct and give more volume to the sounding box. But then ... I also wonder about using finger holes and your fingernails instead of a key mechanism. That way, the top of the instrument box simply has a bunch of holes over each string. You poke your fingertip into a hole to press your fingernail against the string. The entire box body is the sounding box. In addition to the finger holes, there are two larger holes for you to run the bow string through.
That sounds really interesting, I think I visualise most of what you describe. I'm not sure about the combination hand over the keyboard & bow though, bowing is one of the trickiest parts of holding the nyckelharpa, as there isn't much space left for it already, so if you add a left arm in the way too... For the playing holes, not fully sure either. It could work, but you need either something hard to press on the strings (tangents or nails) or enough pressure with the soft tips against something hard (fingerboard) to get a clear sound. At least for most instruments (then jouhikko works too, so that's not an absolute rule). I'm afraid the holes would be too restrictive for the fingers and require too much time to get the fingers down to the strings, therefore reducing the possible speed of playing. But please try, build weird/creative instruments ! Even if they might not fully work ; it's so interesting !
@@EmelieWaldken Yeah, I was trying to figure out bowing, and it's not obvious. The best I figure is to orient the instrument like a cello or bowed dulcimer - but tilted to the side enough for gravity to drop the keys. So, you bow across your belly. I'm not sure about whether the finger hole idea can be workable, as you note. Maybe instead of individual finger holes, there's are slots parallel to the strings. The upper edge of each slot is bumpy. The bumps guide your fingers so your fingernail is aligned to the desired note. So, you only need to remove/insert your fingers if you wish to change which strings are fingered. Otherwise, you just slide along the slots.
@@IsaacKuo Okej, I'm not following the idea about the holes/slots anymore ^^' but please keep me informed if you build this system, it sounds really intricate and interesting !
@@EmelieWaldken Thanks! Honestly, I think they already figured out the best way to do this ages ago - frets on a fingerboard. I was only imagining alternatives to frets because of your video explaining the history of pressing fingernails against strings. But frets seem better.
Fantastisk video! Nyckelharpan äger. 👍
Jag är inte svensk, men jag studerade språket här i mitt hemland och det är alltid kul att lära sig mer om ert avlånga land.
I just have to be honest with you Emelie if you notice my comment. That was the cutest ''Hej Då'' I've heard in a very long time!😊
thank you. it was very interesesting. I am also in love with this intrument. Hope to play in day in a festival with you maybe:)
Danke, Emelie, für diesen interessanten Ausflug in die Geschichte der Nyckelharpa! Schön, dass Du es trotz der Hindernisse geschafft hast. Alles gute, Christian.
Nice! Good to hear from you again.!!!
Thank you for telling us about Drakskip. I found their music and it is really nice.
Just stumbled upon your page while looking into traditional Swedish folk music. Your videos are great! Thank you so much for creating them and I look forward to more!
Thank you too, glad you like my work =)
Delightful. Lived two years in Lidingo, surrounded by Swedes, and enjoyed them all.
Thank you Emilie for this solid expert explanation ❤️
Thank you so much for this video I just found out about today and you have is the history that I love I can't wait to see what else I you do with this beautiful instrument I'm also looking to buy one myself
Fantastic video! Very useful information :)
Thank you !
Many thanks Emelie - I was invcolved in UKJ/US folk revival and music since the 60's but have only just heard of this instrument - wish I'd heard it earlier/learned it. I especially like the Slangspolka you played by Gustav Anders in your other video on the plywood version of the Nykelharpa.
Thorough and excelent. Thank you.
This video was amazing! Great work and I loved this more documental format. Congratulations :)
Thanks a lot ! This kind of format is sooooo much work than facecam ^^' not sure I'll do this often. But here I felt it was good to give as many pictures as possible !
My guess is it originated already from mounting keys on kemences/Cretan lyres from the Byzantine, where 2 strings are stopped by fingernails and one string act as a drone. It predates the viol family and would only be cousins with the rebec that have a fingerboard to stop the strings on.
Vilken superbra video det här är, ett stort tack för denna informativa & intressanta film :) Har alltid velat kunna spela nyckelharpa men spelar istället gitarr & bas av någon anledning 😅
Sånt händer ^^ Det är aldrig för sent att börja !
Thanks!.. wonderful instrument..
Thank you for this history. I think it's a pity that the "standard" nyckelharpa is the 3-row tuned CGCA (uneven intervals). It makes sense though with folk music but less sense with chromatic and other music. I do see some people on TH-cam playing GDAE harpas and I've seen people with CGDA harpas. I personally have a Tord Johansson GDAE nyckelharpa from 2005 with more keys than the one on the picture you showed (I think it's 11,11,11,17). I visited him in his home, together with an English lady who acted as my translator, who also had one of his harpas. He also had other instruments on his wall, such as a 5-string CGDAE instrument with a fingerboard and sympathetic strings, slightly larger than a regular viola. (He also gave me several cassette tapes of him and his friends playing folk tunes. I don't currently have a cassette player to be able to listen to them or convert them to mp3 etc). My gripe with my harpa is that the G string is harsh on the keyed notes. The other strings are fine. One day, if I feel my playing is good enough, I may upgrade to a better 4-row harpa, either GDAE or CGDA as I have also taken a liking to violas. But it seems nobody builds nyckelharpas anymore with reverse fingering (violin-like finger patterns) as Tord Johansson did.
Indeed, I have only ever heard about Tord Johasson for the reversed keyboard concept. My guess is that it's not such a difficult adaptation when coming from fiddle/cello to learn to move the fingers the other direction than on fiddle/cello, it requires just a little practice (from my experience, changing the direction of the BOW, as when switching to cello from fiddle/nyckelharpa is MUCH harder). And I can imagine the reversed keyboard to be more complex to build.
I personally prefer 4-rows nyckelharpas (and tuned CGDA because for the higher register I prefer the sound of fiddle and hardingfela) but there are so incredible musicians on 3-rows, so the traditional chromatic 3-rows is in my eyes not at all a "lesser" instrument.
Interesting video presenting in-depth info. Enjoyed watching it!
Thank you !
Emelie, its always great to learn of new things , your research & video was most enjoyable , now i need to find a left handed Nyckelharpa !!!
They exist ! But they're prolly even harder to come by than usual ones. You might have to order one from a maker. Check also FB groups about nyckelharpas, people often announce instruments for sale in these. Good hunt.
@@EmelieWaldken Yes thats good advice , i will take a look on Ebay .
@@ianrowe9337 Don't expect any good indtrument from Ebay !! Ask nyckelharpa players and builders, which you will find in communities - such as Facebook groups. Look for "All Nyckelharpa. All the time."
Super vidéo ma chère! 😘
Merci Sera =)
Nice video thank you 😊 but Jouhikko and Talharpa is played with the back of the fingers. Not the nails. In sweden it was also common to play with the part directly under your nail 😊
I wish to learn the Nyckelharpa since four years. I never had the money to buy one, as they are really expensive here in germany. But 350€ are a quite resonable price for trying out an instrument. So i will buy one I think. And if i fall in love with the playing i will wait until i can get one build one for my by a professional here in germany. 😊
Was for the nerdyharpa video but i got stuck in a playlist... whoopsie 😅
I'm glad to hear this instrument could help you start on nyckelharpa, that's the idea with it =)
Thank you!
Intressant!
Something happened to the Nyckelharpa in 2010s. I noticed a much higher prevalence of Nyckelharpa videos, particularly revolving around The Grizzly Hills theme from World of Warcraft.
That's interesting ! I didn't follow the nyckelharpa scene as much back then as today, so I didn't notice it. I guess just one viral cover of a well-known theme can have a huge impact - or something along these lines =)
@@EmelieWaldken It gets more interesting, because there are more violinists trying to do Nyckelharpa solos as well. Some musicians with the Nyckelharpa are also doing classical music. I've seen quite a few with Bach.
As an accordion player who is doing research on the nyckelharpa for a school project I feel deeply offended by 7:40 🥲
Maybe I've overlooked it, but have you ever made a video about microtones in Scandinavian Folk music, like the use of neutral intervals? I find that fascinating, but can't seem to find satisfying sources.
@smuecke I haven't talked about that actually ! It's something I would love to nerd about one day, but I feel it's a subject I don't know half well enough to talk about - yet.
@@EmelieWaldken Mats Edén knows a lot about this subject, check with him! 🎻
@@maandalen I know, I learned a great deal from him when he was guest teacher at Malung =) He's amazing. I'll ask him, thanks for the reminder about his knowledge !
Everybody knows this I assume.. but of course "nyckel" in nyckelharpa directly translates to "keyed".
having a relatively small bow seems so much nicer lol
Do you happen to know the name/source for the last polska that plays in the background before the video ends? I've heard it so many times now and for the life of me I can't find any info on it.
It's said in the description =) Sen polska efter Göran Lång från Haverö, Medelpad region, Sweden. Popularized by Göran Månsson and Ahlberg/Ek/Roswall.
I wonder about something like a nyckelharpa, but in a symphonia box form factor - your left hand reaches over the instrument (hurdy gurdy style) so the sounding box can run the full length.
The lack of a hurdy gurdy wheel would make it simpler to construct and give more volume to the sounding box.
But then ... I also wonder about using finger holes and your fingernails instead of a key mechanism. That way, the top of the instrument box simply has a bunch of holes over each string. You poke your fingertip into a hole to press your fingernail against the string. The entire box body is the sounding box. In addition to the finger holes, there are two larger holes for you to run the bow string through.
That sounds really interesting, I think I visualise most of what you describe. I'm not sure about the combination hand over the keyboard & bow though, bowing is one of the trickiest parts of holding the nyckelharpa, as there isn't much space left for it already, so if you add a left arm in the way too...
For the playing holes, not fully sure either. It could work, but you need either something hard to press on the strings (tangents or nails) or enough pressure with the soft tips against something hard (fingerboard) to get a clear sound. At least for most instruments (then jouhikko works too, so that's not an absolute rule). I'm afraid the holes would be too restrictive for the fingers and require too much time to get the fingers down to the strings, therefore reducing the possible speed of playing.
But please try, build weird/creative instruments ! Even if they might not fully work ; it's so interesting !
@@EmelieWaldken Yeah, I was trying to figure out bowing, and it's not obvious.
The best I figure is to orient the instrument like a cello or bowed dulcimer - but tilted to the side enough for gravity to drop the keys.
So, you bow across your belly.
I'm not sure about whether the finger hole idea can be workable, as you note. Maybe instead of individual finger holes, there's are slots parallel to the strings. The upper edge of each slot is bumpy. The bumps guide your fingers so your fingernail is aligned to the desired note.
So, you only need to remove/insert your fingers if you wish to change which strings are fingered. Otherwise, you just slide along the slots.
@@IsaacKuo Okej, I'm not following the idea about the holes/slots anymore ^^' but please keep me informed if you build this system, it sounds really intricate and interesting !
@@EmelieWaldken Thanks! Honestly, I think they already figured out the best way to do this ages ago - frets on a fingerboard.
I was only imagining alternatives to frets because of your video explaining the history of pressing fingernails against strings. But frets seem better.
Félicitation pour cette version anglaise ^^
Merci ! Félicitations à toi pour la version française, j'ai beaucoup apprécié !
L💜V E Instrument
Spela neverendingstory på nyckelharpa
Scandinavia has to live.
unfortunelly...there's no nyckelharpa in bali 😢
Aha! Taken by Vikings down the river highways of Europe…?
Or vice versa.