Northern European. Formed 10 years The lyrics for this song come from bracteates, amulets or coins found in northern Europe dating from the 4th - 7th centuries. The bracteates iconography is influenced by Roman coins. Their catalog uses many languages, including proto Norse, Proto German, Old English, Latin , German, English, Icelandic. Anoana is on the 2022 3rd album, Drif. Instruments include actual bones, which makes customs a challenge.
Heilung mainly represents styles and languages from the Eurasian circumpolar cultures, mainly germanic, scandinavian and the northern parts of europe. But it is absolutely valid to see connections to the Natives of Turtle Island (the american continent) since it is not uncommon for such old cultures to have roots within one another. For example, some native tribes have a spirit called "Deer Woman" while some of the eurasian cultures have "Deer Mother". Deers are generally very honored in both cultures as far as I know. A lot of native tribes & shamans from germanic cultures use elk and deer teeth in their clothes, e.g on dresses and regalia. For example Maria's (the singer in white) clothing is based on founds of shamanic headdresses and Deer Mother's appearance. The other singers and bandmembers are also very authentically dressed from the Northern Bronze Age. Antlers in germanic & indo-eurasian cultures hold a high meaning - Deers are often seen as "holy" animals. They were often associated with woodland entities and life. In more "recent" folklore they are also commonly associated as the prey the Wild Hunt (a band of eternal hunters who perished in accidents or unjust ways) chases during the Winter times. It's a bit complicated, as any folklore can be - alot is also localized generally. Personally I'm from a northern germanic background & Pagan, so what a deer and it's antlers mean to me might differ to those who are further south or upper north (Scandinavia/Iceland). Generally, Heilung often uses found scriptures, poems, healing chants and more from findings all over the eurasian and germanic sites. A lot of their songs are sung in different languages such as Icelandic, proto-germanic, german, norwegian and more. It's really interesting and you can find a lot of translations or interpretations by language experts on the lyrics of their songs. Some sadly are lost or have no complete translation, but they're still captivating. I can always recommend Nesso (based on a healing chant) and Krigsgaldr (the live version is the best one, the audience often gets really into it).
I’m not a pro on the band by any means but I know Heilung means “healing” in German. They have members from Germany, Denmark and Finland I believe. Their instruments and attire are inspired by Germanic and Viking tribes and the majority of their music is based on old runic scripture, tribal/german history and mythological deities.
Heilung (HIGH-lung), from the German, "healing". Try their live video for "Traust", recorded at Red Rocks. Remember that we all are brothers All people, and beasts and trees, and stone and wind We all descend from the One Great Being That was always there Before people lived and named it Before the first seed sprouted
I've seen this band twice, once here in the States and once in Norway (in a small town in Norway -the female lead singer grew up there) and I had the best time I've had in years. Their concerts are performed like healing rituals (thus the name "Heilung") and usually incorporate indigenous peoples from the country they're performing in. If you get a chance, go. You won't regret it.
Hello from Schleswig-Holstein. From my perspective, Heilung presents us with the basic principles of music. How did music come about? People listened to nature and animals and copied them. This was done by drumming with sticks or bones. Puristic, simple and wonderful.
Anoana .. a girl / woman with stong power ... its from the Northern part of Europa.. Germanic pre Scandinavia... Iv heard that they sings the rune alfabeth FUTARK ( old norse.. very old norse..) Tanks ! Best from Bergen, Norway ( she get into the moskus - what you call bison- she became one with the animal) This is ols old old..
I highly recommend their song In maidjan, live at castlefest, it's amazing. The band has three main members: Maria, Christopher and Kai, they're from Norway, Denmark and Germany.
As always, you guys are amazing Thank you so much for everything! I actually don't have a clue what this song is about, and I wanted to research it for you guys, but it was too much for my diminutive level of intelligence to comprehend at the moment 😭 I know in the past I tried looking up more information on this song and I remember it not being very straightforward, so I am glad other people in the comments are coming through with some information since I am just a clueless fan. My second or third longest spotify playlist is one full of this type of music, I love it so much so I am glad you guys liked it too! 🖤🤍
This was unexpected but amazing pick Charlotte! I vibe with Heilung a lot. I always feel like I’m being transported to another plane of existence or something when I listen to things like this.
This band is so good. Big fan of them. You all should also check out the band Wardruna, the vocalist is also a former drummer of the black metal band Gorgoroth
For something similar, check out "Wolf Totem" by The Hu for Mongolian metal/rock, and "Altay" by Otyken & Ummet Ozcan for Siberian folk rock. All three of those acts make extensive use of throat singing, similar to Heilung's.
Pronounced Hi Lung meaning Healing - Amplified History This group focuses on 7-8th century Norse (Viking) this is ancient dead language based on runic characters. They use a mixture of modern technology with with ancient historical instrumentation.
The ei in Heilubg is pronounced, like the i in "Hi". Nice reaction! It is a great song, when you go for a walk in nature! I did that every day for over a year and it was always amazing. Have a good one! ✌🏻
Their music - including the languages in which they sing - is inspired by ancient, pre-Christian, shamanistic European cultures! “Heilung” is the German word for healing, it contains the old word “heil”, which means something like luck, success! But it also applies in the context of “whole/complete” - if something is broken, you colloquially make it “heil” again (whole/complete - repair it) - in other words: "Heilung" (healing) restores the wholeness/completeness of the body/soul! It also appears in the German word for „holy“ (heilig)! But there are also opposite meanings - “Unheil” (bad luck, ruin, misfortune) or “heillos” (unsuccessful/hopeless/helpless)! The word “Heil” gained negative notoriety through Hitler and the Nazis, who used the term in the “Hitler salute” or as “Sieg Heil” - i.e. the invocation of a successful victory! Even today we still wish a hunter a successful hunt with a “Weidmanns Heil” or a fisherman a good catch with a “Petri Heil” (Petri is the abbreviation of Petrus, the patron saint of fishermen)! A small side note on the pronunciation of “Heilung”: In German, “ei” is like the English letter “i” or the word “eye”. In German, the letter “u” is pronounced like the “ou” in “you” - if you were to translate the English pronunciation of “you” into the German spelling, the result would be “ju”! The “H”, “l” and “ng” correspond to the one in the word “healing”! Phonetically something like: H-eye-l-ou-ng!
Ah, yes. They're closest to "native Germanic" as you can get, and naturally enough it seems "Native American" to US Americans because old polytheist and shamanic tribal warrior cultures are somewhat alike. Mind you it's modern music in the spirit of iron age Germanic cultures, *not* "iron age music" as some assert. Best regards Raoul G. Kunz
We were all Pagan once. Heilung asked First Nation permission to perform their ritual while touring usa. They also joined Heilung, in ceremony, on stage. Some awesome footage on yt. xx
At the end, I believe she becomes one with her spirit animal. You can tell as a young girl that she is looking for that animal when she shakes her antlers at the moose, but doesn't get a response.
at the end that is not a buffalo its a musk ox and the woman wasnt crushed or smashed shes the spirit of nature and the beast and the spirit reunited thats how the video ends
Maria Franz’s outfit is a copy of an actual outfit unearthed in archaeological dig. Believed to have been a female shaman of great importance. The deeper sounds are generally Scandinavian throat singing and Maria has amazing vocal and “sound making” abilities.
A lot of people mistake Heilung for native American at first. There are so many similarities between all tribal cultures across the world, since there are only so many ways to utilize resources when living off the land. Languages are the only real divides. I'm happy I found your channel. I look forward to the Heilung arc that I'm sure is coming.
sorry for the long text Heilung describe their music as “amplified history”. You can take that literally. On the stage of the German-Danish collective you will find human bones converted into instruments, ancient drums, bronze rings and sometimes entire armies, armed with shields and swords modeled on the material of the Iron and Viking Age. What became an international phenomenon at the end of the 2010s began on a very small scale in 2014. Kai Uwe Faust, a German tattoo artist living in Denmark, promised musician Christopher Juul (Euzen) a tattoo if he would work with him on a collection of poems. This is how the spoken word track “Schlammschlacht engl. Mud fight”, the retelling of the famous Varus Battle in the Teutoburg Forest, which is later included on the debut album, was created. Faust and Juul are both interested in ancient history and are involved in the reenactment scene. The former also works as a shaman. Their aim with Heilung: “To put the listener into a state of relaxation after a magical, sometimes turbulent musical journey.” Heilung soon concentrated primarily on the Iron Age and Viking culture, for example, processing inscriptions from old rune stones and amulets from this period into lyrics. Instead of simply retelling history, they also charge their works with spirituality. In 2015, they released the album “Ofnir” on their own. The musicians, now joined by singer Maria Franz, largely stick to materials that were already present in the time they were singing about. Bells clang, stones scrape across the ground, water runs through bones. Melodies are almost nowhere to be found; the focus is on an atmosphere based on natural sounds, percussion and the vocal performance of the three musicians. They croak, whisper, howl, lapse into deep overtone singing or ethereal high notes. Their extraordinary, artistic live performances open the doors to concert halls where bands from their scene are otherwise rarely encountered. As part of their 2019 headlining tour, they will be performing at venues including Kiel Castle and the Admiralspalast in Berlin. New songs are already in the program. Heilung will release their second studio album “Futha” in the summer after that tour. The trio took the title from a coin engraving from the 6th century B.C. The meaning is not clear, archaeologists and historians suspect a magical background on the one hand and a reference to the female sex on the other. Both serve Heilung as the thematic basis for the album, which they conceived as a counter-design to the “male” first album. While lyrical inspiration for “Ofnir” mainly came from engravings on weapons and armor, Heilung now focus on Icelandic poetry and spells of holy women. Maria Franz and her voice also take center stage. The musicians underline how serious they are about the spiritual and magical dimension of their work with the symbolic power they even put into their schedules. After three years of work, they will finish recording “Futha” on December 21, 2018 at 9 pm. Winter solstice, the darkest day of the year. On “Drif”, the 2022 trio focuses more on special moods and moments of tension. Melodies also play an increasingly important role in the music, without the atmospherically dark moments being neglected. In the dark, without distracting stimuli, this is probably the closest you can get to the cathartic listening experience the band has in mind. Because some misguided people see music about ancient times and the use of Nordic symbolism as an invitation for missionary, nationalist and far-right ideas, Heilung emphasize that their art is independent of modern political and religious systems. Any attempt to establish a connection to this is “pointless”, as Heilung “try to link the listener to the time before Christianity and its political offspring raped and burned their way into the Northern European mentality. have a nice day, greetings from germany
It's not a native American thing, it's a native nordic thing - exactly: Shamanism of the North. You can find this kind of Rituals in Scandinavian, Siberian, Mongolia up to Korea. The Song selfs? It 's about the Reincarnation of a Shaman and Healer ... ;)
Definitely not native american, their music is very proto germanic and norse in nature. People like to associate them with vikings but the themes are older altho include the viking era nordic culture. If this musical group intrigues you i would also recomend skald and wardruna
Hello ladies a amazing band and great song too i am a subscriber i would like to ask a favor my mother Cathy has breast cancer and not in good health so i would like to request for you to react to her favorite symphonic metal band from Finland wintersun for Wintersun sons of winter and stars 1.5 official lyric video from Wintersun jari TH-cam channel it would make her day better watching you two react to that song and would make her last possible days better so let bme know in a reply thank you. Wintersun Alex ❄️🫶
It’s part Germanic and Scandinavian Scandinavia Norway 🇳🇴 Sweden 🇸🇪 Denmark 🇩🇰 Germanic are the German 🇩🇪 Dutch 🇳🇱 Belgium 🇧🇪 Switzerland 🇨🇭 Austria 🇦🇹
Northern European. Formed 10 years The lyrics for this song come from bracteates, amulets or coins found in northern Europe dating from the 4th - 7th centuries. The bracteates iconography is influenced by Roman coins.
Their catalog uses many languages, including proto Norse, Proto German, Old English, Latin , German, English, Icelandic. Anoana is on the 2022 3rd album, Drif.
Instruments include actual bones, which makes customs a challenge.
I think most of the bones are fine it's just the human bones that make customs problematic ;)
Oh we are in the Heilung arc? Personal suggestions for this band are : "Krigsgaldr" and "In Maidjan". Both Live versions at Lifa.
I prefer LIFA Iotungard.
The "Norupo" video!
The live performance of "In Maidjan" would blow their minds
@@thedappermagician6905alfadirhaiti live would also throw them for a loop
Krigsgaldr live at Castlefest is an absolute must, but the music vid commands attention.
She runs in to the animal and becomes one with the nature 😉
Heilung mainly represents styles and languages from the Eurasian circumpolar cultures, mainly germanic, scandinavian and the northern parts of europe. But it is absolutely valid to see connections to the Natives of Turtle Island (the american continent) since it is not uncommon for such old cultures to have roots within one another.
For example, some native tribes have a spirit called "Deer Woman" while some of the eurasian cultures have "Deer Mother". Deers are generally very honored in both cultures as far as I know.
A lot of native tribes & shamans from germanic cultures use elk and deer teeth in their clothes, e.g on dresses and regalia. For example Maria's (the singer in white) clothing is based on founds of shamanic headdresses and Deer Mother's appearance. The other singers and bandmembers are also very authentically dressed from the Northern Bronze Age.
Antlers in germanic & indo-eurasian cultures hold a high meaning - Deers are often seen as "holy" animals. They were often associated with woodland entities and life. In more "recent" folklore they are also commonly associated as the prey the Wild Hunt (a band of eternal hunters who perished in accidents or unjust ways) chases during the Winter times.
It's a bit complicated, as any folklore can be - alot is also localized generally. Personally I'm from a northern germanic background & Pagan, so what a deer and it's antlers mean to me might differ to those who are further south or upper north (Scandinavia/Iceland).
Generally, Heilung often uses found scriptures, poems, healing chants and more from findings all over the eurasian and germanic sites. A lot of their songs are sung in different languages such as Icelandic, proto-germanic, german, norwegian and more. It's really interesting and you can find a lot of translations or interpretations by language experts on the lyrics of their songs. Some sadly are lost or have no complete translation, but they're still captivating.
I can always recommend Nesso (based on a healing chant) and Krigsgaldr (the live version is the best one, the audience often gets really into it).
I’m not a pro on the band by any means but I know Heilung means “healing” in German. They have members from Germany, Denmark and Finland I believe. Their instruments and attire are inspired by Germanic and Viking tribes and the majority of their music is based on old runic scripture, tribal/german history and mythological deities.
Norway not Finland but other then that you're dead on
they are from germany,denmark and norway,the singer is norwegian
@@rockhardjohnson3691 other THAN that
Heilung (HIGH-lung), from the German, "healing".
Try their live video for "Traust", recorded at Red Rocks.
Remember that we all are brothers
All people, and beasts and trees, and stone and wind
We all descend from the One Great Being
That was always there
Before people lived and named it
Before the first seed sprouted
I've seen this band twice, once here in the States and once in Norway (in a small town in Norway -the female lead singer grew up there) and I had the best time I've had in years. Their concerts are performed like healing rituals (thus the name "Heilung") and usually incorporate indigenous peoples from the country they're performing in. If you get a chance, go. You won't regret it.
Hello from Schleswig-Holstein. From my perspective, Heilung presents us with the basic principles of music. How did music come about? People listened to nature and animals and copied them. This was done by drumming with sticks or bones. Puristic, simple and wonderful.
Anoana .. a girl / woman with stong power ... its from the Northern part of Europa.. Germanic pre Scandinavia... Iv heard that they sings the rune alfabeth FUTARK ( old norse.. very old norse..) Tanks ! Best from Bergen, Norway ( she get into the moskus - what you call bison- she became one with the animal) This is ols old old..
👍
By the way, that was a musk ox, not a Buffalo. This is northern Europe, pre viking Era..
I highly recommend their song In maidjan, live at castlefest, it's amazing.
The band has three main members: Maria, Christopher and Kai, they're from Norway, Denmark and Germany.
Heilung is incredible. And such an amazing live band.
I love this band! I saw them live in Austin. They’re amazing!
As always, you guys are amazing Thank you so much for everything! I actually don't have a clue what this song is about, and I wanted to research it for you guys, but it was too much for my diminutive level of intelligence to comprehend at the moment 😭 I know in the past I tried looking up more information on this song and I remember it not being very straightforward, so I am glad other people in the comments are coming through with some information since I am just a clueless fan. My second or third longest spotify playlist is one full of this type of music, I love it so much so I am glad you guys liked it too! 🖤🤍
Now that you know the context of the song you should watch, without reacting, the live version. It's impressive. Seen them live and they are amazing.
Nice reaction and the live version of this song is definitely worth checking out as well.
This was unexpected but amazing pick Charlotte! I vibe with Heilung a lot. I always feel like I’m being transported to another plane of existence or something when I listen to things like this.
You should always expect the unexpected with me :(
@ Yeah you right!!
Love to see these reactions, really takes a curious mind to figure out an ancient language.
Next y'all should check out the song Krigsgaldr live at Lifa.
Love that you looked at this one. ❤
love the reaction. If you wanna go deeper into the band, I recommend watching Fylgija Ear / Futhorck from their first ever live performance LIFA.
This band is so good. Big fan of them. You all should also check out the band Wardruna, the vocalist is also a former drummer of the black metal band Gorgoroth
have you guys heard any Wardruna yet?
Yes, absolutely! The granddaddy of the pagan folk scene.
For something similar, check out "Wolf Totem" by The Hu for Mongolian metal/rock, and "Altay" by Otyken & Ummet Ozcan for Siberian folk rock. All three of those acts make extensive use of throat singing, similar to Heilung's.
all natives are not "similar" at all !
Wolf Totem 👍
As you liked this one, you might enjoy Wardruna Himinndotter (sky dotter). There is also a live video of Wardruna with Aurora singing Helvegen..
Aurora version is my favorite verison of Helvegen I think. So I second this!! :)
Pronounced Hi Lung meaning Healing - Amplified History
This group focuses on 7-8th century Norse (Viking) this is ancient dead language based on runic characters.
They use a mixture of modern technology with with ancient historical instrumentation.
The ei in Heilubg is pronounced, like the i in "Hi".
Nice reaction! It is a great song, when you go for a walk in nature!
I did that every day for over a year and it was always amazing.
Have a good one! ✌🏻
Their music - including the languages in which they sing - is inspired by ancient, pre-Christian, shamanistic European cultures!
“Heilung” is the German word for healing, it contains the old word “heil”, which means something like luck, success! But it also applies in the context of “whole/complete” - if something is broken, you colloquially make it “heil” again (whole/complete - repair it) - in other words: "Heilung" (healing) restores the wholeness/completeness of the body/soul! It also appears in the German word for „holy“ (heilig)! But there are also opposite meanings - “Unheil” (bad luck, ruin, misfortune) or “heillos” (unsuccessful/hopeless/helpless)! The word “Heil” gained negative notoriety through Hitler and the Nazis, who used the term in the “Hitler salute” or as “Sieg Heil” - i.e. the invocation of a successful victory! Even today we still wish a hunter a successful hunt with a “Weidmanns Heil” or a fisherman a good catch with a “Petri Heil” (Petri is the abbreviation of Petrus, the patron saint of fishermen)!
A small side note on the pronunciation of “Heilung”:
In German, “ei” is like the English letter “i” or the word “eye”.
In German, the letter “u” is pronounced like the “ou” in “you” - if you were to translate the English pronunciation of “you” into the German spelling, the result would be “ju”!
The “H”, “l” and “ng” correspond to the one in the word “healing”!
Phonetically something like: H-eye-l-ou-ng!
Ah, yes. They're closest to "native Germanic" as you can get, and naturally enough it seems "Native American" to US Americans because old polytheist and shamanic tribal warrior cultures are somewhat alike. Mind you it's modern music in the spirit of iron age Germanic cultures, *not* "iron age music" as some assert.
Best regards
Raoul G. Kunz
It is NOT native American. It is native North European. The Band is Danish-German-Norwegian.
We were all Pagan once.
Heilung asked First Nation permission to perform their ritual while touring usa. They also joined Heilung, in ceremony, on stage. Some awesome footage on yt. xx
At the end, I believe she becomes one with her spirit animal. You can tell as a young girl that she is looking for that animal when she shakes her antlers at the moose, but doesn't get a response.
And she gazes at the eagle in the sky but no response.
@georgelynch6139 Very true. She engages with multiple animals and insects.
you girls will LOVE heilung, more please 🙏
at the end that is not a buffalo its a musk ox and the woman wasnt crushed or smashed shes the spirit of nature and the beast and the spirit reunited thats how the video ends
👍
If you like this you really should check out Wardruna - Helvegen. I like the version with Aurora :)
Maria Franz’s outfit is a copy of an actual outfit unearthed in archaeological dig. Believed to have been a female shaman of great importance. The deeper sounds are generally Scandinavian throat singing and Maria has amazing vocal and “sound making” abilities.
yes, in northern germany with baby bones if iam not wrong? :)
Celebrating our Germanic tribal ancestors. And by “Germanic” I include our Norse ancestors.
Many Celt, Norse Germanic tribes, & all Pagan xx
They become one.
A lot of people mistake Heilung for native American at first. There are so many similarities between all tribal cultures across the world, since there are only so many ways to utilize resources when living off the land. Languages are the only real divides. I'm happy I found your channel. I look forward to the Heilung arc that I'm sure is coming.
sorry for the long text
Heilung describe their music as “amplified history”. You can take that literally. On the stage of the German-Danish collective you will find human bones converted into instruments, ancient drums, bronze rings and sometimes entire armies, armed with shields and swords modeled on the material of the Iron and Viking Age.
What became an international phenomenon at the end of the 2010s began on a very small scale in 2014. Kai Uwe Faust, a German tattoo artist living in Denmark, promised musician Christopher Juul (Euzen) a tattoo if he would work with him on a collection of poems. This is how the spoken word track “Schlammschlacht engl. Mud fight”, the retelling of the famous Varus Battle in the Teutoburg Forest, which is later included on the debut album, was created.
Faust and Juul are both interested in ancient history and are involved in the reenactment scene. The former also works as a shaman. Their aim with Heilung: “To put the listener into a state of relaxation after a magical, sometimes turbulent musical journey.”
Heilung soon concentrated primarily on the Iron Age and Viking culture, for example, processing inscriptions from old rune stones and amulets from this period into lyrics. Instead of simply retelling history, they also charge their works with spirituality. In 2015, they released the album “Ofnir” on their own.
The musicians, now joined by singer Maria Franz, largely stick to materials that were already present in the time they were singing about. Bells clang, stones scrape across the ground, water runs through bones. Melodies are almost nowhere to be found; the focus is on an atmosphere based on natural sounds, percussion and the vocal performance of the three musicians. They croak, whisper, howl, lapse into deep overtone singing or ethereal high notes.
Their extraordinary, artistic live performances open the doors to concert halls where bands from their scene are otherwise rarely encountered. As part of their 2019 headlining tour, they will be performing at venues including Kiel Castle and the Admiralspalast in Berlin. New songs are already in the program. Heilung will release their second studio album “Futha” in the summer after that tour.
The trio took the title from a coin engraving from the 6th century B.C. The meaning is not clear, archaeologists and historians suspect a magical background on the one hand and a reference to the female sex on the other. Both serve Heilung as the thematic basis for the album, which they conceived as a counter-design to the “male” first album. While lyrical inspiration for “Ofnir” mainly came from engravings on weapons and armor, Heilung now focus on Icelandic poetry and spells of holy women. Maria Franz and her voice also take center stage.
The musicians underline how serious they are about the spiritual and magical dimension of their work with the symbolic power they even put into their schedules. After three years of work, they will finish recording “Futha” on December 21, 2018 at 9 pm. Winter solstice, the darkest day of the year.
On “Drif”, the 2022 trio focuses more on special moods and moments of tension. Melodies also play an increasingly important role in the music, without the atmospherically dark moments being neglected. In the dark, without distracting stimuli, this is probably the closest you can get to the cathartic listening experience the band has in mind.
Because some misguided people see music about ancient times and the use of Nordic symbolism as an invitation for missionary, nationalist and far-right ideas, Heilung emphasize that their art is independent of modern political and religious systems. Any attempt to establish a connection to this is “pointless”, as Heilung “try to link the listener to the time before Christianity and its political offspring raped and burned their way into the Northern European mentality.
have a nice day, greetings from germany
It's not a native American thing, it's a native nordic thing - exactly: Shamanism of the North. You can find this kind of Rituals in Scandinavian, Siberian, Mongolia up to Korea. The Song selfs? It 's about the Reincarnation of a Shaman and Healer ... ;)
scandinavian pagan//troutbumandsam(all the best)
Definitely not native american, their music is very proto germanic and norse in nature. People like to associate them with vikings but the themes are older altho include the viking era nordic culture. If this musical group intrigues you i would also recomend skald and wardruna
Try HEILUNG - Norupo!
🤝👍👏👏
Hello ladies a amazing band and great song too i am a subscriber i would like to ask a favor my mother Cathy has breast cancer and not in good health so i would like to request for you to react to her favorite symphonic metal band from Finland wintersun for Wintersun sons of winter and stars 1.5 official lyric video from Wintersun jari TH-cam channel it would make her day better watching you two react to that song and would make her last possible days better so let bme know in a reply thank you. Wintersun Alex ❄️🫶
The most vegan friendly band ever
I actually like the live version better
It’s part Germanic and Scandinavian
Scandinavia Norway 🇳🇴 Sweden 🇸🇪 Denmark 🇩🇰
Germanic are the German 🇩🇪 Dutch 🇳🇱 Belgium 🇧🇪 Switzerland 🇨🇭 Austria 🇦🇹
It's not native American, it's native Scandinavian.
Please take a look on google translate how Heilung is pronounced in German ... it is meaning healing in German .
NOTHING TO DO WITH NORTH AMERICA !
Or Samoa 😊!
And NOT a Buffalo !
30 second search on the Internet would answer all your questions !
native european... white peoples culture and heritage