Korpiklaani
Korpiklaani | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Also known as | Shamaani Duo (1993–1996) Shaman (1996–2003) |
Origin | Lahti, Finland |
Genres | Folk metal |
Years active | 1993–present |
Labels | Nuclear Blast, Napalm |
Members | Jonne Järvelä Matti "Matson" Johansson Kalle "Cane" Savijärvi Jarkko Aaltonen Tuomas Rounakari Sami Perttula |
Past members | Maaren Aikio Juke Eräkangas Ilkka Kilpeläinen Tero Piirainen Samu Ruotsalainen Janne G`thaur Hosse Latvala Veera Muhli Toni Näykki Henri "Trollhorn" Sorvali Jaakko "Hittavainen" Lemmetty Toni "Honka" Honkanen Ali Määttä Arto Tissari Juho Kauppinen Teemu Eerola |
Website | www.korpiklaani.com |
Korpiklaani (Finnish: The Backwoods Clan) is a folk metal band from Finland who were formerly known as Shaman.
Biography
Shamaani Duo
While other folk metal bands began with metal before adding folk music, Korpiklaani started with folk music before turning metal.[1] The roots of Korpiklaani can be traced back to a Sami folk music group under the name of "Shamaani Duo",[2] an "in house restaurant band" created by Jonne Järvelä in 1993.[3] An album of folk music (Hunka Lunka) was released under this name before Järvelä relocated and "Shamaani Duo" morphed into "Shaman".[4]
Shaman
Shaman was the second incarnation of Korpiklaani, formed in 1996 which is notable for the heavy use of original native Sámic music elements and lyrics in Northern Sámi. The band's music was based on the folk music of Shamaani Duo.[5] The most widely used elements are the shamanic drum, yoik and humppa. Besides yoik, the vocals vary from clean to rather aggressive growling.
The musical style of Shaman is quite distinctive, especially in the slow songs, due to its entrancing atmosphere created by the monophonic, "narrow" synth sound making the deep contrast to the spacious sound of the acoustic guitar, the shamanic drum and yoik singing.
The first recording released under the name of Shaman was the demo single Ođđa máilbmi (New World in Northern Sámi). The video clip shot for the song featured a wolf breaking free from its cage and running into the forest. Besides the single CD the song was included on the band's first full-length album Idja (Night in Northern Sámi, 1999) as well.
The band released another album, Shamániac, in 2002.[4]
Korpiklaani
The band underwent another evolution in 2003, and "Shaman" became "Korpiklaani" (with only Järvelä and drummer Samu Ruotsalainen remaining from the last "Shaman" lineup), with the music style to a more conventional folk metal with folk/thrash vocals instead of yoiking. Shamániac had already featured a strong resemblance to the future Korpiklaani style. In fact, the song, "Vuola lávlla", has the same music as the Korpiklaani song, "Beer Beer".
The change in name was accompanied by a change in the music. The traditional yoik vocals and the use of the Northern Sámi language were dropped while the synthesizer was replaced with real folk instruments.[6] Jonne Järvelä credits his work with Finntroll as the catalyst for the shift in emphasis from folk to metal.[7] Their song lyrics are often related to alcohol and partying.
According to Jonne Järvelä, Korpiklaani's music would be seen as "old people's music with heavy metal guitars"[8] in Finland.
There has been some collaboration between Korpiklaani and Finntroll, as Samu Ruotsalainen of Finntroll provided session drums for their debut album Spirit of the Forest and Järvelä provided the yoiking for the title track of Finntroll's album Jaktens Tid.
Juha Jyrkäs has written some Finnish lyrics to Korpiklaani and from 2011 lyrics are written by poet Tuomas Keskimäki, who writes lyrics in the old Finnish "kalevalametre".[9]
The name Korpiklaani means "Backwoods Clan" in the Finnish language.[5] In spoken language "korpi" means dark old forest. In biology it refers to boreal forest appearing on moist moraine soils, characterized by dense growth of spruce and a deep layer of moss as undergrowth.
In September 2011 Korpiklaani announced that Jaakko "Hittavainen" Lemmetty would be leaving the band due to personal health issues which made the constant touring and recording impossible. First his replacement was violist Teemu Eerola and later, nowadays permanent member, Tuomas Rounakari.[10] In 2013 accordion player Juho Kauppinen left Korpiklaani and the new accordion player is Sami Perttula.[11]
Personnel
Members
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|
Timeline
Discography
- Hunka Lunka (1996)
- Idja (1999)
- Shamániac (2002)
- Spirit of the Forest (2003)
- Voice of Wilderness (2005)
- Tales Along This Road (2006)
- Tervaskanto (2007)
- Korven Kuningas (2008)
- Karkelo (2009)
- Ukon Wacka (2011)
- Manala (2012)
- Noita (2015)
- Kulkija (2018)
References
- ^ Dicks, Britton. "Interview with Jarkko Aaltonen of Korpiklaani". Metalcoven.com. Archived from the original on May 16, 2008. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Van Horn Jr., Ray. "Interview with Jarkko Aaltonen of Korpiklaani". Maelstrom.nu. Archived from the original on March 20, 2008. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Sharpe-Young, Garry. "MusicMight Shama". MusicMight.com. Archived from the original on August 11, 2011. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b Ramos Jr, Octavio. "Voice Of The Forest". Soundchecks.co.uk. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
- ^ a b Morton, Kenneth. "Interview with Jarkko Aaltonen of Korpiklaani". Highwiredaze.com. Archived from the original on February 25, 2008. Retrieved May 12, 2008.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Lehtinen, Arto. "Interview with Jonne Järvelä of Korpiklaani". Metal-rules.com. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
- ^ Fjordi. "Interview with Jonne Järvelä of Korpiklaani". Tartareandesire.com. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
- ^ Fruehauf, Stefan. "Interview with Jarkko Aaltonen and Jonne Järvelä of Korpiklaani". Dark-Festivals.de. Retrieved March 4, 2013.
- ^ "Perisuomalaista black metalia kalevalamitassa – Hiidenhaudalta tuore musiikkivideo!". Inferno.fi. 2014-10-27. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
- ^ "Tuomas Rounakari - Encyclopaedia Metallum". Metal-archives.com. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
- ^ "Sami Perttula - Encyclopaedia Metallum". Metal-archives.com. Retrieved 2015-05-01.