A Nordic Poem is the first studio album of the musical project Folkearth. Because of the bad sound quality it was remastered and reissued. There was around 60 minutes of material, but some of it got lost.[1]

A Nordic Poem
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 1, 2004
GenreFolk metal, Viking metal
Length39:38
LabelStygian Crypt Productions
Folkearth chronology
A Nordic Poem
(2004)
By the Sword of My Father
(2006)

Track listing

edit
  1. "(Intro) The Pipes Are Calling" — 2:08
  2. "Wolfsong in Moonlight (Fenris Unbound)" — 4:40
  3. "Horned Trolls and Mystical Folk" — 5:28
  4. "Rhyming with Thunder" — 5:55
  5. "Eldritch Sorcery and Faery Runes" — 3:41
  6. "In Odin's Court" — 3:16
  7. "Storm Ravens Come" — 4:22
  8. "Gryningssång" — 2:30
  9. "Gaelic Valor" — 5:21
  10. "Outro" — 2:17

Line-Up

edit

Instruments

edit

  Greece

  • Marios "Prince Imrahil" Koutsoukos (Dol Amroth) – keyboard
  • Stefanos Koutsoukos (Dol Amroth) – bass
  • Nikos Nezeritis (Dol Amroth) – acoustic guitar

  Lithuania

  • Ruslanas – spoken vocal

  Austria

  • Alex "Hugin" Wieser (Uruk-Hai) – keyboard

  Great Britain

   Switzerland

  Sweden

  • Magnus Wohlfart (Nae'blis) – acoustic and electric guitar, bass, keyboard, jaw harp, vocal
  • Jeremy Child (Yggdrasil) – drums, vocal
  • William Ekeberg (Broken Dagger) – cello, vocal
  • Jonas Fröberg (Trymheim) – keyed fiddle, vocal
  • Kristofer Janiec – violin
  • Michelle Maas – female vocal

Writing and production

edit
  • all music except "(Intro) The Pipes Are Calling", "Rhyming With Thunder", and "Outro" by Magnus Wohlfart
  • music on "(Intro) The Pipes Are Calling" by Chrigel Glanzmann, additional arrangements by Magnus Wohlfart and Michelle Maass
  • music on "Rhyming With Thunder" by Athelstan and Wulfstan, additional arrangements by Magnus Wohlfart, Jonas Fröberg and William Ekeberg
  • music on "Outro" by Alex "Hugin" Wieser
  • all lyrics except "Gryningssång" by Marios Koutsoukos
  • lyrics for "Gryningssång" by Magnus Wohlfart
  • layout by Dragon Design[2]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Holy Sword By the Sword of My Father note". 2006-08-04. Retrieved 2007-09-18.
  2. ^ "Metal Storm A Nordic Poem review". 2005-04-07. Retrieved 2007-09-16.