A Vardøger is traditionally seen as a protective spirit or companion that precedes a person, warning of their arrival or impending dangers. Today, it often refers to a premonition indicating someone is about to appear.
A group of songs within folk music consists of prayers for good weather for bountiful crops, or chants believed to have magical effects on nature. These are the types of texts that Jorun Marie Kvernberg has drawn upon for her new work for Song Circus. The piece also includes texts taken from the aquaculture industry’s own propaganda apparatus, as well as academic texts of various kinds.
The overarching idea behind the work is to mirror these texts in our time, where we, modern and enlightened individuals, have placed ourselves in a situation where we once again must ask Mother Earth for good weather.
Vardøger is a piece that gives us as an ensemble a large space for co-creative expression. The form and theme of the work have been developed in close collaboration between Jorun Marie and Song Circus, led by Liv Runesdatter.
Vardøger is a musical defense of nature and the protection of fish stocks in our seas. In developing the work, Jorun Marie focuses more on sound fragments than on written music. The music springs from fiddle playing, but also from Jorun Marie’s singing and vocal sound play. Vardøger also incorporates sounds from her father Kvernberg’s silversmithing. Lush, beautiful, and imaginative music!
Når fiskane flotnar
og røtene rotnar
og ingenting botnar
i graver me grev utan vit.
Kor skal
songane sveva og
draumane leva og
menneska streva i
luft utan von?
Svar, måne, svar!
Svar, måne, svar!
English translation:
When the fish float
and the roots rot
and nothing buds
in graves we dig without knowing.
Where shall
the songs soar and
the dreams live and
humans struggle in
air without hope?
Answer, moon, answer!
Answer, moon, answer!
Jorun Marie writes:
“The music should reflect the drama of this obvious truth that again demands our attention: that we are dependent on nature, and that weather and climate both give and take life – even in our modern time. In ancient times, they used magical rituals and songs to awaken the fields in spring. Where do we turn today when the poles are melting and temperatures are rising?
Both musically and thematically, I will try to reflect the span between the past and the present, folk music and contemporary music, the struggle for existence in pre-industrial society, and the fight for repair and redress of our own destruction in our time.”