If the slightly studio-y sound of these tracks can feel rather less than olde worlde, the fireside strum of Harpens Kraft is satisfyingly medieval, as is the picked lyre and bold cello of Reiar. It’s in these moments that Folkesange is at its best, where it most convincingly touches on the past to which it points. And throughout, it shows that regardless of the filter through which it is performed, a sense of stark vastness can’t help but ripple through Myrkur’s music – whether that’s as a terrible, imposing isolation or, as here, as something to bathe in and drink the welcoming beauty of.
Across 12 tracks, it does get a little samey, but then again, individual songs aren’t the entire point here. This is a record that creates an atmosphere around itself, a world of its own, without sounding twee or like something from a real ale festival. A curio, maybe, but a heartfelt and skilfully realised one from a genuinely unique artist.
Verdict: 3/5