SKÁLD is a French collective that brings Norse skaldic poetry into today's folk scene with layered voices and heavy frame drums. Their music centers on Old Norse lyrics, rattling strings like tagelharpa, and steady, trance-ready rhythms.
French-bred, Norse-sung
On recent tours the lineup has rotated, with a tight lead trio up front and extra percussion added, which shifts the blend from choral to punchy and close. Expect anchor pieces like
Rún,
Ó Valhalla, and
Ragnarök, with newer mood-setters such as
Huldufolk used as breathers between the big drum numbers. They tend to start slow and build, letting the low drum and droning strings carry long vowels before the full chant lands.
Lore, quirks, and who shows up
The crowd is a mix of folk fans, metal crossovers, language students, and history buffs, many in simple earth tones, braids, and rune pendants, listening hard and singing the refrains. Lesser-known detail: they consult Old Norse specialists to tighten pronunciation on recordings and rehearse vowel shapes as part of warmup. Another note: the project began as a studio experiment layering drums and voices before it took shape as a touring ensemble. Note: song choices and staging described here are educated guesses based on recent shows.
Runes on Jackets, Stories in the Air
What you see in the crowd
Clothes skew toward natural fabrics, layered blacks and browns, and a few handmade pieces like leather bracers or woven belts. You will spot discreet face paint or a single stripe, but most people keep it practical for moving and clapping. Merch trends toward lyric booklets with translations, rune patches, and heavyweight shirts with stark, minimal art.
Shared rituals
Chant moments often arrive on two or three-syllable hooks where the room answers the drum with a short hey, and the stomps fall in a steady, even pulse. Between songs, people swap notes about instrument names and saga sources, and there is a respectful hush before the next beat lands. After the show, the talk is less about decibels and more about which lines stuck in the head and how the stories connect to now.
Drum, Drone, and Voice: The Music at Play
Voices ride the drum
Lead voices sit close to the mic with breathy consonants, while a small choir locks simple harmonies that thicken on refrains. Arrangements favor drones from tagelharpa or bowed lyres and bright plucks from cistre or bouzouki, giving the chant a floor to stand on. Tempos often start restrained and then surge a notch for the last refrain so the crowd can clap or stomp in time. A neat live habit is retuning or capoing the stringed drones to low D or A so songs segue smoothly without breaking the mood.
Ritual color without clutter
Lighting leans warm and smoky, with narrow beams that outline drum strikes and keep faces in half-shadow to let the sound lead. Drums carry the narrative, and the band leaves space between hits, which makes each chorus feel heavier without turning into rock bombast. When a song calls for a lift, a simple flute line or overtone chant slides in rather than big cymbal crashes.
Kindred Echoes for SKÁLD Listeners
If this moved you, try these live acts
Fans of ritual percussion and chant will likely feel at home with
Heilung, whose theater-like pacing and primal drums echo the ceremonial side here. Those drawn to myth-heavy storytelling and deep baritone leads should try
Wardruna, which shares the same Nordic source texts but leans more meditative. For brighter folk colors and nimble flutes,
Faun offers dance-ready grooves and lush harmonies that overlap with this scene. If voice-forward Nordic ballads speak to you,
Eivor delivers intimate storytelling and soaring tone that fans of chant and drones often admire.
Overlap in vibe, not copies
All four acts balance old forms with modern staging, and their crowds value atmosphere, language, and percussion in similar ways. If you want a bridge between ritual heft and melodic folk, these shows sit on the same map as
SKÁLD without sounding the same.