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Myrkur


Line-up

2013-  Myrkur - bass, guitars, piano, vocals
2014  Rex Myrnur - programming
2015-  Teloch - bass, guitars
2015-  Øyvind Myrvoll - drums
2018  Jo Quail - cello
› 2020  -//-
2020  Kristian Uhre - percussion
› 2023  -//- drums
2023  Maja Shining - vocals, bass, keyboards
2023  Mikkel Haastrup - guitars
2023  Randall Dunn - synthesizers, frame drum, horn
2015-  Teloch - guitars
2015-  Sir - bass
2015  Øyvind Myrvoll - drums
2016-2017  Rasmus Schmidt - drums
2017-  Martin Haumann - drums
2015  Christopher "Chris" Amott - guitars
2015  Ole-Henrik Moe - íslensk fiðla, hardanger fiddle, violin
2015  Håvard Jørgensen - acoustic guitars
2015  Tone Reichelt - horn
2015  Martin Taxt - tuba
2017  Chelsea Wolfe - vocals
2017  Aaron Weaver - drums, percussion
2021  Lindsay Schoolcraft - harp
2021  Maja Shining - choirs vocals
2023  Brent Arnold - cello

Discography

2014 Myrkur [EP] 7.2
2016 Mausoleum [EP] 6.8
2018 Juniper [EP] 7.3
2014 Nattens Barn [Single] 7
2014 Skaði [Demo] 6.6
2015 Hævnen [Single] 8
2015 Onde Børn [Single] 7
2015 Den Lille Piges Død [Single] 6.8
2017 Live At Wacken 2016 [VA]
2017 Två konungabarn [Single] 6.8
2017 Shadows Of Silence [Single] 6.7
2020 Dronning Ellisiv [Single] 7.8
2021 Rivers Blessed [Demo] 7.8
2014 Nattens Barn 6
2015 Onde Børn 8.5
2017 Ulvinde 8.8
2018 Juniper
2018 Bonden Og Kragen
2023 Mothlike 7

Latest reviews

Spine
7.6
Myrkur’s gradual transition from folk black metal to just folk reached a natural conclusion with 2020’s Folkesange. This project hadn’t yet stood still between releases, but the next steps were unclear; would future releases see a return to the metallic sounds of earlier records, or would Amalie Bruun continue to take Myrkur further away from its original sound? As it turns out, she isn’t yet finished with metal.
Review by musclassia ››
Don't let that Sound Of Music cover art fool you; somehow we've arrived at the point where acoustic folk is more metal than folk metal.
Review by ScreamingSteelUS ››
Myrkur hasn't stopped making waves in the metal scene since unveiling her self-titled EP in 2014, and Mareridt, the project's second full-length, suggests that those waves are only going to get bigger and bigger with the passage of time.
Review by ScreamingSteelUS ››

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