
Korpiklaani - Noita
In May 2015, the energetic workaholics that make up KORPIKLAANI return with their ninth studio album »Noita«, which promises to get you dancing on feet, banging your fists and most importantly, having a good time. It will also be the first album to feature new accordion player Sami Perttula, who has had a remarkable influence on the traditional folk arrangements, along with Fiddler Tuomas Rounakari, making a perfect balance between Folk and Metal as frontman Jonne always envisioned. »Noita« was recorded at Petrax Studio with Aksu Hanttu handling production, recording and mixing once again. The album artwork done by Jan Yrlund.
The literal translation of the new releaseâs title may be misleading with regards to the album themes but Jarkko Aaltonen is on hand to give a correct summary of the storyline: â»Noita« in the traditional Finnish meaning is different than what people associate it with nowadays. âNoitaâ is a person with wider knowledge and understanding of nature and who also was believed to possess paranormal or unnatural abilities. These people were often also referred to as âTietĂ€jĂ€â, which translates as someone with wider knowledge and understanding of pretty much everything. The Native American medicine man and all the different types of Shamans of the primitive people are other examples. âNoitaâ is someone that you turn to when you need help of some kind. Finnish âNoitaâ had the ability to heal, just like their North American counterparts. They were very respected members of the society. Only later Christianity changed the word to mean something negative since those people were considered rivals by the church. Even in Finland this turned into a Witchhunt (=noitavainot) every now and then. Anyway, most people using Google Translate or similar will find the word âWitchâ and will probably get the wrong idea of the meaning, since most will probably connect it with the black sabbaths, devil marks and such, when a way more correct translation would probably be medicine man or Shaman.â
New accordionist Sami Perttula comments on his first album with the band: âPreviously the KORPIKLAANI albums were played with a piano-accordion and now I play with a traditional button-accordion which was more widely used in Finland anyways. In the arrangements you can hear more tonal harmonies and folky accompaniments combined to the power-chords than before. It actually boosts up the uplifting feel of our music.â
Violinist Tuomas Rounakari adds: âThis album has more violin solos than ever before. Violin is more in the role of a lead-guitar now just as Jonne had originally intended it to be.â
And vocalist Jonne JĂ€rvelĂ€ concludes: âWe have finally managed to create the balance between folk and metal in the way Iâve always dreamt it to be. Thanks to Samiâs arrangements and Tuomasâs crazy shredding of the violin.â
Ever since the release of their debut album âSpirit Of The Forestâ in 2003, Finnish traditional folk metal pioneers KORPIKLAANI have continuously made their way to the top of the scene. Whether you take their early works such as âVoice Of Wildernessâ (2005), âTales Along This Roadâ (2006) and âTervaskantoâ (2007) or listen to the records of their Nuclear Blast era â namely âKorven Kuningasâ (2008), âKarkeloâ (2009), âUkon Wackaâ (2011) and âManalaâ (2012) â youâll always conclude: KORPIKLAANI have established their very own style. It is this unique mixture of time-honoured folk tunes mixed with classic metal and rock and roll attitude that makes it impossible for every connoisseur of high-class handmade music to elude their almost magnetic attraction. There are not many metal bands that have the ability to get people dancing at a metal show or festival, yet Korpiklaani manage this on their journeys around the world. â»Noita« is a continuation of this positive, fun, energetic tradition that is Korpiklaani.
Tracklist:
01. ViinamÀen Mies
02. Pilli On Pajusta Tehty
03. Lempo
04. Sahti
05. Luontoni
06. MinÀ NÀin VedessÀ Neidon
07. Jouni Jouni
08. KylÀstÀ KevÀinen Kehto
09. ĂmmĂ€nhauta
10. Sen Verran MinÀkin Noita
11. Antaja (Bonus Track)
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Items typically ship in 5-7 business days.
You will receive tracking information as soon as your order is shipped.
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In May 2015, the energetic workaholics that make up KORPIKLAANI return with their ninth studio album »Noita«, which promises to get you dancing on feet, banging your fists and most importantly, having a good time. It will also be the first album to feature new accordion player Sami Perttula, who has had a remarkable influence on the traditional folk arrangements, along with Fiddler Tuomas Rounakari, making a perfect balance between Folk and Metal as frontman Jonne always envisioned. »Noita« was recorded at Petrax Studio with Aksu Hanttu handling production, recording and mixing once again. The album artwork done by Jan Yrlund.
The literal translation of the new releaseâs title may be misleading with regards to the album themes but Jarkko Aaltonen is on hand to give a correct summary of the storyline: â»Noita« in the traditional Finnish meaning is different than what people associate it with nowadays. âNoitaâ is a person with wider knowledge and understanding of nature and who also was believed to possess paranormal or unnatural abilities. These people were often also referred to as âTietĂ€jĂ€â, which translates as someone with wider knowledge and understanding of pretty much everything. The Native American medicine man and all the different types of Shamans of the primitive people are other examples. âNoitaâ is someone that you turn to when you need help of some kind. Finnish âNoitaâ had the ability to heal, just like their North American counterparts. They were very respected members of the society. Only later Christianity changed the word to mean something negative since those people were considered rivals by the church. Even in Finland this turned into a Witchhunt (=noitavainot) every now and then. Anyway, most people using Google Translate or similar will find the word âWitchâ and will probably get the wrong idea of the meaning, since most will probably connect it with the black sabbaths, devil marks and such, when a way more correct translation would probably be medicine man or Shaman.â
New accordionist Sami Perttula comments on his first album with the band: âPreviously the KORPIKLAANI albums were played with a piano-accordion and now I play with a traditional button-accordion which was more widely used in Finland anyways. In the arrangements you can hear more tonal harmonies and folky accompaniments combined to the power-chords than before. It actually boosts up the uplifting feel of our music.â
Violinist Tuomas Rounakari adds: âThis album has more violin solos than ever before. Violin is more in the role of a lead-guitar now just as Jonne had originally intended it to be.â
And vocalist Jonne JĂ€rvelĂ€ concludes: âWe have finally managed to create the balance between folk and metal in the way Iâve always dreamt it to be. Thanks to Samiâs arrangements and Tuomasâs crazy shredding of the violin.â
Ever since the release of their debut album âSpirit Of The Forestâ in 2003, Finnish traditional folk metal pioneers KORPIKLAANI have continuously made their way to the top of the scene. Whether you take their early works such as âVoice Of Wildernessâ (2005), âTales Along This Roadâ (2006) and âTervaskantoâ (2007) or listen to the records of their Nuclear Blast era â namely âKorven Kuningasâ (2008), âKarkeloâ (2009), âUkon Wackaâ (2011) and âManalaâ (2012) â youâll always conclude: KORPIKLAANI have established their very own style. It is this unique mixture of time-honoured folk tunes mixed with classic metal and rock and roll attitude that makes it impossible for every connoisseur of high-class handmade music to elude their almost magnetic attraction. There are not many metal bands that have the ability to get people dancing at a metal show or festival, yet Korpiklaani manage this on their journeys around the world. â»Noita« is a continuation of this positive, fun, energetic tradition that is Korpiklaani.
Tracklist:
01. ViinamÀen Mies
02. Pilli On Pajusta Tehty
03. Lempo
04. Sahti
05. Luontoni
06. MinÀ NÀin VedessÀ Neidon
07. Jouni Jouni
08. KylÀstÀ KevÀinen Kehto
09. ĂmmĂ€nhauta
10. Sen Verran MinÀkin Noita
11. Antaja (Bonus Track)
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Items typically ship in 5-7 business days.
You will receive tracking information as soon as your order is shipped.
For any questions about your order, please contact us here!
Original: $13.99
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$4.90Description
In May 2015, the energetic workaholics that make up KORPIKLAANI return with their ninth studio album »Noita«, which promises to get you dancing on feet, banging your fists and most importantly, having a good time. It will also be the first album to feature new accordion player Sami Perttula, who has had a remarkable influence on the traditional folk arrangements, along with Fiddler Tuomas Rounakari, making a perfect balance between Folk and Metal as frontman Jonne always envisioned. »Noita« was recorded at Petrax Studio with Aksu Hanttu handling production, recording and mixing once again. The album artwork done by Jan Yrlund.
The literal translation of the new releaseâs title may be misleading with regards to the album themes but Jarkko Aaltonen is on hand to give a correct summary of the storyline: â»Noita« in the traditional Finnish meaning is different than what people associate it with nowadays. âNoitaâ is a person with wider knowledge and understanding of nature and who also was believed to possess paranormal or unnatural abilities. These people were often also referred to as âTietĂ€jĂ€â, which translates as someone with wider knowledge and understanding of pretty much everything. The Native American medicine man and all the different types of Shamans of the primitive people are other examples. âNoitaâ is someone that you turn to when you need help of some kind. Finnish âNoitaâ had the ability to heal, just like their North American counterparts. They were very respected members of the society. Only later Christianity changed the word to mean something negative since those people were considered rivals by the church. Even in Finland this turned into a Witchhunt (=noitavainot) every now and then. Anyway, most people using Google Translate or similar will find the word âWitchâ and will probably get the wrong idea of the meaning, since most will probably connect it with the black sabbaths, devil marks and such, when a way more correct translation would probably be medicine man or Shaman.â
New accordionist Sami Perttula comments on his first album with the band: âPreviously the KORPIKLAANI albums were played with a piano-accordion and now I play with a traditional button-accordion which was more widely used in Finland anyways. In the arrangements you can hear more tonal harmonies and folky accompaniments combined to the power-chords than before. It actually boosts up the uplifting feel of our music.â
Violinist Tuomas Rounakari adds: âThis album has more violin solos than ever before. Violin is more in the role of a lead-guitar now just as Jonne had originally intended it to be.â
And vocalist Jonne JĂ€rvelĂ€ concludes: âWe have finally managed to create the balance between folk and metal in the way Iâve always dreamt it to be. Thanks to Samiâs arrangements and Tuomasâs crazy shredding of the violin.â
Ever since the release of their debut album âSpirit Of The Forestâ in 2003, Finnish traditional folk metal pioneers KORPIKLAANI have continuously made their way to the top of the scene. Whether you take their early works such as âVoice Of Wildernessâ (2005), âTales Along This Roadâ (2006) and âTervaskantoâ (2007) or listen to the records of their Nuclear Blast era â namely âKorven Kuningasâ (2008), âKarkeloâ (2009), âUkon Wackaâ (2011) and âManalaâ (2012) â youâll always conclude: KORPIKLAANI have established their very own style. It is this unique mixture of time-honoured folk tunes mixed with classic metal and rock and roll attitude that makes it impossible for every connoisseur of high-class handmade music to elude their almost magnetic attraction. There are not many metal bands that have the ability to get people dancing at a metal show or festival, yet Korpiklaani manage this on their journeys around the world. â»Noita« is a continuation of this positive, fun, energetic tradition that is Korpiklaani.
Tracklist:
01. ViinamÀen Mies
02. Pilli On Pajusta Tehty
03. Lempo
04. Sahti
05. Luontoni
06. MinÀ NÀin VedessÀ Neidon
07. Jouni Jouni
08. KylÀstÀ KevÀinen Kehto
09. ĂmmĂ€nhauta
10. Sen Verran MinÀkin Noita
11. Antaja (Bonus Track)
In stock and ready to ship!
Items typically ship in 5-7 business days.
You will receive tracking information as soon as your order is shipped.
For any questions about your order, please contact us here!
























