At the Summerfarm

by Catherine Madsen

Jonna Jinton uses the Scandinavian singing tradition of kulning to herd cows. Photo credit: Jonna JintonWho would suppose, in this age of large-scale dairy farms and robotic milking machines, that the way to bring your cows home is to ?

That鈥檚 what traditional Scandinavian farm women did from time out of mind, in high-pitched melodic phrases known as kulning. The unmarried women and the older women鈥攁nyone who didn鈥檛 have small children to look after鈥攚ould take the cows for the summer up to the mountains, where the forests were carefully managed to produce grass for grazing. Under the midnight sun they would look after their herds, guard them from bears and wolves, and work hard at making butter and cheese for the winter. The summerfarm was known as the f盲bod in Sweden and the seter in Norway; there used to be about 20,000 of them. Today there might be 200.

To anyone whose general sense of how to call animals is limited to 鈥 HERE kittykittykitty鈥 and 鈥淪ooEEEEEE,鈥 the musicality of kulning is a revelation. The kulning scale, demonstrated  by Maria Misgeld, is called the vall氓tsmodus (herding tune mode). What it鈥檚 like in practical use is shown by this field recording of , excerpted from the 1966 album 鈥溾. Edvardsson鈥檚 virtuosity is electrifying; it鈥檚 not surprising that she was the first to transplant kulning from the farm to the stage.

Singer and folk music researcher , whom you heard at the first link as part of a trio performing Sven Ahlb盲ck鈥檚 鈥Vall氓tar from Gammelboning,鈥 knows more about the science of kulning than anyone else. In terms of vocal technique, the sound is produced not by lowering the larynx and creating space in the throat as for classical singing, but by raising the larynx, resulting in a piercing, nasal tone that can carry as far as three miles. There is no vibrato. The decibel level is quite high鈥攊t鈥檚 been measured at 125, not something you want to be standing right next to. The pitch can go right up into what鈥檚 called , Rosenberg鈥檚 workshops have introduced generations of women to the technique; her offers books, CDs and learning resources, including a  with book and CD. The warmups alone are worth the price of the course; how many voice coaches will teach you how to bark in Swedish?

Other learning options are available as well. Rosenberg鈥檚 student Maria Misgeld has posted a series of step-by-step , and offers workshops and Zoom lessons. Kolterud鈥檚 teacher was Agneta Stolpe, shown from about 7:18 to 8:36 (vocalists will find the closeups helpful).

Among the many younger exponents of the form, some to watch are and , whose album features examples of kulning for cows, sheep and goats. YouTube phenomenon Jonna Jinton has a of her kulning videos, including a haunting reworking of the Swedish national anthem, 鈥溾. (Compare the  of the anthem to appreciate the difference.)

Try kulning yourself鈥攖aking all proper precautions to learn the technique and do the warmups, because you can damage your voice by launching into the vocal stratosphere incautiously. Cows will certainly take notice of it鈥攕o will ravens and deer (I haven鈥檛 tried moose yet)鈥攂ut to get them to come to you, you鈥檒l probably have to feed them. Kulning developed on the basis of reciprocity with domestic animals, and beauty may have a natural link to need.

 

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香港六合彩开奖直播 the Author

Catherine Madsen, courtesy of the author

Catherine Madsen is a writer, singer and folk harper now living in Michigan. The three years she spent in Fairbanks as a child (1962-65) were a turning point in her life, and she established the Circumpolar Music Series as a gift of gratitude.