Icelandic Christmas Cat Song
And for modern Icelanders most of making sure we got something new for Christmas.
Icelandic christmas cat song. Icelands favourite daughter sings her version of the carol Jólakötturinn or the Christmas cat by composer Ingibjörg Þorbergs. Behave or a troll will terrorize you or a cat will eat you. The poem Jólakötturinn tells the story of the dreaded Christmas Cat a horrible beast which ate poor children who didnt get new clothes for Christmas.
This year the fearsome felines likeness has been captured in a sculpture that is 5 meters 16 feet tall and 6 meters 19 feet wide and decorated with 6500 LED lights. It was part of his childrens book of Christmas poems based on Icelandic folklore Jólin koma. The figures are depicted as living together as.
A faithful cover of the Shakin Stevens song Snow is Falling but Laddis charming voice and the Icelandic lyrics makes it into one of the most popular Icelandic Christmas songs. Icelandic Christmas folklore depicts mountain-dwelling characters and monsters who come to town during Christmas. The Christmas Cat is said to eat children who do not receive clothing as Christmas presents.
Jólakötturinn The Christmas Cat is a beast that according to Icelandic folklore eats children who dont receive new clothes in time for Christmas. Björk also recorded a popular version of the song in the late 1980s listen here. This is Skuggi perhaps a distant relative to.
Translation of Jólaköttinn by Björk from Icelandic to English. If playback doesnt begin shortly. The first song is a 1987 recording of Björk singing a early 20th century poem by Jóhannes úr Kötlum who codified the many old folk stories and myths relating to Christmas.
No one is quite sure where the Yule Cat belief comes from but what has made the Cat universally famous is perhaps the poem by Jóhannes úr Kötlum 18991972 the beginning of. Icelandic Christmas celebrations traditionally begin on December 23rd and involve a mix of religious practices and intriguing Icelandic mythology. Apparently farmers threatened their employees with being preyed upon by the Yule Cat in order to encourage them to complete the processing of the autumn wool before Christmas.