The history of Swedish folk music collection began with the formation of an organization called the
Gothic Society (
Götiska Förbundet) in 1811, shortly after the establishment of Sweden as a modern
constitutional monarchy in 1809. The first published transcription of a Swedish
folk tune came out in their journal
Iduna in 1813. The men of the Gothic Society were primarily interested in collecting the oldest materials they could find among the peasants of the Swedish countryside. Collection in the 19th century largely followed this model; the music was generally
arranged for performance by people whose primary background was in
art music. In the early 1890s, the first "public" performances of Swedish folk music by actual
spelmän (folk musicians) were held at
Skansen,
Stockholm's
open-air museum of Swedish
folklife. The first Swedish
spelman contest was held in 1906, and the first national gathering of Swedish spelmän in 1910. Over time, the contests began to fade, and the less formal gatherings became the primary venue for
Swedish folk musicians to interact with one another. Instrumental folk music was still primarily a
solo tradition during the first half of the 20th century, and the best-known players were virtuosic fiddlers from the
province of
Hälsingland. In the 1940s, the first
spelmanslag, or
amateur folk music groups, were established, associated primarily with the music of
Dalarna. The first major recording project for Swedish folk music was also launched in the late 1940s. Some of the most popular recordings were of spelmanslag in Dalarna, and during the 1950s the spelmanslag phenomenon spread throughout the country. The beginnings of the
folk music revival could already be seen in the mid-1960s, influenced by albums such as
Jan Johansson's
Jazz på svenska ("Jazz in Swedish") released in 1962 (EP) and 1964 (LP). The movement gained momentum in 1970 in the aftermath of Gärdesfesten, Sweden's answer to
Woodstock. Elsewhere during the 1960s and 1970s, rock and pop musicians began adapting Swedish folk music into their own compositions. The 1967 album
Studio by
Tages along with subsequent singles "
There's a Blind Man Playin' Fiddle in the Street" and "Fantasy Island" from 1968 were amongst the first rock recordings blending the genres. In the years since, Swedish folk music has once again receded into a
subcultural niche, but the revival has effected a number of changes. These include the addition of a number of new instruments (
saxophone,
flute,
tambourine,
guitar, and
mandola, to name a few) as well as some revived instruments (e.g.
Swedish bagpipe,
hurdy-gurdy, and
härjedalspipa). The inclusion of these instruments has meant the invention of new forms of
ensemble music (given that Swedish folk music had previously been primarily a solo
melody tradition). A
polska dance revival, beginning in the early 1980s, has meant new contexts for the music to be played in. Swedish folk music has entered the educational system at all levels; musicians are becoming more and more skilled at ever-younger ages. ==See also==