Dutch one-man project Thurnin were unknown to me before I snagged Harmr for review. Having now investigated, I see that I’m in for a subdued time. Following a similar, winding path to that walked by Wardruna’s Einar Selvik, Thurnin main minstrel Jurre Timmer wandered away from his black metal roots, corpse paint washing off in a Dutch downpour, to arrive in instrumental neofolk land. He has now taken up permanent residence there, with two albums under his belt as Thurnin, 2021’s Menhir, followed two years later by Útiseta. I am informed (whether reliably or not) by the promo blurb for this latest platter that the Icelandic word Harmr is now understood to mean ‘sorrow.’ However, Timmer adopts it as the title of his third album for the (apparently) older, more traditional sense of ‘grief.’ So, let us skip down the road, lute in hand, and see what Harmr has been done.
Ok, that was misleading. As far as I know, Thurnin makes no use of lutes on Harmr. Instead, the majority of the work is done by Timmer’s acoustic guitars, adorned by other strings, including violins and occasional pipes. The guitars are multi-tracked and densely layered, meaning that, despite being both instrumental (a few background vocal effects, like on “Arcturus,” aside) and largely percussion-free (save for “Heortece” and a few moments of “Eitr”), there are multiple layers to this tapestry. Whether one interprets Harmr as depicting sorrow or grief will, I suspect, come down to your own individual perception of those two words. For me, I lean more to the former. The soundscapes conjured on the album feel forlorn and melancholy, imbued with a sense of longing, but not the despair, desperation or hopelessness that I associate with grief.
As Harmr progresses, Thurnin confidently crafts and maintains the mood, its sombre tones resonating across the album’s full 42-minute run. There is something about it that reminds me of an accordion. Not in the sound—no accordions were Harmred, or used, in the making of this album—but in the breathy quality of the music. It almost feels like, track to track, the record in- and exhales, just as the air flows into an accordion, before being slowly expelled again. Perhaps breathing would be a better metaphor because Harmr feels very organic in its flow. The delicate, relatively stripped back notes of “Fylgja” or closer “Folkvangr” are at once notably different in mood from, but clearly belong alongside, the more urgent and insistent refrain of “Heortece” and the backend of “Eitr,” which feature the only percussion (it sounds like it’s probably a handheld drum along the lines of a bhodran) on the album.
Thurnin’s overall approach is perhaps best described as dreamlike. Harmr seems to slowly wander, weaving between moods and pacing without ever breaking the spell. For me, however, this is both the charm and Achilles heel of this album and indeed Thurnin’s prior releases. For all its richness of sound and compositional consistency, it also lacks differentiation. The absence of vocals and very limited use of percussion means that the album is crafted using a fairly limited palette, compared to the likes of Wardruna. Moreover, although there are changes in pacing (compare, for example, “Heortece” and “Fylgja”), these are relative, within the spectrum of what Thurnin does. That said, the production here is worthy of a callout, as Harmr sounds phenomenal. Although albums like this, without the backbone of drums, often seem to return high DR scores, the 11 here feels right. Its component parts breathe and sway like the wind-in-the-grass vibes that open “Folkvangr,” feeling rich enough to almost touch.
Harmr is one of those albums where I wish we didn’t give out scores or ratings. Whatever I choose will feel wrong, and mileage will likely vary significantly. On the one hand, Thurnin’s forlorn dark folk is expertly crafted and executed but on the other, it also feels a bit limited in scope. I find myself largely unable to recall individual moments, left instead with the overall sense and mood evoked by the album, but without any details. Above, I likened Harmr to a dream, and perhaps that intangibility is the epitome of this. Either way, I don’t see myself returning to this album often because, I suspect, its virtues will fade quickly. However, if I find myself listening to it, I will no doubt be borne away again, as I was the first time round.
Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 11 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Auerbach Tonträger
Websites: thurnin.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/ThurninFolk
Releases Worldwide: March 14th, 2025
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