Icelandic Christmas Cat Song
Unfortunately if there are no colourful new clothes among these gifts the innocent little ones instead of feasting on the Christmas banquet next day will become feasted on by the Yule Cat.
Icelandic christmas cat song. 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. Here you can listen to Icelands most famous singer Björk singing about the Icelandic Christmas Cat - and read the translation of the text from Icelandic to English. 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.
Superstition was rife in Iceland in the past. 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. So imagine the terror of poor children who didnt get a new piece of clothing for Christmas.
Björk also recorded a popular version of the song in the late 1980s. Snjókorn Falla Laddi. The feline was made famous in a 1932 poem by Icelandic poet Jóhannes úr Kötlum.
I am not afraid of the Christmas cat. Icelandic Christmas celebrations traditionally begin on December 23rd and involve a mix of religious practices and intriguing Icelandic mythology. And for modern Icelanders most of making sure we got something new for Christmas.
The threat of being eaten by this massive monster of a cat was not only used to motivate kids. Icelands favourite daughter sings her version of the carol Jólakötturinn or the Christmas cat by composer Ingibjörg Þorbergs. The stories are directed at children and are used to scare them into good behaviour.
Jólakötturinn is one of few real Icelandic Christmas songs in which the song and lyrics are. Imagine the most celebrated and loved comedian in your country. Translation of Jólaköttinn by Björk from Icelandic to English.