
Vi sålde våra hemman is not a song about adventure. It is a song about the moment home becomes unrecoverable.Usually translated as We Sold Our Homesteads, the title carries more than property. In nineteenth-century Swedish, a hemman was a holding, a farmstead, a place in the world: land, status, continuity, memory. The song begins not with the journey, but with the sale. By the time the emigrants leave, home is already gone.First printed as a broadside in 1854 and attributed in archival records to Jan Jansson of Carlskoga parish, the song follows emigrants through England and Liverpool toward Canada and Québec, where promise gives way to crowding, hunger, illness, fraud, and death. It is unusually specific, and unusually bleak.This episode traces how that old emigrant warning changed over time: from Karin Edvardsson’s stark field recording, to Jan Johansson’s reflective piano, to later jazz, live folk, viking rock, and metal versions. Along the way, the song stops being news and becomes memory, identity, and inherited doom.
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