Songwriting Advice
How to Write Folk Metal Lyrics
You want lyrics that sound like a campfire prophecy and a mosh pit chant at the same time. You want lines that make the hair on the back of a neck stand up while a banjo and a blast beat both exist in the same universe. Folk metal blends storytelling from folk traditions with the raw intensity of heavy metal. The words need to carry history, character, and a vocal delivery that cuts through heavy guitars and thunderous drums. This guide gives the exact tools you need to write folk metal lyrics that feel authentic and absolutely savage.
Quick Interruption: Ever wondered how huge artists end up fighting for their own songs? The answer is in the fine print. Learn the lines that protect you. Own your masters. Keep royalties. Keep playing shows without moving back in with Mom. Find out more →
Quick Links to Useful Sections
- What Is Folk Metal and Why Words Matter
- Folk Metal Themes That Work
- Research Like a Guerrilla Historian
- Where to look
- Voice and Point of View
- Language Choices and Local Words
- Imagery That Works in Folk Metal
- Lyrical Devices Tailored to Folk Metal
- Ring phrase
- Call and response
- List escalation
- Persona shift
- Rhyme, Meter, and Prosody
- Common rhyme schemes
- Prosody checklist
- Writing for Harsh Vocals and Clean Singing
- Harsh vocals
- Clean vocals
- Song Structures That Fit Folk Metal
- Example structure A
- Imagery to Avoid and Ethical Notes
- Title Crafting for Folk Metal
- Editing and the Crime Scene Pass
- Folk Metal Lyric Exercises
- The Local Object Drill
- The Ritual Drill
- The Persona Switch Drill
- The Chant Draft
- Collaboration With Musicians
- Publishing, Copyright, and Credits
- Live Performance Tips for Lyrics
- Examples You Can Steal, Rewrite, and Own
- Common Mistakes and How to Fix Them
- Workflow to Finish a Folk Metal Song Fast
- Action Plan You Can Use Today
- FAQ
- FAQ Schema
Everything here is written for artists who want fast results and substance. You will find practical templates, lyrical devices tailored to folk metal, cultural sensitivity notes, delivery tips for harsh vocals and clean lines, and exercises you can do in one hour. We explain every term so no mystery remains. Expect loud metaphors, a few jokes, and a lot of honesty.
What Is Folk Metal and Why Words Matter
Folk metal is a subgenre of metal that mixes traditional folk music elements with metal elements. That can mean using folk instruments like fiddles, flutes, hurdy gurdy, or bagpipes together with distorted guitars and heavy drums. Vocals move between clean singing, chanting, and harsh techniques like growls and screams. The lyrical content often draws from folklore, history, mythology, nature, drinking songs, and local stories. Words matter in folk metal because they do the heavy lifting of world building. The music can create the mood. The lyrics fill that mood with a story, a ritual, a curse, or a victory shout.
Quick term guide
- Clean vocals means singing without distortion or harshness. Think clear and melodic.
- Harsh vocals means growls, screams, rasp, or other distorted vocal styles often used in metal. These styles add aggression and texture.
- Prosody means how the natural stress and rhythm of words match the beat of the music.
- Strophic is a song form where each verse uses the same melody like a traditional ballad.
- Blast beat is a drumming pattern common in extreme metal that speeds everything up and demands short, powerful vocal lines.
Folk Metal Themes That Work
Folk metal loves big ideas and small objects. Themes that land again and again include:
- Myth and legend
- Local history or battles
- Nature and seasons
- Ritual, drinking, and celebration
- Personal transformation told as a quest
- Fate, curses, and bargains with spirits
Real life scenario
You are at a bar in Trondheim and your elderly neighbor tells you his grandfather used to row across a fjord at midnight to deliver rye to a winter wedding. That detail becomes a lyric image. The song paints the boat, the smell of wet wool, the creak of oars, and the moon that refuses to melt. That scene is folk metal gold because it is both specific and epic.
Research Like a Guerrilla Historian
Good folk metal lyrics often start with research. You do not need a PhD. You do need curiosity and respect.
Where to look
- Local folktale collections, often available at libraries or in small local publications
- Translated myths from around the world, if your band plays with multiple cultural sources
- Old field recordings for authentic language and phrasing
- Interviews with elders, local historians, and musicians who play traditional instruments
Explain the sources
If you quote a real myth or borrow a ritual text, cite it in the liner notes or on the band page. That shows respect and gives listeners a path to learn more. Do not appropriate sacred material for the sake of shock. Use folk material in a way that honors the origin and is transparent about your role as an interpreter.
Voice and Point of View
Decide who is telling the story. Persona matters more than you think.
- First person gives visceral immediacy. It is great for songs told as confessions, curses, or oaths.
- Second person can be accusatory or instructive. It works well for anthems and taunts.
- Third person lets you tell a saga or a legend with cinematic distance.
Real life scenario
Write a verse from the perspective of a widow who keeps a lantern burning on a cliff to guide the ghost of her sailor. First person pulls you into the sadness. Third person allows the chorus to become a legend the villagers repeat by the hearth.
Language Choices and Local Words
Folk metal can use modern language, archaic forms, or a mixture. Local words and place names give texture and authenticity. Use them like spice. A little goes a long way.
Explain local words
Including a non English word can be powerful. Provide context in the lyrics or in the album page. For example, if you use the word seidr from Norse magic, explain that it refers to an Old Norse form of ritual magic. The lyric can let the word carry weight while the liner note gives the translation. That way new listeners feel mystery, not lost.
Imagery That Works in Folk Metal
Folk metal thrives on tactile images. Abstract language will die in a wall of guitars. Use things that the listener can see, smell, or touch.
- Weather and landscape: frost, fog, red birch, peat smoke
- Tools and crafts: anvil, oar, spinning wheel, axe
- Food and drink: black bread, rye, mead, brined fish
- Clothing and ornaments: wool cloak, iron brooch, bone amulet
Example image swap
Before: I am cold and tired.
After: The wool on my shoulder smells of smoke. My fingers are split like old rope.
Lyrical Devices Tailored to Folk Metal
Some devices punch above their weight in folk metal.
Ring phrase
Repeat a short phrase at the start and end of a chorus or stanza. It becomes a chant the crowd can scream back. Example: Keep the lantern lit. Keep the lantern lit.
Call and response
Use a simple chant for the audience to repeat after a lead line. This works great live and gives the song ritual energy.
List escalation
Create lists that escalate from small to monumental. Example: I load my oar. I lift my oath. I call the storm.
Persona shift
In the bridge, switch perspective. The narrator may become the antagonist. This surprises the listener and deepens story complexity.
Rhyme, Meter, and Prosody
Rhyme matters less than prosody. Prosody is how natural word stress matches musical beats. A line can rhyme and still feel wrong if the stress is off. Always speak your lyric aloud on the rhythm before locking it in.
Common rhyme schemes
- Simple couplets for chanting and drinking songs
- ABAB for balladic verses
- Internal rhyme for rhythmic aggression
Explain meter
Meter refers to the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line. Iambic meter is unstressed then stressed like the phrase "the sea". Trochaic is stressed then unstressed like "forest". Folk verses often lean on trochaic patterns because they read like marching chants. But do not force classical meters. Use the natural speech stress that fits the melody.
Prosody checklist
- Read the line normally out loud. Mark the stressed syllables.
- Sing the line on the melody at conversation speed. Does the stress land on strong beats?
- If a heavy word falls on a weak beat, rewrite the line or change the melody.
Writing for Harsh Vocals and Clean Singing
Folk metal often alternates between clean and harsh vocals. Each needs a different lyrical approach.
Harsh vocals
- Shorter phrases work best because the vocal tone eats detail.
- Use strong consonants and hard vowels like ah and oh for clarity.
- Keep imagery punchy. The drums and guitars will fill the space.
Clean vocals
- Longer melodic lines can carry more sensory detail and complex grammar.
- Use open vowels for sustain on long notes.
- Let the chorus be lyrical and memorable so fans can sing along.
Real life scenario
If your chorus has an eight bar clean melody with a soaring note on the title, use a short, emotionally clear phrase. If your verse is delivered as harsh vocals over a blast beat, keep each line to a few words and a hard image.
Song Structures That Fit Folk Metal
Folk metal borrows from ballads and metal forms. Choose a structure that serves the story.
- Strophic ballad plus chorus: verse chorus verse chorus with strophic verses for saga style
- Through composed with recurring motifs: good for long narrated epics
- Anthemic chorus with chant sections: perfect for live sing along
Example structure A
Intro with folk instrument motif, verse one sung clean, pre chorus in harsher tone, chorus chantable, instrumental break featuring folk instrument, verse two that moves the story forward, bridge with a key change or modal shift, final chorus with gang vocals and a fatalistic last line.
Imagery to Avoid and Ethical Notes
Folk material can easily cross into exploitation. Folk metal has a history of courting controversy. That does not mean you cannot write bold content. It means you must think about context and impact.
- Do not use sacred prayers or chants from living religious practice as novelty props.
- Avoid romanticizing violence against real groups or praising historical oppression without critique.
- If you borrow from an indigenous tradition or minority culture, collaborate with artists from that culture and credit them.
Real life scenario
You hear an old lullaby sung by a Romani woman in a field recording. The melody is perfect for your chorus. Instead of taking it, reach out to the source if possible, or at minimum explain the origin and how the song inspired you. Offer credit and compensation when appropriate.
Title Crafting for Folk Metal
A great title is short, evocative, and singable. It may be a name, a place, a ritual phrase, or a single strong verb. Think like a banner the crowd can chant.
Title examples
- The Last Oar
- Blood on the Barrow
- Lantern of Winter
- We Pledge the Stone
Testing a title
Say it in a pub voice. Yell it into a pillow. If it feels like something you would shout with sticky beer on your hands, it works.
Editing and the Crime Scene Pass
Edit like a surgeon. Remove dead weight and make every image count.
- Read the full lyric out loud to the instrumental. Mark lines that sound like filler.
- Underline abstractions. Replace with physical detail.
- Cut lines that repeat information without adding new angle or image.
- Tighten long similes. A single sharp metaphor beats a string of tired comparisons.
Before and after example
Before: I wander the hills and I feel sorrow like a heavy cloak.
After: My feet know the shale. My cloak drips peat smoke into the night air.
Folk Metal Lyric Exercises
Write with speed to capture truth. Use these drills.
The Local Object Drill
Pick one object from your home that feels old or textured. Write eight lines where that object appears and does a new thing each time. Ten minutes.
The Ritual Drill
Create a short ritual with three steps. Each step is a line in a chorus. Keep verbs active. Five minutes.
The Persona Switch Drill
Write a verse in first person as a miller who sold grain to a witch. In the bridge switch to third person. The change should reveal truth. Fifteen minutes.
The Chant Draft
Write a two line chant that can be repeated by the crowd. Make it one heavy vowel word and one short verb. Five minutes.
Collaboration With Musicians
Folk metal lyricists do not work in a vacuum. Talk with the musicians early.
- Ask the drummer about tempo and where the blast beats will land. Adjust phrasing to fit.
- Ask the folk instrumentalist about instrumental hooks and where a vocal break would let the instrument shine.
- Record a guide vocal and share. Feedback on syllable count and stress is gold.
Real life scenario
Your fiddle player wants a three bar solo after the chorus. If your chorus lines go on for five bars, trim a line so the solo breathes. Small edits make arrangements tight without losing story.
Publishing, Copyright, and Credits
If you borrow a melody from a field recording, check copyright. Many traditional melodies are public domain, but not all field recordings are. When in doubt, credit the source and seek permission. Register your lyrics with a performance rights organization if you want royalties. At minimum, keep clear records of authorship and versions.
Live Performance Tips for Lyrics
On stage you will not be recording in a studio. Things will be louder and messier. Write lyrical cues that survive screaming, crowd noise, and sweat.
- Make choruses short and repetitive for sing along energy.
- Include a shoutable line or a name that the audience can yell back.
- Leave space for gang vocals and call and response.
Examples You Can Steal, Rewrite, and Own
Use these before and after lines as templates.
Theme: A night crossing to a forbidden island
Before: I row across the water and I am scared.
After: Oars bite the black. Salt drinks my sleeves. The island waits with teeth.
Theme: A title that becomes an oath
Before: We will fight and win.
After: We pledge the stone. We bury our names in the cold earth and do not look back.
Common Mistakes and How to Fix Them
- Too many ideas. Commit to one central image per verse. Let the chorus hold the moral or the shout.
- Vague folklore. If you use a myth, be specific about a single scene instead of summarizing a whole saga.
- Unsingable lyrics. If a line trips over consonants on a held note, rewrite for vowels.
- Overreliance on exotic words. One or two local words add charm. A paragraph of foreign terms makes the listener feel lost.
Workflow to Finish a Folk Metal Song Fast
- Pick a core image or event in one sentence. This is the song thesis.
- Choose a title that can be a crowd chant.
- Make a one page map of sections and decide who sings each part.
- Write the chorus first as a short repeatable hook.
- Write two verses that move the story from scene A to scene B.
- Record a rough demo with the vocalist speaking the lines at tempo. Check prosody.
- Run the crime scene pass to replace abstractions and delete filler.
- Test live in rehearsal. Trim for the stage.
Action Plan You Can Use Today
- Write one sentence that states the song thesis in plain speech. Example sentence I ferry the dead across the winter sea.
- Turn that sentence into a short chant title. Example Ferry the Dead.
- Do the Local Object Drill for ten minutes using an old coat as the object.
- Draft a chorus that uses the title as a ring phrase and has four lines at most.
- Write verse one with three images. Use the Persona Switch Drill to create a bridge twist.
- Share the draft with your drummer and folk instrumentalist. Ask where they want space for instruments and adjust syllable counts.
- Do the Crime Scene Pass and then rehearse live.
FAQ
What makes folk metal lyrics different from other metal lyrics
Folk metal lyrics lean into story world building and local detail. While thrash might focus on anger and speed and black metal might focus on atmosphere and nihilism, folk metal usually combines narrative, landscape, ritual, and occasionally humor. The genre allows for longer narratives and use of traditional language because that supports the folk elements.
Can I write folk metal lyrics in English if my band is from elsewhere
Yes. Many bands write in English to reach a wider audience. You can keep authenticity by including local phrases or specific images. If you choose a non native language, make sure translations are accurate and consider consulting native speakers to avoid awkward phrasing.
How do I balance authenticity with not appropriating culture
Use transparent sourcing and collaboration. If you use a specific indigenous motif or ritual that is still lived practice, reach out to community members, credit them, and offer compensation. Avoid turning sacred material into spectacle. When in doubt, use inspiration not imitation, and be explicit about your status as an outsider.
What kinds of stories work best for folk metal
Epic journey stories, revenge or redemption sagas, local legends retold as personal odysseys, and ritual scenes all work well. Songs that can be visualized in a single cinematic sequence are especially strong. Keep the scale large and the detail specific.
How do I make a folk metal chorus that the crowd can sing
Keep the chorus short, repetitive, and heavy on vowels. Use a ring phrase at the start and end. Make the title the chorus anchor. A single two or three word chant repeated with a steady melody is perfect for live audiences.
Should I use archaic language in folk metal
Use archaic words sparingly. They can add atmosphere but too many will make the lyric inaccessible. Mix a few old terms with clear modern language. Explain rarer words in liner notes or on social media so curious fans can learn.
How do I write for different vocal styles in my band
Assign parts based on vocal strengths. Give clean singers the long melodic lines with detail. Give harsh vocalists the short, percussive lines and chorus shouts. Test prosody and make sure syllable counts match the vocal stamina of each singer.
How long should a folk metal song be
Folk metal songs can be long because they often tell stories. Two minutes can be enough for an anthem. Five to eight minutes is common for a full saga. The length should serve the narrative and keep variation in arrangement to maintain listener interest.
Can I mix multiple folk traditions in one song
You can but proceed with care. Mixing traditions can create new textures but also risks shallow pastiche. If you do mix, research each tradition and consider collaborating with musicians from those cultures to keep the result respectful and coherent.