Snapsvisa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Snapsvisa (Swedish, plural: snapsvisor) is a Scandinavian traditional drinking song which is used before drinking a short spirit shot known as the snaps.

A typical snapsvisa is a short and vigorous and its lyrics tell usually about the delicacy and glory of the drink or singer's desire having the snaps. Due to their shortness and mostly very openly glad character they are easy to learn. Snapsvisas are famous and important part of traditional and family festivities in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and among Swedish-speaking Finns. Singing these drinking songs is also a viable part of Scandinavian student culture in the universities and thus are also very widespread among monolingually Finnish students in Finland, although snapsvisa is rarely met otherwise in Finnish drinking culture.

History of the using snapsvisas during parties is quite old. Already in 1790 a Swedish poet Carl Michael Bellman published collection Epistles of Fredman (Fredmans epistlar) including 82 songs and a year later another collection Songs of Fredman (Fredmans sånger) of 65 songs both consisting of traditional Swedish drinking songs.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

Languages