Unsuspecting bargoers stumbling upon a Volva Stav session at Merlins Rest Pub are liable to think they've either been hurtled way back in time or to the rec room at the nearest "nervous hospital."
A circle of women and a guy or two pound long crooked sticks on the floor in a corner of the E. Lake Street pub, clacking spoons and chanting in a meditative way, occasionally breaking into a sort of improv medieval scat, ululation or yip. Ululating and yipping most loudly -- and often singing beautifully -- is Volva ("staff carrier") Kari Tauring, champion of Nordic-roots music and any tradition that connects people with nature in a spiritual way.
Tauring, a singer, teacher and believer in the mores of the ancient Earth peoples, sees symbolism in every twig, drop and stone. She is dedicated to what nature-based rituals and traditions, both lacking in so many modern lives, can teach us. She seems happiest when connecting the old with the new, as in her description of an upcoming concert with musical collaborator Drew Miller as "so Retro-Future, so Bronze-Age Revival."
Fellow staff pounder and graphic designer Karin Odell, of Swedish descent, said she liked "how the rhythms imitate the real work women did."
"The object is to obscure the rhythm so much that the dancers get screwed up," Tauring said, grinning broadly. "Where's the beer lady?"
The beer lady did indeed come, bearing not glug and mead but Jameson's and Summit. An old man in a baseball jacket came around the corner, surveyed the scene, plugged his ears and giggled, then moved on. Songs in the key of Kari aren't likely to be played on KDWB.
While not completely fluent in Norwegian, she can sing and speak phrases. She has recorded two CDs, teaches rune reading as well as Norse mythology and pageantry, and performs both solo and with other musicians.
One upcoming gig is for a national gathering of heathens in Hinckley, Minn., in June. But she also is booked to teach Lutheran church-basement ladies how to pound their staffs and chant.