country

Norway

From Grieg's fjords to frostbitten black metal and tropical house

8
genres
21+
artistes
160y
d'histoire

Top 10

Les titres emblématiques de cette région

1 / 5
1
#1 au classement

Take On Me

a-ha
1985norwegian pop

a-ha, formed in Oslo in 1982 by Morten Harket, Magne Furuholmen, and Paul Waaktaar-Savoy, are the most commercially successful Norwegian band in history. Their 1985 debut single Take On Me, with its landmark rotoscoped video, reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 and became one of the defining synth-pop records of the decade. They recorded the James Bond theme The Living Daylights in 1987, have sold more than 50 million records, and continue to tour and record into the 2020s. Take On Me passed one billion YouTube views in 2020.

Norway's music reaches far beyond its five million people. Edvard Grieg turned the folk melody of the western fjords into the Romantic-nationalist canon in the 19th century, and the Sámi joik of Mari Boine carried the Arctic north into the modern era. Jan Garbarek made Norwegian jazz the defining sound of the ECM label; a-ha topped the Billboard Hot 100 in 1985 with Take On Me. In the early 1990s a small Oslo scene built the second wave of black metal — Mayhem, Darkthrone, Emperor, Immortal — that became Norway's most influential and notorious export. Röyksopp and Todd Terje built the electronic underground that Kygo and Alan Walker scaled to the global charts, while Aurora, girl in red, and Sigrid turned 2010s Norway into a pop-export powerhouse and Karpe became the country's biggest live act of any genre.

ClassicalNordic folkNorwegian jazzNorwegian popNorwegian black-metalNordic electronicNorwegian alt-popNorwegian hip-hop

Questions fréquentes

What kinds of music is Norway known for?+

Norway has an outsized musical footprint for a country of five million. Edvard Grieg defined Romantic-nationalist classical music in the 19th century. In the early 1990s, Norwegian black metal — Mayhem, Darkthrone, Emperor, Immortal — became the country's most internationally influential export. a-ha topped the US charts in 1985 with Take On Me; Jan Garbarek made Norwegian jazz central to the ECM label; and in the 2010s, Kygo invented tropical house while Aurora, Sigrid, and girl in red turned Norway into a pop-export powerhouse. Mari Boine carries the indigenous Sámi joik tradition.

Why is Norway so important to black metal?+

In the early 1990s a small scene centred on the Oslo record shop Helvete created the second wave of black metal, building a frostbitten, lo-fi, tremolo-driven sound from bands like Mayhem, Darkthrone, Emperor, and Immortal. The scene became globally infamous for a series of stave church burnings between 1992 and 1993 and the 1993 murder of Mayhem's Euronymous by Burzum's Varg Vikernes. Despite — and partly because of — that notoriety, Norwegian black metal went on to shape extreme metal worldwide.

Who is the most famous Norwegian musician?+

By global recognition, a-ha is the most famous Norwegian act, thanks to the 1985 number-one single Take On Me. In the streaming era, Kygo and Alan Walker are the most commercially successful: Kygo invented tropical house and headlined the 2016 Rio Olympics closing ceremony, while Alan Walker's Faded has over four billion YouTube views. Edvard Grieg remains the most famous Norwegian composer.

What is tropical house and who created it?+

Tropical house is a relaxed, melodic subgenre of house music built on marimba and pan-flute-style synth leads and a slower tempo than mainstream EDM. It was pioneered by the Norwegian producer Kygo, born Kyrre Gørvell-Dahll in Bergen, whose 2014 single Firestone and remix work defined the sound. Kygo became the fastest artist to reach a billion Spotify streams and performed at the closing ceremony of the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Who are the biggest new Norwegian artists?+

The 2010s and 2020s produced a wave of globally successful Norwegian acts. Aurora makes ethereal art-pop and sang on Frozen 2; her song Runaway had a billion-stream TikTok revival in 2021. girl in red, the project of Marie Ulven, became a queer Gen-Z icon. Sigrid and Astrid S anchor the festival-pop scene. In hip-hop, the Oslo duo Karpe became the country's biggest live act, selling out the Oslo Spektrum for ten consecutive nights in 2022.

Dernière révision : 2026-05

Sources & Références

  1. 1
    Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal UndergroundMichael Moynihan and Didrik Søderlind, 1998Livre
  2. 2
    Edvard Grieg: The Man and the ArtistFinn Benestad and Dag Schjelderup-Ebbe, 1988Livre
  3. 3
    How Norway became a pop powerhouseThe Guardian, 2018
  4. 4
    Kygo and the rise of tropical houseRolling Stone, 2016
  5. 5
    Music of NorwayWikipedia contributors, 2026

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À propos de cet article

Our editorial team curates each location through a multi-phase process: landscape research, decade-by-decade era planning, a candidate pool drawn from canonical sources and contemporary streaming data, and a final hitlist verified for accuracy. Every YouTube video is checked against the source recording with yt-dlp and oembed, every internal link is HTTP-validated, and every claim is cross-referenced against at least two independent sources before publication.

timeline.music editorial, working with sources from the National Library of Norway, Rockheim (the Norwegian national museum of popular music), the by:Larm and Øya festival archives, and contemporary outlets including NRK, The Guardian, and Pitchfork.