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Metal Pagan, Norse, Folk music video 4 minutes track. The tale of Gylfaginning, The beguiling of King Gylfi is the source of what we know today about Norse Pagan beliefs and their gods so-called Æsir. It is really wonderful stories and my point with the story is Pagan beliefs or any other belief is the same. A hierarchy is always there to surpress more or less. It begins with King Gylfi being cheated by an Æsir- woman when he repays her for her service, she takes the land where the lake -Mälaren today is in Sweden and plow it with her four oxes, the soil became the Danish island Sjælland in the Easternsea. That achievement made king Gylfi curious and he traveled to seek the wisdom of the Æsir. The christian icelander Snorre Sturlasson, wrote the saga down from old tales early 1200 ac. This is the short version about how the curious King Gylfa of Svidjod (Sweden) traveled far away to learn and get answers of his thousand questions from tree Odin looking fellows in a magic castle. (Odin is soposed to be the highest of the Æsir gods). With prompt help from Super Grok after my storyboard and the new better Grok image it became the best I have created. Also two frame to frame videos was made in Kling. Music made in Suno. Lyrics mine with minor error correction of Grok. #sunoai #suno #sunomusic #grok #grokimagine #grokai #klingai #musicvideo #ai #aivideo #aimusic #pagan #norsemythology #norse #metal #metalmusic #metalhead #divine #odin #rock #rockmusic #numetalmusic #numetal #numetalcore Lyrics: Verse 1] Gylfe, king of Svitjod, the most curious of men, intrigued by the divine wisdom of the Æsir and tales of their feats, journeyed to the east of the Black Sea where it was told they would be. [Break] [precorus] Disguised in an old man's cloak so no one would suspect, he would sneakily steal their secrets. Oh, how wrong he was. how wrong he was [Choir] The Æsir, on the other hand, were prepared. A divine beauty, seductive and long-haired served Gylfi a holy goblet to drink. [Verse 3] Now he saw high palaces, built with impregnable walls. Inside he was led through impressive halls. Here three Æsir waited on their thrones, one above the other as if they were clones. [Verse 4] Gylfi was free to ask – since he was a king – and he got answers to everything. He learned about the world’s creation, the end – and everything in between. A tale were Æsirs are gods? Were they real -or frauds? Gylfi thought. [Verse 5] The question remains. Gylfi woke up on a plain – no palace or beauty in sight, just a distant surrounding light. [Verse 6] Shaken, he traveled back home and told the story from his throne. In his mind remains an eternal teasing flaw: Was it really Odin he saw? [Outro with a Choir singing] Was it really Odin he saw?