3:04 Ompa til du dør 9:05 Bøn fra helvete 14:12 KGB 18:22 Støv og sand 22:25 I ett med verden 29:04 Veterans klage 30:51 Bak et halleluja 34:25 Resistansen 39:32 Dr. Mowinckel 43:08 En for orgelet, en for meg 47:34 Kontroll på kontinentet w/ band introduksjon 58:15 Min kvite russer 1:05:55 Hjerteknuser 1:10:32 Maestro 1:18:08 Aldri vodka, Violeta 1:24:36 Begravelsespolka 1:32:20 170 1:40:46 Die polizei
@TheHofffa10 ай бұрын
@Jesper Tack
@gustavberg47159 ай бұрын
What a fucking amazing show🥲
@bloodfurycon10 ай бұрын
seeing them in 2 days! been waiting for this for like 10 years 😅
@SveinSvinserTV78 ай бұрын
Fun. I know that guy that play the contrabass i have known him my Hole life
@Vinterloft4 ай бұрын
Øivind blrsflsngngah KAIZEEEEEEER
@skaaredalen8 ай бұрын
Hva er navnet på instrumental sangen helt i starten?
@torbenmathias37598 ай бұрын
Russian Dance - Tom Waits
@BUNKERwebTV10 ай бұрын
Funny watching Swedes sing in Stavanger dialect
@TheHofffa10 ай бұрын
Very many Norwegians in the audience
@BUNKERwebTV10 ай бұрын
@@TheHofffa Kaizers has a cult like following in Norway so it figures :D
@Ozzianman8 ай бұрын
Janove is from Bryne, he is singing in Jær dialect, the difference between city and rural Jærdialect is very noticeable if you are familiar with both. I know because I myself speak a bastardised combination of both + some influence from Egersund because family is spread all over Rogaland. So Swedes are pretty much singing in rural Jær dialect.
@andubh93608 ай бұрын
@@BUNKERwebTVYes There were many Norwegians there - but (nearly) all of us swedes sang in the Stavanger/Bryne dialect. You know Swedish and Norwegian have a lot of words in common so we can understand each other pretty good. But I’m astonished when watching live videos from countries like Holland and other countries that have nothing in common with Norwegian and hearing people sing along to every song.
@Makkufurai7 ай бұрын
Depending on the Swedish dialect, of course, but at least the Swedes with a Göteborg dialect they're not that different from theirs. Except from the pronunciation of the r-s, not rolling them. Coming from a Norwegian from very close to Göteborg.