How can we explain Sweden’s bizarre Midsummer frog dance?

by time news

2023-06-23 15:31:24

The song describes little frogs who are apparently amusing to look at, due to their lack of ears and tails, and is accompanied with dance moves to represent ears and tails. The song then mimics croaking and the dancers skip like frogs around the pole.

Maybe you saw Swedish actor Peter Stormare sing the song to Tom Cruise in the American action movie Minority Report, made by Steven Spielberg in 2002. Or maybe you have seen Swedish celebrities demonstrate the dance, such as Alicia Vikander in the clip below. Maybe you’ve simply been bewildered when the frog dance broke out at a Swedish Midsummer party.

Here’s how the song goes:

Small Frogs lyrics

Little frogs, little frogs are funny to watch.

Little frogs, little frogs, are funny to look at.

Little frogs, little frogs are funny to watch.

Little frogs, little frogs, are funny to look at.

They have no ears, no ears, no tails.

No ears, no ears, no tails have they.

They have no ears, no ears, no tails.

No ears, no ears, no tails have they.

Kou ack ack ack, kou ack ack ack,

your ack ack ack ack car.

Kou ack ack ack, kou ack ack ack,

your ack ack ack ack car.

Where does it come from?

Despite being a pinnacle in Swedish culture, the song actually originates from France.

It borrows from the French military march The Onion Song (The Song of the Onion), which was sung by the Napoleon army. The onion was an important source of food for the French army, and the chorus, used for croaking in the Swedish version, goes “Step, comrade, step, comrade, step, step, step” (In step, comrade) in the French original.

As for how frogs became involved in the song, it is commonly believed to be due to a parody version sung by the English, who at the time were bitter enemies of France. The English referred disparagingly to the French as “frogs” or “frog-eaters” and rewrote the lyrics to “Step, frog” (In step, frog).

How this song made its way into Swedish traditions is not known, but the first recorded instance of the “Little Frogs” was in woodwork and culture classes given at Nääs castle in the end of the 1800s. These courses were given to teachers where they could learn songs and traditions to pass onto school children.

The song is also sung in Norway as “Little Tadpoles” and in Denmark as “Little Frogs”. But it is relatively young in terms of Swedish children’s ballads. Some the other Midsummer classics, such as “The Fox hurries over the ice” (The Fox Hurries Across the Ice) can be traced back to the middle ages, according to Mats Nilsson, professor of ethnology at Gothenburg University.

Article written by Isabella Anderson in 2021.

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