Never heard them live though.
You don't really go to a Rammstein concert to listen to them, though... Most of the members have backgrounds as roadies and stage operators for special effects, so they like to make live performances into as much of a hoohah as possible.
I mean, everybody knows about the penis cannons and the dildo mics, but they also put out some ridiculous pyrotechnics, light/laser shows, prosthetics, and whatever else they can think up. Supposedly, 2019's tour is going to be "the biggest production yet" with a convoy of I believe 16 trailer trucks used to haul everything around. It's a spectacle.
Like, you don't go to a GWAR concert because you prefer the live versions of their songs... You go to a GWAR concert to watch Oderus Urungus (may he reap in putrescence) bisect explosive politicians and shower the audience with their blood.
Svartmálm's vocalist is apparently "one of the best guitarists in the Faroese metal scene", according to my GF. I don't know much about the others, GF was too short to see them over the crowd and they all had hoodies and corpse paint on anyways, and looking the band up will only show you their stage names. Hamferđ's guitarist used to be one of her roommates, and the bassist (the one seen in
this clip, not sure who the fellow playing in the church video is) was for all practical purposes another roommate, thanks to spending a great many nights passed out drunk on the sofa. Or, rather, "half on the sofa, half on the floor".
As she said, "I've seen most of these people drunk.
Really drunk".
Hamferđ likes to play around with unusual beats/time signatures in their stuff, which can make it
really tricky to headbang to if you're not familiar with their songs... As I learned the hard way. The song in the clip I just linked is called, I believe, "Ugly". Just putting that out there, because it's one of the few words I think I can make sense of.
I really only know one or two words in Faroese, but it has enough similarities with other Nordic languages that I can recognize what a lot of things are supposed to be when they're written down. The spoken component, however, is something that is absolutely in its own weird little category...
Icelandic and Faroese actually have sort of the same kind of relationship that Norwegian and Danish have: The written components are extremely similar, but the pronunciations are
wildy different.