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Interview: Natalie Prass – “I like the echo-y sound in the bathroom when I’m alone, that’s when all the ideas come!”

Written by Tommy Juto

As I sit down at the Cirkus in Stockholm with extremely gifted singer/songwriter Natalie Prass it’s clear this is an artist enjoying her career finally taking off, having waited so long to see the release of a richly produced debut album that’s so far had unanimous praise. She made it to Scandinavia, eventually, although Denmark never got to see her as aviation hassle made her miss out on playing Copenhagen the night before coming into Stockholm. Our conversation is running much smoother, though, except for a distracting waiter tip-toeing around us serving tea. This waiter in particular goes by the name of Ryan Adams, whom Prass is supporting on a number of dates in Europe. Adams, who the night before stood in for his ill-travelling touring mate wearing a black and white dress playing her songs as “Natalie SAS”, is ever the gentleman, politely offering both of us something that looks like lemon tea. Trying to stay focused on asking questions and voice-recording I decline, but Prass gets a cup so hot she needs to cool it with some plain water. Seems fitting for a cool musician with a hot career.

So, you missed the show last night in Copenhagen due to problems with your flight. What happened?

They had a problem in their computer system, they couldn’t see that they’d charged us for all five tickets. We had the reservations, we had the confirmation e-mail, but we didn’t have the card it was booked on, ‘cause my business manager booked it. So they wouldn’t let us on the plane, and they couldn’t see the card in their system. But they actually charged us three times for the tickets, and I still haven’t gotten the money back.

So I missed the show last night, which is something I never do. Especially when it’s not our fault, we were there on time and everything but they wouldn’t let us on the flight. It was really frustrating, being at the airport literally all day. Then we went to London to spend the night there and left early this morning to come here.

But Ryan went to Copenhagen and he made sure “you” were there anyway.

Yeah, it was a happy ending, ‘cause Ryan dressed up like me! It’s amazing what he did, I always wear a black and white dress, so he found a black and white dress and went out there and played my songs as “Natalie SAS”. He’s a lot of fun, I feel like it’s a perfect tour, we’re both a lot of fun.

Not that you’re old, but you’ve been doing this for some years. Releasing your first album at 28, how is that different compared to if you would have been younger?

Well, I recorded the record when I was 25 and I’d had two EP:s out before that, I was definitely not expecting it to take this long. But I’m kind of glad that it took this long, I mean I’m trying to find the positive in it after the agony of all these years with it being on hold. I recorded two more records during that time, but I knew so hard that this had to be the first one. It didn’t make sense to me to release something newer while knowing this was so special. I definitely learned a lot about myself and went into this really dark period for about a year, questioning whether I wanted to keep playing music.

The record was finished as I was turning 26, and I was kinda naïve thinking “it will come out in the summertime”, but I’d never thought it would be three years. All the guys involved, we started to evolve a friendship but then I realized it wasn’t much I could do, and we have a really special musical relationship. So I figured I just had to trust them, they know what’s best, Spacebomb is getting bigger and more resources. I was playing more with other people, getting new experiences and thinking it’ll work out. But then in January right before the album release was really happening all the fear came back, thinking the record was old and so on.

Why did it take so long?

Because Spacebomb was growing and going through a lot of internal changes with how the label would be run. Spacebomb was literally an idea when I started working, it wasn’t a label yet. I just wanted to work with these guys, it made sense and was so exciting. So it kind of reminded me of the Stax thing, but more recently of how Jack White moving to Nashville did amazing things, just really nurturing the underground scene there. Because I moved to Nashville before Jack got there and as soon as he moved there and started doing his thing it all started blossoming.

So it’s kind of like that, not really, but it felt cool doing this with supportive friends that I grew up with. Even if I was in Music City it felt natural and meaningful to go home to Richmond.

I know you and Matthew E. White have known eachother long, but was it the same with Trey Pollard?

No. I knew of Trey, of course, he was known as the music guru, the crazy jazz guitar player and we both went to this Magnet school. So I knew who he was, but he graduated before I got into high school. So that was pretty cool.

And Trey is with you on tour as well. It must feel good and secure to have ones you know well?

Yeah. I’m so honoured! I’m a person who likes having the people I trust and love around me all the time. It’s important to me to stick with the same people.

The sound on the record, have you always had that or is it something that has developed over the years?

I have always tried to write in a more standard, classic kind of way but I’ve never been able to record an album that way because I didn’t have the skills to do string arrangements like Trey does or horns like Matt. I wouldn’t have been able to do that on my own.

Apart from the country-soul influences, I hear Disney films, Cole Porter and classic songwriting like you mentioned, especially in a song like “It Is You”. Has that been a major influence?

I think that type of music is just kind of ingrained in you. I love big band sets, the forties, the fifties. All the American songbook stuff. I was listening to a lot of that kind of music when I wrote that song. So I wrote a ton of songs in that style, jazz songs, standards, and that was one of them.

You have had a lot of praise for the album so far. How do you deal with that?

It’s nice, of course, but I’m also a realist. I’m flattered and excited that people are receiving it so well. I honestly had no idea, I was pretty disconnected from the record ‘cause it’s been so long since we did it. All I wanted was the record to have a chance and put it out there. People might hate it, but I have no idea. I was definitely waiting for “It Is You” to baffle people, to be the throwaway track or something, and funny enough it’s now the song of the month or something on BBC 2 who are playing it every single day! Amazing.

To me it’s very healthy that a song like this can get the spotlight, it gives you hope for music.

Yeah, it’s a really good sign.

Your song “Violently” is arguably one of the best songs so far this year. Could you tell us the story behind it?

I wrote that song so fast. That’s the only song I wrote by myself in class, I was at college at the time and I wrote the lyrics and the melody in my head. So I had to take a bathroom break and sneak off down the hallway! For some reason I like the echo-y sound in the bathroom when I’m alone, that’s when all the ideas come! Kind of weird, ha ha! Basically it’s about longing and wanting somebody but you can’t have them, you’re tired of pretending that you’re just a friend. There’s just all these reasons why you can’t be with that person.

The recording was moving, quite a heavy one.

The strings are very dramatic in it.

Yes, Trey knocked that out of the park… We referenced Gal Costa and her version of “Baby”, the[Caetano Veloso] song on her 1969 self titled album. The songs sound nothing like eachother, but the only thing we wanted to capture was the swelling, the building of that song and how the strings kept getting bigger and bigger with this huge release at the end. We were all obsessed with that album.

Are you the one playing the piano?

No, actually it’s Daniel Clarke who’s in Ryan’s band. What’s pretty weird with Daniel and me is I didn’t think I knew him when he came in to play on the record. Then I started playing in Jenny Lewis’ band and Ryan and Jenny did a tour together when I found that Daniel was there, he who played on my record. Then it turned into me telling my sister about him and how crazy it was that he was in Ryan’s band, and she said “Daniel Clarke? I know him, I had a huge crush on him when he was at your thirteenth birthday party!”, I was like “What??”!!! So I have pictures of me, him and my sister from when I was thirteen in my old photo albums! And now we’re sitting here together in Stockholm! Really freaky.

Given the main theme of the album, I have to ask: have you ever been happily in love…?

Ha ha, I do have faith that one day it will all work out!

One topic that’s been up for debate lately is misogyny. Have you ever encountered this?

Yeah, I don’t know how it is now, but I think every young girl has dealt with that. It’s pretty safe to say. It’s just unfortunately so that it’s the mentality. When I was growing up in Virginia Beach I was literally the only girl that played in bands and played music that wasn’t in an orchestra. I did my own thing and I was just in a big guy club in the middle of all that growing up and feeling very awkward, not knowing who you are. So I definitely got pushed aside, but then you just have to find your people.

I think a lot of girls and girl musicians, not all of course, have to compensate with being more masculine or something to show how they’re tough, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but I’ve always avoided that type of persons and just been in my own little world. Never really cared about what anyone thought about me and I’ve shielded myself from a lot of stuff, subconsciously and consciously, and this record shows that I’m not afraid to be feminine. It’s a pretty unashamed, emotional, feminine record and I think the female spirit is what really makes it sensitive and beautiful. So I’m not afraid to show that.

Did you ever had to stand up for yourself?

I feel like there was a time when I was in a band when I had to buck up a little. But I feel that it might be changing these days.

During the recording of your album, was it comforting knowing Matthew, Trey and the others so well that you could be frank and upright if you needed to when disagreeing over something?

Oh, totally. They’re top notch.

Have you worked with others you didn’t know so well, so that you felt it was difficult for your opinion to come across?

Oh yeah, especially sound guys, ha ha! No, but if I’ve come to a club without my tour manager or my own sound guy I’ve had to stand up a little for myself. But I don’t really have a problem with that.

And we all know what sound guys are like…

Yeah, ha ha! No, even if they are, I just brush it off.

The Bucket List, Vecka 10, 2015

Ny vecka, nya fantastiska släpp. Har egentligen inga fler kommentarer än så.

Nu kör vi.

LYSSNA PÅ SPELLISTAN VIA WiMP


C. Duncan ”Say”(singel)

Multiinstrumentalisten Chris Duncan är på gång med sitt debutalbum, och “Say” är andra singeln som släpps från det. Atmosfärisk, själfull och vacker. Lika vackert som dess skivomslag, ett flygfoto taget över ett kvarter i hemstaden Glasgow.

The Wombats “Give Me A Try”(från kommande albumet Glitterbug)

Jag vet att jag hade med förra singeln på en lista för några veckor sedan. Men Liverpooltrion fortsätter att spotta ur sig singlar med glödande refränger, så vad gör man?

Blipp! “Dina Andetag”(från EKO)

Få gruppnamn säger så mycket om musiken som Dalarnas syntare Blipp!. Förpackningen med melodifestivalsmelodier och Page-produktion är av ett slag man sällan springer på.

MotoBunny ”Let’s Go Out”(singel)

“Iggy-Pop-meets-Icona-Pop”, så beskriver de sig själva, Los Angeles-kvartetten med veckans bästa gå-på-lokal-anthem.

Jonathan Wilson ”Slide By”(från Slide By EP)

Spelades in live i studion under tiden senaste albumet Fanfare gjordes, släpptes sedan i slutet av förra året som en 5-spårs EP inför Record Store Day. Finns nu även för streaming.

Cable Street Collective ”Wasted Hours”(från The Best Of Times)

I höstas turnerade bandet i Malawi, vilket ger en vink om de afrikanska influenserna i deras glada karnevalspop. Tänk Paul Simons ”You Can Call Me Al” så är du nära.

Damon And Naomi “A Shining Dream”(från Fortune)

När Dean Wareham gick sin egen väg och Galaxie 500 upplöstes 1991 fortsatte trummisen Damon Krukowski och basisten Naomi Yang som duon Damon And Naomi. Fyra år efter senaste albumet False Beats And True Hearts är de äntligen tillbaka.

Tongues. ”Colour In The Dark”(singel)

Producenten bakom electronicaakten Tongues. är maskerad och anonym. Precis allt vad den kusligt förföljande ”Colour In The Dark” inte är.

Scarlet Soho “In Cold Blood”(från In Cold Blood)

Syntpop som den lät i begynnelsen.

Rathbone ”Wanna Be You”(från Soft)

Powerpop med Lindsey Buckingham-feeling.

Eternal Death “Hole”(från Eternal Death)

Allt Johan Angergård har vidrört har varit meningsfullt: Club 8, Acid House Kings, Labrador Records, och nu Eternal Death. Singeln “Bullet” var en iskall syntklassiker i vardande, och nu när Angergård och Elin Berlin har släppt sitt första album som Eternal Death är det bara att börja gräva efter fler.

Ghostface Killah and BADBADNOTGOOD “Mind Playing Tricks”(från Sour Soul)

På förra albumet Twelve Reasons To Die gav Killah min favoritproducent Adrian Younge fritt fram att rama in allt med 70-talsfunk, spionthrillers och Blaxploitation. Den här gången är det kanadensiska instrumentaljazztrion BADBADNOTGOOD som står för musiken, men även de lyckas få det att låta lika coolt.

They Might Be Giants ”Answer”(singel…eller vad man nu ska kalla det…)

De två John:arna Flansburgh och Linnell är lika träffsäkra som vanligt med melodierna, och Dial-A-Song är mer aktiv än någonsin. Popsångerna bara sprutar ut.

Lilly Hiatt “Get This Right”(från Royal Blue)

Man behöver inte mycket betänketid för att gissa vem som är hennes pappa. Soundet på “Get This Right” har hon dock från Liz Phair, även om hon lutar sig mest mot country på sitt andra album Royal Blue.

Brian Wilson, Al Jardine & David Marks ”The Right Time”(från kommande albumet No Pier Pressure)

När Brian Wilson skrev sångerna till nya albumet hade han The Beach Boys i åtanke, men det blev inget av med någon återförening, så han ger ut det i eget namn. She And Him(Deschanel/Ward) gästar liksom Kacey Musgraves, men även f.d. strandpojkar som Blondie Chaplin, Al Jardine och David Marks. Jardine är den som sjunger lead på ”The Right Time”, och harmonierna sitter lika perfekta som förr.

Priest “The Game”(singel)

Tidigare kända som syntpopduon X priest X, nu har Madeline Priest och David Kazyk bestämt sig för att korta ner namnet till bara Priest.

Tuxedo ”R U Ready”(från Tuxedo)

Tuxedo består av inga mindre än Mayer Hawthorne och Jake One, förenade av en gemensam kärlek till tidiga 80-talets funkdisco och grupper som Zapp, Kool & The Gang, The Jacksons m.fl. Låtarna som utgör deras första album tillsammans har legat och grott i flera år, och framgångarna för Daft Punk med ”Get Lucky” blev den spark i häcken de behövde för att få ut dem.

Joanna Gruesome “Last Year”(från kommande albumet Peanut Butter)

Rykande noisepop som släpper av lite på gapandet en minut in i låten. Älskar de dissonanta tonerna som uppstår vid 1.05 och sedan återkommer titt som tätt!

The Zoltars “Sincere”(från The Zoltars)

Skönt att höra att det fortfarande går att göra psykedelisk 60-talspop á la 13th Floor Elevators.

Estelle ”Make Her Say(Beat It Up)”(från True Romance)

Ni minns hennes hit ”American Boy” för några år sedan. Brittiska R&B-stjärnan är intressantare nu än då. Och snuskigare.

Superwalkers “Not Like Us”(singel)

Den som saknar nytt från Empire Of The Sun kan sluta deppa. Och glädja sig med att Sverige har en duo som axlar manteln.

Trust Fund “Cut Me Out”(från No One’s Coming For Us)

Ellis Jones från Bristol har en osviklig förmåga att koka soppa på en spik. Hemmainspelningar blir till melodispäckad lo-fi-pop.


Följande låtar bör heller inte, under några omständigheter, missas:

Leon Bridges “Lisa Sawyer”(singel)

Ded Rabbit ”Better On The Day”(från Wake Up In A Dream)

Meek Mill feat. Pusha T, Rick Ross & Wale “The Deep End”(från Maybach Team)

The Mountain Goats “Heel Turn 2″(från kommande albumet Beat The Champ)

Chromatics “I Can Never Be Myself When You’re Around”(från kommande albumet Dear Tommy)

Everything Everything “Distant Past”(från kommande albumet Get To Heaven)

Absofacto “Dissolve”(singel)

Hardcore Superstar “Touch The Sky”(från kommande albumet HCSS)

Jessie Baylin “To Hell And Back”(från kommande albumet Dark Place)

Major Lazer feat. MØ & DJ Snake “Pay No Mind”(singel)

Sunset Sons ”Medicine”(från The Fall EP)

Antimatter People “No Need To Be So Small”(singel)

Nadine Shah “Fool”(från kommande albumet Fast Food)

Small Houses feat. Samantha Crain ”Seventeen In Roselore”(från Still Talk; Second City)

Waxahatchee “Under A Rock”(från kommande albumet Ivy Tripp)

Kelela “A Message”(från Hallucinogen EP)

William Elliot Whitmore “Healing To Do”(från kommande albumet Radium Death)

Ghostpoet feat. Lucy Rose “Sorry My Love, It’s You Not Me”(från Shedding Skin)

Kendrick Lamar “The Blacker The Berry”(singel)

Passion Pit “Lifted Up(1985)”(från kommande albumet Kindred)

Roisin Murphy “Gone Fishing”(från kommande albumet Hairless Toys)

Wyldest “Cruel Dusk”(singel)

Calexico “Falling From The Sky”(från kommande albumet Edge Of The Sun)

Lo-Fi-Fnk feat. Duvchi “U Don’t Feel The Same”(singel)

Kate Miller-Heidke feat. Andy Burrows “Share Your Air”(från O Vertigo)

Mystery Skulls feat. Nile Rodgers and Brandy “Magic”(singel)

Of Montreal “Virgilian Lots”(från Aureate Gloom)

Public Service Broadcasting “Gagarin”(från The Race For Space)

Coleman Hell “2 Heads”(singel)

Flor ”Heart”(från Sounds EP)

Jenny Wilson “I Wanna Have It All”(singel)

Madeon feat. Passion Pit “Pay No Mind”(från kommande albumet Adventure)

Jenny Hval “That Battle Is Over”(från kommande albumet Apocalypse, Girl)

Toro Y Moi ”Buffalo”(från kommande albumet What For?)

George Fitzgerald feat. Boxed In “Full Circle”(från kommande albumet Fading Love)

Speedy Ortiz ”The Graduates”(från kommande albumet Foil Deer)

Charles Howl “Going Down With A Hi”(från kommande albuet Sir Vices)

Meadowlark “Eyes Wide”(från kommande EP:n Dual)

The Solicitors “(You Should See The) Look On Your Face”(från Blank Check)

Patrick Watson ”Love Songs For Robots”(från kommande albumet Love Songs For Robots)

Action Bronson feat. Chance The Rapper “Baby Blue”(från kommande albumet Mr. Wonderful)

Lust For Youth “Vibrant Brother”(från Perfect View)

The Preatures “Somebody’s Talking”(från Blue Planet Eyes)

Surfer Blood “Dorian”(från kommande albumet 1000 Palms)

Trail Of Feathers “Love And Theft”(från Love And Theft EP)

Raekwon feat. French Montana & Busta Rhymes “Wall To Wall”(singel)

Cheerleader “The Sunshine Of Your Youth”(singel)

Amy Speace “Raincoat”(från That Kind Of Girl)

Buxton “Miss Catalina 1992″(från Half A Native)

The Helio Sequence “Stoic Resemblance”(från kommande albumet The Helio Sequence)

Doldrums “Loops”(från kommande albumet The Air-Conditioned Nightmare)

The Tallest Man On Earth ”Sagres”(singel)

The Lions “At A Loss”(från Soul Riot)

Echo Lake “Era”(från Era)

Diamond Rugs “Live And Shout It”(från Cosmetics)

Conny Nimmersjö “Din Framtid, Min Död”(från Tänk, Nyss Var Här Så Trevligt)

SeaWitches “Stars”(singel)

Tom Brosseau “Tell Me, Lord”(från Perfect Abandon)

Born Gold “Here We Are”(singel)

Brandi Carlile ”I Belong To You”(från The Firewatcher’s Daughter)

My Morning Jacket “Big Decisions”(från kommande albumet The Waterfall)

Elliot Moss “I Can’t Swim”(singel)

Moon Duo “Zero”(från Shadow Of The Sun)

Theme Park “Something Good”(singel)

Fyfe “Solace”(från Control)

Palma Violets “Danger In The Club”(från kommande albumet Danger In The Club)

Girlpool “Chinatown”(singel)

The Dandy Warhols “Chauncey P vs All The Girls In London”(singel)

Digitalism “Second Chance”(singel)

Thief “Crazy”(singel)

The Elwins “So Down Low”(singel)

Shy Nature “Birthday Club”(från Birthday Club EP)

Silk Rhodes “Heart Of Grass”(singel)

Ryley Walker “Sweet Satisfaction”(från kommande albumet All Kinds Of You)

Diet Cig “Harvard”(från Over Easy)

All Tvvins “Thank You”(singel)

LYSSNA PÅ SPELLISTAN VIA WiMP

The Bucket List, Vecka 7, 2015

Häromdagen hamnade jag i en intressant diskussion kring huruvida vår svenske fantomproducent Max Martin, och några få ytterligare med honom, gör att all musik idag låter likadant. I viss mån kanske det kan stämma – många gånger när man slentrianlyssnar på radio får man lätt det intrycket. Min uppfattning är dock inte att roten till det onda skulle vara såna som Martin, vilken jag för övrigt hyser stor beundran för, snarare att vi människor är bekväma av naturen och inte orkar ta omvägen runt den musik som radio och andra medier serverar. Det som slevas upp på tallriken duger, typ. Vilket jag givetvis har full respekt för, alla kan inte nörda ner sig som undertecknad.

Du som följer The Bucket List vet att det knappast  handlar om det ovannämnda här. Bredd är ett ledord, och homogent ett ord som endast refererar till kvaliteten i varje spår. I de här spellistorna är allt handplockat. Det som finns med är enligt mitt subjektiva tycke russinen ur kakan. Glasyren på masarinen. TV-apparaterna på Trisslotten. Honungen i bikupan. Ta bara den schweiziska syntpopen från From Kid, den turkiska psych-funken från Alpman, porrfilmsgroovet från Lilacs & Champagne, “Wooly Bully”-pastischen från J.D. McPherson, de orientaliska rytmerna uppblandad i elektropopen från Lia Ices. Lägg därtill en skur av fenomenala popsinglar och coola albumspår. Exakt då vet man att den här listan är(nästan) det enda man behöver spela i helgen.

Ni må förlåta mig för det stora antalet låtar i veckans lista, men den mängd magnifik musik som släppts senaste tre veckorna saknar motstycke. En hård kamp har förts för att sålla, och potentiella klassiker har fått stryka på foten. Men en sak kan du vara säker på: de låtar som finns kvar är de bästa du kan höra om du har gjort dig omaket att kolla in The Bucket List.

LYSSNA PÅ SPELLISTAN I RARA.COM

LYSSNA PÅ SPELLISTAN I WIMP

LYSSNA PÅ SPELLISTAN I DEEZER


Unknown Mortal Orchestra “Multi-Love”(från kommande albumet Multi-Love)

Elektronisk psychpop när den är som allra, allra bäst.

FMLYBND “Letting Go”(singel)

Alla som en gång älskat sönder MGMT‘s “Kids” och “Time To Pretend” kan glädja sig åt ny elektronisk grunge att kära ner sig i.

The Little Secrets “All I Need”(singel)

Allt jag behöver är en två och en halv minuter lång skur av melodier från en debuterande Liverpoolduo.

Colonel Red ”Make Life Gud For U”(från Make Life Gud For U EP)

För tio år sedan hyllades hans debut av eklektiske DJ:n Gilles Peterson, men den funkiga alternativsoulen har inte nått ut riktigt. Dags nu.

The High Dials “Echoes And Empty Rooms”(från In the A.M. Wilds)

Numera vilande skivbolaget Rainbow Quartz gav ut album med mängder med fenomenala powerpopartister från millennieskiftet och framåt, däribland The Grip Weeds och The Shazam. Kanadensarna i The High Dials som också hörde till samma skara är nu tillbaka på nytt bolag med ett nytt album som finansierats med hjälp av deras fans.

Two Gallants ”Some Trouble”(från We Are Undone)

Nya albumet från punkfolkduon har många mer lågmälda, akustiska stunder, men jag föredrar de råare och ruffigare bluesnumren.

Guster “Gangway”(från Evermotion)

Älskvärda Bostonbandet är inne på sitt fjärde decennium, och “Gangway” exemplifierar den perfekta popsången.

Hot Chip ”Huarache Lights”(från kommande albumet Why Make Sense?)

Electronicakollektivet från London gjorde en grymt svängig spelning på Popaganda för ett par år sedan, bland det bästa jag sett. Efterlängtat nytt album på gång.

Lia Ices “Tell Me”(från Ices)

Förföriska orientaliska rytmer.

Jib Kidder ”In Between”(från Teaspoon To The Ocean)

Neo-psykedelia med en knasig sångslinga man blir lycklig av.

The Cribs “Burning For No One”(från kommande albumet For All My Sisters)

Britpopen? Den lever och frodas genom tre brorsor som pendlar mellan engelska Wakefield och amerikanska Portland.

Joel Alme “Backa Tiden”(från kommande albumet Flyktligan)

Från det engelska språket till det göteborgska.

Twerps “Stranger”(från Range Anxiety)

Hajpat C86-sound från Australien.

Death Cab For Cutie “Black Sun”(från kommande albumet Kintsugi)

Sjunger inte Ben Gibbard lite som en mix av Elton John och Stephen Duffy här?

Happyness “A Whole New Shape”(från kommande albumet Weird Little Birthday – Deluxe Edition)

“It’s On You” fanns med på listan över 2014 års bästa låtar, och i slutet av mars släpper Londontrion en deluxeutgåva av Weird Little Birthday där nya singeln ingår som bonusspår. NME drar paralleller till Pavement, Built to Spill och Wilco.

Butch Walker “I Love You”(från Afraid Of Ghosts)

Om vi tränger oss förbi den solklara “Solsbury Hill”-slingan hittar vi en förnämlig akustisk ballad, producerad av Ryan Adams.

Grande Roses “No Future”(från Built On Schemes)

Det bästa postpunkbandet från Duved släpper andra albumet. Ingen framtid? Jodå, och den är ljus.

OOFJ “I Forgive You”(singel)

Paret Jens Bjørnkjær and Katherine Mills Rymer, från Danmark respektive Sydafrika, håller till i Los Angeles. Nya hyllade singeln är dramatisk syntpop med drag av Saint Etienne och Angelo Badalamenti.

Will Butler ”Anna”(från kommande albumet Policy)

Vi känner honom förstås bäst från Arcade Fire. Första soloalbumet på G.

No! Disco “Your Orange Car”(singel)

Vilken jädra debutsingel från Nottinghamtrion!

Spector ”All The Sad Young Men”(singel)

Londonkvintettens nya singel drar mot The Nationals postpunk, och jag älskar det.

Ricked Wicky “Well Suited”(från I Sell The Circus)

Det finns absolut ingenting som kan hindra Robert Pollard från att slunga ut ruffiga popdängor i parti och minut. Att Guided By Voices har lagt ner för vilken gång i ordningen är egalt. Det är bara ett bandnamn. Ricked Wicky ett annat. En av flera täckmantlar.

Curtis Harding “Surf”(från Soul Power)

Tidigare samarbetspartner till Cee-Lo Green som riktat in sig på retrofierad soul och rhythm & blues.

The Suffers “Make Some Room”(från Make Some Room EP)

Även om du normalt inte lyssnar på retrosoul(varför du nu inte skulle det?), så lyssna på Kam Franklins röst. Jo, du måste.

Charlie Belle “Get To Know”(från Get To Know)

Hade ärligt talat svårt att välja låt från den här EP:n från Texastrion Charlie Belle, ledda av själfulla, blott 17-åriga sångerskan/gitarristen Jendayi Bonds och hennes trummande lillebror Gyasi. Medelåldern i bandet(tredje medlemmen är basisten Zoe Czarnecki) sägs vara 15 år! Vartenda ett av de fem spåren är av den sortens indiepop som får din kropp att skutta med i takt. Veckans fynd.

Terri Walker feat. Frisco “Bad Boy”(från kommande albumet Entitled)

Någon kanske minns brittiskan från soulduon Lady(tillsammans med amerikanskan Nicole Wray som fortfarande verkar under deras gemensamma namn) som 2013 släppte ett album och den i mitt tycke fantastiska singeln “Get Ready”.

Monogem “The Glow”(från Monogem EP)

Alltså, syntslingan som rullar i bakgrunden genom hela låten gör den här låten.

Tor Miller “Midnight”(från Headlights EP)

Ny lovande pianospelande singer/songwriter med drag av 70-talets Elton John, Billy Joel och Jackson Browne.

Jape “Seance Of Light”(från This Chemical Sea)

Dublin är inte första plats jag associerar till när jag hör elektronisk popmusik, men Richie Egan gör magnifik sådan. Irländaren är bosatt i Sverige sedan ett par år tillbaka, och ikväll uppträder han i Norrköping på Where’s the Music?.

Young Guv “Wrong Crowd”(från kommande albumet Ripe 4 Luv)

Ben Cook har tagit ett steg väldigt långt avsides från oljudet i Fucked Up, som om han hängt med fel folk på riktigt. Istället går han in i softrock-mode, med funkig bas, ostiga saxofoner och ett franskt spoken word-parti under de drygt sju minuterna som utgör singeln “Wrong Crowd”.

Alabama Shakes “Don’t Wanna Fight”(från kommande albumet Sound & Color)

Tre långa år har gått sedan Brittany Howard raspade oss igenom Boys & Girls.

J.D. McPherson “Head Over Heels”(från Let The Good Times Roll)

Få albumtitlar säger så mycket om musiken det bär med sig som 50’s-inspirerade rockern J.D. McPherson. Är skamligt förtjust i “Wooly Bully”-takten i “Head Over Heels”.

Young Ejecta “All Day”(från The Planet)

Syntduon från Brooklyn blev tvungna att lägga till “young” i sitt namn pga en DJ som hade ett snarlikt namn. Leanne Macombers tradition att visa sig naken på omslaget är dock oförändrad.

Solomon Grey “Miradors”(från Selected Works)

Electrosoulduon bildades av Tom Kingston och Joe Wilson i Oxford och är just nu aktuella med musiken till brittiska TV-serien The Casual Vacancy, baserad på J.K. Rowling-romanen med samma namn. Därifrån plockar vi “Miradors” som även finns med på minialbumet Selected Works.

Följande låtar bör heller inte, under några omständigheter, missas:

All We Are “Honey”(från All We Are)

Mikal Cronin “Made My Mind Up”(från kommande albumet MCIII)

Years & Years “King”(från Y & Y EP)

Makthaverskan “Witness”(singel)

Winhill/Losehill “Control”(från Trouble Will Snowball)

Marina & The Diamonds “I’m A Ruin”(från kommande albumet Froot)

SoLBLoMMa “Ko-KooN People”(singel)

Swim Deep ”To My Brother”(singel)

Close Talker “Great Unknown”(från Flux)

Coin “Run”(singel)

Kid Ink “Faster”(från Full Speed)

Alpman “Seven Seas”(singel)

Lapalux feat. Szjerdene “Closure”(från kommande albumet Lustmore)

Lord Huron “Fool For Love”(från kommande albumet Strange Tails)

Cannons “Evening Star”(från Spells EP)

The Dodos “The Tide”(från Individ)

The Leather Nun “Just Like A Dream”(från kommande albumet Whatever)

Sleater-Kinney “Fangless”(från No Cities To Love)

H. Hawkline “Moons In My Mirror”(från In The Pink Of Condition)

Lilacs & Champagne “Made Flesh”(från kommande albumet Midnight Features Vol. 2: Made Flesh)

Ringo Deathstarr “See You”(från God’s Dream)

Houndmouth “Sedona”(från kommande albumet Little Neon Limelight)

Maribou State “Rituals”(från kommande albumet Portraits)

Houndstooth “No News From Home”(från kommande albumet No News From Home)

Other Lives ”Reconfiguration”(från kommande albumet Rituals)

Romare “Prison Blues”(från kommande albumet Projections)

SOAK “Sea Creatures”(från kommande albumet Before We Forgot How To Dream)

Adna ”Lonesome”(singel)

Elin Bell “Round And Round”(från Elin Bell)

Lusts “Temptation”(singel)

Songs Of Boda “Yellow Fanatics”(singel)

THEESatisfaction ”EarthEE”(från kommande albumet EarthEE)

Courtney Barnett “Pedestrian At Best”(från kommande albumet Sometimes I Sit And Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit)

I’m From Barcelona “Violins”(från kommande albumet Growing Up Is For Trees)

Sun Hotel “Tropic Of Cancer(Made Me Drop Out Of College And Start Working At This Bookstore)”(från Rational Expectations)

Peace ”Lost On Me”(från Happy People)

St. Tropez “I Don’t Wanna Fall In Love”(från St. Tropez EP)

Billy Momo “It’s Mine”(från Drunktalk)

From Kid “Come In”(från You Can Have All The Wonders)

HOLY “Demon’s Hand”(från kommande albumet Stabs)

Michna feat. MNDR “Solid Gold”(från Thousand Thursday)

John Calvin Abney “I Can’t Choose”(från Better Luck)

Vetiver “Current Carry”(från kommande albumet Complete Strangers)

Father John Misty “The Night Josh Tillman Came To Our Apartment”(från I Love You, Honeybear)

Title Fight “Liar’s Love”(från Hyperview)

Prefuse 73 feat. Sam Dew “Infrared”(från kommande albumet Rivington Não Rio)

Robyn Sherwell “Pale Lung”(singel)

Emmy the Great “Solar Panels”(från S EP)

Boxed In “Foot Of The Hill”(från Boxed In)

Indiana ”Solo Dancing”(från No Romeo)

Drenge ”We Can Do What We Want”(från kommande albumet Undertow)

Murder By Death “Send Me Home”(från Big Dark Love)

Aphex Twin ”diskhat1”(från Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments Pt2 EP)

Los Trasgos Muertos “Roll With The Punches”(från Los Trasgos Muertos EP)

Penguin Prison “Never Gets Old”(singel)

Ellen Sundberg “What Is Life”(från kommande albumet White Smoke And Pines)

The Subways “Taking All The Blame”(från The Subways)

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The Bucket List, Vecka 4, 2015

Någon kanske undrar vart The Bucket List tog vägen? Det korta svaret är att de höll på att ta över mitt liv. Med den outsinliga ström av ny musik som hela tiden forsar fram blev jag efter sommarsemestern tvungen att göra ett val. Antingen fortsätter jag med listorna och går under, eller så ägnar jag tid åt att skriva åt fler saker som tiden inte medgav. Listorna fick stryka på foten. Med distans har jag beslutat mig för att ge dem en chans på nytt, fast jag kommer inte att skriva lika mycket kring låtarna, utan möjligen som här nedan skriva lite kort om några och ändå uppmana er att lyssna på samtliga.

Så här har ni den, årets första The Bucket List. Blandningen är precis lika bred och bra som tidigare. Hoppas den smakar.

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Django Django “First Light”(singel, 2015)

För tre år sedan kom Londonbandet ut med sitt egensinniga debutalbum som tog världen med storm. Nu är de tillbaka med en singel som är lika uppseendeväckande bra.

Crushed Beaks “Overgrown”(från kommande albumet Scatter, 2015)

Rasande bra popsingel från denna Londontrio.

BC Camplight “Love Isn’t Anybody’s Fault”(från How To Die In The North, 2015)

Brian Christinzio krisade och klarade inte av att stanna i hemstaden Philadelphia, så han flyttade över ankdammen till Manchester istället. Där har han gjort 2015 års första riktigt helgjutna album som spänner från The Beach Boys-pop över Philly-soul till Forever Changes-känslan i “Love Isn’t Anybody’s Fault”.

Sundara Karma “Loveblood”(singel, 2015)

Grabbarna i Readingkvartetten Sundara Karma har precis gått ut skolan och är på gång med sin första EP i februari. Deras briljanta, psykedeliska indiepop har uppmärksammats av brittisk musikpress och lett till att de fått inleda 2015 med att öppna för The Wombats och Alvvays. Inte missa.

Ghost Culture “Arms”(från Ghost Culture, 2015)

Rough Trade var kloka nog att utse James Greenwoods debut till månadens album för januari. Låt dig frälsas av analoga Kraftwerk– och Sheffield-slingor i förening med lätta housetakter och Greenwoods försiktiga sång.

Susanne Sundfør “Delirious”(från kommande albumet Ten Love Songs, 2015)

Norskan kan vara på väg att åtminstone tillfälligt ta över den nordiska electropoptronen från Robyn med den här majestätiska dängan.

Viet Cong “Pointless Experience”(från Viet Cong, 2015)

Jag gav Calgary-kvartetten betyget 4 av 5 häromdagen när jag recenserade deras album. The Jesus & Mary Chain på besök i Postcard-tida Glasgow.

First Aid Kit “Brother”(från America EP, 2015)

Fin tidigare outgiven akustisk ballad på både engelska och svenska som finns med på nya EP:n med den berömda Simon & Garfunkel-covern.

Sharon Van Etten “I Don’t Want To Let You Down”(singel)

Oväntad singel följer plötsligt upp fjolårets Are We There.

Waxahatchee “Air”(från kommande albumet Ivy Tripp, 2015)

Katie Crutchfield har släppt första smakprovet från kommande tredje albumet med kvalitativ alt-folk.

The Decemberists “Till The Water’s All Long Gone”(från What A Terrible World, What A Beautiful World, 2015)

Mellotronprydd valsballad med öm sång från Colin Meloy.

Tobias Jesso Jr. “How Could You Babe”(från kommande albumet Goon, 2015)

Världens nya singer/songwriter-darling har släppt en ny pianoballad att bli tårögd till.

Amason “The Moon As A Kite”(från Sky City, 2015)

Tillsammans med Oskar Linnros har Amanda Bergman gjort nya Volvoreklamen, men om nu någon inte visste det äger hon en av Sveriges bästa sångröster, och tillsammans med de övriga i Amason utgör hon ett av Sveriges absolut bästa band.

Frazey Ford “September Fields”(från Indian Ocean, 2015)

Blåögd countrysoul från The Be Good Tanyas-gitarristen.

Mark Ronson feat. Keyone Starr “I Can’t Lose”(från Uptown Special, 2015)

Producentfantomen Ronsons album är ett potpurri av olika genrer, allt från funkig R&B till softrock. Mest förtjust är jag i “I Can’t Lose” som tar oss tillbaka till 80-talets dansgolv med sin Moogbas och soundet från soundtracket till Beverly Hills Cop.

Lonelady “Bunkerpop”(från kommande albumet Hinterland, 2015)

Minimalistfunk som Julie Campbell själv jämför med Prince, Parliament och Arthur Russell. Jag är beredd att hålla med.

The Charlatans “Come Home Baby”(från Modern Nature, 2015)

Senaste singeln från veteranerna är en själfull affär.

The Go! Team “The Scene Between”(från kommande albumet The Scene Between, 2015)

Efterlängtad återkomst, och vilken återkomst!

Dan Deacon “Feel The Lightning”(från kommande albumet Gliss Riffer, 2015)

Vocodern har inte spelat ut sin roll riktigt ännu.

Dawn Richard “Warriors”(från Blackheart, 2015)

Återföreningen med Danity Kane häromåret slutade med handgemäng i studion, och sedan dess har Richard insett att hon nog bör styra själv. Blir definitivt bäst så.

 

Följande låtar bör heller inte, under några omständigheter, missas:

Låpsley “Brownlow”(från Understudy EP, 2015)

José González “Leaf Off / The Cave”(från kommande albumet Vestiges & Claws, 2015)

Mikky Ekko “Burning Doves”(från Time, 2015)

POP ETC “Running In Circles”(singel)

The Staves “Black & White”(från kommande albumet If I Was, 2015)

Giorgio Moroder feat. Kylie Minogue “Right Here, Right Now”(singel, 2015)

Carl Bârat And The Jackals “A Storm Is Coming”(singel, 2015)

Pond “Outside Is The Right Side”(från Man It Feels Like Space Again, 2015)

Ty Segall “The Picture”(från Mr Face EP, 2015)

Matthew E. White “Rock & Roll Is Cold”(från kommande albumet Fresh Blood, 2015)

Cabinets “The Man You’re Looking For”(från Hometown Pt 1, 2015)

Diagrams “Gentle Morning Song”(från Chromatics, 2015)

Ebba Forsberg “Jag Ska Helst Inte Alls Bli Kär I Dig”(från Om Jag Lämnar Dig: Ebba Forsberg Sjunger Tom Waits, 2015)

Purity Ring “Begin Again”(från kommande albumet Another Eternity, 2015)

Chastity Belt “Time To Go Home”(från kommande albumet Time To Go Home, 2015)

The Vaccines “Handsome”(från kommande albumet English Graffiti, 2015)

Aesop Rock “Cat Food”(singel, 2015)

Mew “Satellites”(från kommande albumet +-, 2015)

Natalie Prass “Bird Of Prey”(från Natalie Prass, 2015)

Dutch Uncles “Decided Knowledge”(från kommande albumet O Shudder, 2015)

Night Terrors Of 1927 feat. Tegan & Sara “When You Were Mine”(från Everything’s Coming Up Roses, 2015)

Tropics “Rapture”(från kommande albumet Rapture, 2015)

To Kill A King “Love Is Not Control”(från kommande albumet To Kill A King, 2015)

Kate Tempest “Bad Place For A Good Time”(singel, 2015)

Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds “Ballad Of The Mighty I”(från kommande albumet Chasing Yesterday, 2015)

Rae Morris “Under The Shadows”(från Unguarded, 2015)

Swervedriver “Setting Sun”(från kommande albumet I Wasn’t Born To Lose You, 2015)

Amen Dunes “Lezzy Head – Burial”(från Cowboy Worship, 2015)

Panda Bear “Butcher Baker Candlestick Maker”(från Panda Bear Meets The Grim Reaper, 2015)

Siskiyou “Bank Accounts And Dollar Bills”(från Nervous, 2015)

Ibeyi “Ghosts”(singel, 2015)

Marilyn Manson “The Mephistopheles of Los Angeles”(från The Pale Emperor, 2015)

The Smashing Pumpkins “Dorian”(från Monuments To An Elegy, 2015)

Cracker “When You Come Down”(från Berkeley To Bakersfield, 2015)

A$AP Rocky “Lord Pretty Flacko Jodye 2(LPFJ2)(från kommande albumet LPFJ2, 2015)

Jesse Malin “Addicted”(från kommande albumet New York Before The War, 2015)

Justin Townes Earle “Call Yo Momma”(från Absent Fathers, 2015)

Hanni El Khatib “The Teeth”(från Moonlight, 2015)

Strangeways “The Hunter”(singel, 2015)

The-Dream feat. T.I. “That’s My Shit”(singel, 2015)

Belle & Sebastian “The Book Of You”(från Girls In Peacetime Want To Dance, 2015)

The Lone Bellow “Marietta”(från Then Came The Morning, 2015)

John Power “Electrify”(från Happening For Love, 2015)

Left. “Lay With Me”(från kommande albumet Sirens, 2015)

Chappo “I’m Not Ready”(från Celebrate EP, 2015)

Holydrug Couple “Everyone Knows All”(singel, 2015)

Spector “Don’t Make Me Try”(singel, 2015)

Ghostpoet “Off Peak Dreams”(singel, 2015)

Sallie Ford “Workin’ The Job”(från Slap Back, 2015)

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Class of 2014 – The 100 greatest songs of the year!

What could possibly be better than listening to the 100 best songs of the year? Well, how about listening to them while reading the stories behind them? Upon compiling last year’s list in the final weeks of 2013 I felt that among the hundreds, maybe thousands, of year end lists carefully put together by like-minded people like myself, there was usually something lacking: the perspective of the artists themselves. It’s easy for everyone of us writers to have opinions and thoughts about each song, but wouldn’t it be nice to have their true back stories, instead of us guessing things?

So, just like I did last year, again in 2014 I asked the artists if they would consider sharing everything they remembered from writing and recording their song. More than a third responded. And they willingly let us take a deep look into their creative process, with everything from personal downs to party nights acting as fuel to making music. Some songs were long in the making, some songs wrote themselves at the blink of an eye. Happy accidents, eureka moments, cyber writing? Classic poems, books, movies, children’s TV shows? Teenage nostalgia, violent ex-boyfriends? Racist basketball games, newly acquired instruments? And lest we forget, one hilarious story about a man who never dried? Yep, it’s all in there. The food for the greatest songs of 2014.

All song stories are in English, except for a few told in Swedish. I couldn’t really translate them into English without taking away some of their intimacy from the authors.

N.B. My deepest gratitude(and apologies for the stalking…) to all the artists and musicians for taking time to contribute the stories told in this list by giving their songs a personal touch, additional dimension and even a new life. You are all number one.

LISTEN TO THE PLAYLIST VIA WiMP

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1. Jack White “Lazaretto”(from Lazaretto)

How did you start off working on the song “Lazaretto”?

“We recorded the album during breaks from touring in 2012. There were many songs that Jack came to the studio with that had already been written start to finish, while others began as experiments or ideas. He works very fast and sometimes likes to get an idea or sketch on tape and see what we can make of it. This song started as more of an experiment.”

Could you elaborate on how it was written?

Jack worked with both of his backing bands, The Buzzards and The Peacocks, on these sessions and we recorded a lot of music. I would guess there’s another 12 tracks that we had been working on that didn’t make the album. The song ‘Lazaretto’ was interesting because initially there were no lyrics. The riff came together and Jack wrote a few of the chord changes along with the breakdown and tempo shifts. We ran through it just a few times and moved on to some other material very quickly. Months later I would listen back thinking he would make some tape edits and give the song more of a traditional structure, but Jack liked it as is. What you hear on the record is what we had put down originally. Start to Finish.

It was great seeing this record come together. Sometime in 2013 he called me into the studio to hear what he was working on. I had heard a lot of other tracks that we had recorded but had forgotten about ‘Lazaretto’ because it was more of a sketch or a studio exercise. Hearing it with lyrics for the first time was a remarkable moment. I couldn’t believe what he had come up with. The song doesn’t have what you would call a traditional chorus or verse form, but it’s so powerful. Both musically and lyrically.”

How was the riff conceived?

Jack has a lot of riffs kicking around when we’re in the studio. Sometimes we’ll be working on something else or rehearsing and one will appear. He usually gets those little snippets on tape to work with later. We had listened to the MC Lyte song ‘Cha Cha Cha’ earlier that day and I think that may have been an initial inspiration. More so with the tempo or the feel of it. Again, this was another experiment that happened in between tracking songs that had already been penned. I don’t even think we spent an hour getting it together and laying down the basic tracks. He cut that solo live and you really can’t beat the room sound of guitar bleeding into all of the other instruments and microphones.”

It’s got a real Lalo Schifrin-meets-Beastie Boys kind of groove. Was that the intention from the beginning, or something you worked out along the way?

“I’m not sure we ever discussed the feel or groove. Drummer Daru Jones comes from a hip hop background so he’ll just take you there at times. Honestly, without the lyrics it was originally an entirely different song. It could have gone so many ways lyrically.

We had recorded 5 or 6 of these song sketches during the session and we didn’t spend much time on it.  Jack wants to capture what happens when human beings play music in a room. He’s going for the spirit or a feeling rather than worrying about little details or trying to reach for perfection. It seems that he’s always got the big picture in sight.”

Did any odd, or unusual, things happen during the recording sessions?

“In a way, this entire record was odd. We would have a day or two off here and there, go in and put down as much as we could in the short time we had. Sometimes 4-5 songs a day. I said before that Jack works fast, but because we were touring it took him a year and a half to finish the record which is really unlike him. The sessions themselves were fast, but the entire process was the longest he’s ever worked on a record. It makes me wonder what the next one will be like.”

Dominic John Davis, bassist

first-aid-kit-stay-gold

2. First Aid Kit “Stay Gold”(from Stay Gold)

“The song ‘Stay Gold’ was written last summer. The original melodic inspiration arrived from the Canadian sister duo Kate & Anna McGarrigle and their song ‘Heart Like a Wheel’. We loved the melancholy beauty of that tune. ‘Stay Gold’ started as a simple verse with the lines ‘The sun shone high those few summer days / It shone like gold, it shone like gold’. When searching for further inspiration for the lyrical content we found a poetry book and by chance happened to stumble upon Robert Frost’s poem ‘Nothing Gold Can Stay’, which we’d never read before. The poem, about the fleeting nature of life, really hit home with us and it felt like a perfect theme for the song. The rest of the song then followed pretty quickly.

We wanted the production to create a dreamy and haunting landscape. Like a gorgeous but very distant memory and a journey towards something with an uncertain end. We used lots of strange mellotron sounds drenched in reverb, strings and autoharp. In the studio it grew to become this very big and epic sounding, dramatic folky pop, almost ABBA-like sound. It eventually became the title track because we felt like it represented a reoccurring theme within the record of nostalgia, restlessness and fear for the future.”

Johanna and Klara Söderberg

3. The War On Drugs “Lost In The Dream”(from Lost In The Dream)

“That was one of the first songs I recorded on the album. I remember having that guitar, just a little thing, I sat down at night and put a drum machine on it. It’s funny, if you heard the drum machine, it was like a disco pattern. Not at all what I intended to use. Then I just put down the acoustic and some rough vocals and over time added the instruments. Actually, when I recorded it, it wasn’t that arrangement. I went in and added one more verse based on the first verse, and then redid all of it. It’s a little more sparse than other songs on the album, I like that song a lot.”

– Adam Granofsky

4. Röyksopp feat. Jamie Irrepressible “Here She Comes Again”(from The Inevitable End)

5. Future Islands “Seasons(Waiting On You)”(from Singles)

6. Jungle “Time”(from Jungle)

7. Ariel Pink “Put Your Number In My Phone”(from Pom Pom)

“That song was more of a collaboration between Jorge Albrecht and I. He had some of the guitar arrangements and stuff like that, which were very beautiful. Then I wrote the lyrics and did the song part. It was a lot of fun to record, there’s a lot of harmonies on it. There were five of us standing around one microphone which made it sound good.”

Ariel Rosenberg

8. St. Paul & The Broken Bones “Call Me”(from Half The City)

“‘Call Me’ all started with that first guitar riff you hear at the beginning. There were six of us in a tiny room and the moment we heard the riff we knew we had a danceable song. I was in love with the idea of putting a phone number in a song just like the Wilson Pickett ‘634-5789(Soulsville U.S.A)’ song. While in the studio we cut the song live and chose the best of two takes. That song came rather quickly while writing as did the recording of that song. It is always a great moment in our set now when folks hear that opening guitar riff.”

– Paul Janeway

9. The Magic Numbers “Shot In The Dark”(from Alias)

“I think on this album, a lot was about asking questions, from Romeo having a baby. I think that definitely sparked it in his head. He doesn’t even remember writing it, it just wrote itself. I think it’s a really natural kind of song, with the vocals and all. We just chose what parts we could relate to and sing them, it made it flow better than just one person singing it. The music was done in a lot of live takes, and with the vocals we sat down around an acoustic guitar, as we always do. We’re rocking out a bit in the end, and live it’s even more so. I think it was after touring with Neil Young that Romeo made the solo longer!”

Angela Gannon

“I think it’s the song that represents us best. It’s got the rockier and poppier sides and elements from all four of us.”

Michele Stodart

10. Son Little “The River”(from Things I Forgot EP)

11. Skogsrå “Now You See Me”(single)

12. Röyksopp & Robyn “Do It Again”(from Do It Again EP)

13. Lost In The Trees “Past Life”(from Past Life)

“For ‘Past Life’, I wanted to write a song based around a single guitar riff, kinda like David Bowie‘s ‘Rebel Rebel’. So I hit record and that riff was the first thing I played. It was just a simple blues riff, but it was so far from anything Lost In The Trees had done up to that point that I thought that was very exciting. My lyrics are about two angels or souls coming to this world to go on a date with each other, the whole ‘park the car at night’ thing reminded me of a make out scene from a 50’s movie. I thought it was romantic and fun, so I went with it.”

– Ari Picker

14. Band Of Skulls “Hoochie Coochie”(from Himalayan)

“‘Hoochie Coochie’ was a song that we first worked on in the sessions for our second album ‘sweet sour’. It didn’t really fit in with those songs so we kept it. When recording Himalayan we all knew ‘Hoochie Coochie’ would be perfect and with Nick Launey at the desk the song took on a new energy.

It’s a song about every late night and misadventure you’ve ever had all rolled into one. A lot of it’s from first hand experiences.”

Russell Marsden

15. Allo Darlin’ “Crickets In The Rain”(from We Come From The Same Place)

“‘Crickets…’ was the last song written for our album We Come From The Same Place. I wrote it after I’d moved away from England. We didn’t have a chance to rehearse it before our recording session, so we practised it in the studio in the morning and recorded it in the afternoon. This is not the best way to record all songs, but sometimes it has worked for us. To be honest, a lot of our first album was recorded in this way, with the songs coming together in the studio rather than in the rehearsal room.

I think that the reason the song came together very quickly with the band is that it’s such a typical Allo Darlin’ song and sound. It really sounded like an Allo Darlin’ song from the beginning. I’d had the chord progression for a little while, there’s not much to it really. The important thing to me was the lyric.

I’ve been reading a lot of Joan Didion the last two years, starting with The Year of Magical Thinking and working backwards from there. It’s difficult to write about Joan Didion because she is such an incredible writer and her words have meant so much to me. She has influenced me tremendously. After I left London I was thinking a lot about her essay ‘Goodbye to all that’, which begins with the words ‘It’s easy to see where things begin, it’s harder to see where they end’. It’s broadly about her leaving New York City after spending much of her twenties there, getting married and moving to California. It’s very beautiful. My situation seemed so similar.

Sometimes I have these flashbacks to when I was growing up, and I can see the images very clearly, and feel the weight of the memory. The scenes in the song are all scenes I remember, kissing in swimming pools, a boy falling from the top of resovoir, a sprinkler lazily moving across the lawn in the sunset, the sound of crickets in the rain. I don’t know why these are the ones I recall first, I don’t even have to search for them.

But nostalgia is just that, and it’s crippling. I didn’t want to live in the past anymore. That’s why I contrast the chorus with the verse, ‘and nothing feels the way it did before and I am grateful for that’. It’s a joy to sing these words when we play it live, and it is my favourite song on our record.”

Elizabeth Morris

16. The Afghan Whigs “It Kills”(from Do To The Beast)

17. Jessie Ware “Tough Love”(from Tough Love)

18. Weeping Willows “It Takes A Strong Heart To Love”(from The Time Has Come)

“I Weeping Willows fungerar det alltid så här: någon i bandet ger mig en demo med en instrumental låt. Om jag får känsla för låten så skriver jag ett utkast till en text som jag tycker passar stämningen och stilen i musiken. Det måste passa ihop. Vill det sig sedan väl blir det en låt som vi slutför tillsammans hela bandet. I det här fallet var det en demo från Anders som jag tror att han haft väldigt länge. Det är som en blandning av två av våra stora influenser. Verserna är lite Velvet Underground och refrängen och sticket är The Smiths.

Anders demo lät väldigt mycket Lou Reed/VU, därav ‘Here it comes now…'(‘Here She Comes Now’ – från White Light/White Heat). Mellan våra albuminspelningar sparar jag fraser i en skrivbok. Det kan vara något från någon film eller bok. Eller något jag hör någon säga. Eller så klart något jag själv kommer på. Alla dessa ‘oneliners’ blandas huller om buller i min skrivbok och efter ett tag minns jag inte längre var fraserna kommer ifrån. Jag brukar börja med att leta i min skrivbok för att förenkla processen och snabbt komma igång. När jag väl börjat skriva till en låt kommer flowet, tack vare dessa sparade fraser och jag åker in i en ‘låtskrivarbubbla’.

Texten kom att handla om minnen från skoltiden. Och hur vår uppväxt präglar oss hela livet. Jag minns mobbarna. Hur jobbigt det var. Och att jag ibland sällade mig till dem för att själv slippa bli mobbad. I efterhand förstår jag nu att många av dem kom från väldigt tråkiga hemförhållanden, och att det till viss mån är en förklaring. Men det hjälper ju knappast den utsatte. En situation jag minns väldigt starkt är att det var en flicka i klassen som ofta var smutsig. Hon kallades för ‘Lusen’ och var, så klart, hårt ansatt. En rast stod(som vanligt) halva klassen i en ring runt henne och kastade hennes mössa emellan sig. Jag gick emellan och tog mössan och gav den till henne. Jag kände en stark stolthet över denna handling och jag märkte att hon blev så lättad. Ingen frågade någonsin hur någon mådde. Man ville bara överleva dagen. Jag undrar nu i vuxen ålder över hur hon egentligen hade det hemma…(‘It takes you back to school, where no one ever asked you, they don’t know what you’ve been through’).

Låten skrevs ju under ‘supervalåret’ 2014. Så jag tänkte mycket på Sverigedemokraterna och deras väljares ‘mobbing-stil’. Något som oroar och stör mig enormt. Om man som människa är stark och har medel och möjlighet, tycker jag jag att man har en skyldighet och ett ansvar att hjälpa de som har det svårt. Om att vara medmänniska.

Det handlar låten om för mig. Den är nästan politisk.”

– Magnus Carlson

“Den har mycket riktigt funnits ganska länge. Inspirationen till låten / versen kommer(otippat) från The Knife‘s ‘Pass This On’ som kom typ 2003, ‘kjol-Johan'(Johan Renck) gjorde en fantastisk video till den. Refräng och brygga är mycket riktigt(mollvers, dur refräng) Smiths-inspirerade. Hade glömt bort låtidén, hittade den i en gammal telefon typ 2012, gillade melodierna och jobbade klart låten inför The Time has Come, drog upp tempot(vi behövde upptempo låtar) och hittade på ett väldigt enkelt gitarrintro. Magnus text om utanförskap korrelerade med min känsla för vad musiken för mig handlade om.”

– Anders Hernestam

19. Nick Mulvey “Cucurucu”(from First Mind)

“‘Cucurucu’ was this lullaby that my mother used to sing to me and my brothers and sisters. I think it comes from the Spanish word for the sound of the bird. Something she used to make up with a melody and sing, and I had it in my mind. Then when I was a teenager a friend of mine gave me this book with a poem called ‘Piano’, a very famous poem by british poet D.H. Lawrence. I always loved it, and from the very first time I read it I had a desire to turn it into a song. I just knew it. It took me a long time, because I was busy in Portico Quartet, but it was in the back of my mind for six years.

Then one time I got down to making an adaptation of the poem in some form. In this poem, he takes the reader on a journey which takes him back through the years to a memory of when he was a child and sat underneath a piano, and he presses the feet of his mother who smiles as she sings. In his version that’s a full stop right there, but I thought it would be cool to add a colon and then add my mother singing ‘Cucurucu’. So then you achieve the song within the song. It’s an adaptation, but I’ve been liberal and added on the title and the bridge. ‘Softly, in the evening…’ and onwards, that’s from the poem.

About the slow start, I wanted people to get the words, to hear them clearly. You know, it comes with a good intention. I can also see that it was born from a concern that people wouldn’t get the words. Now I know that people are listening. In my next songs, I don’t know if I’ll be that systematic, when there’s nothing to explain like in this one.”

– Nick Mulvey

20. Viet Cong “Continental Shelf”(single)

“I remember writing that main riff – like the first thing that you hear in the song – on an acoustic guitar. It was on my birthday, I was on tour with Chad VanGaalen and we were in a little town called Encinitas just north of San Diego, down the West Coast of California, which is maybe why there’s some sort of surfy vibe in there, because I wrote it when I was in a surf town in Southern California. I wrote it in standard tuning, it was kind of like a folky song. I had the melody, I didn’t have the lyrics, but I remember playing it in a studio with Monty and we deconstructed it, we changed the tuning to give it a weirder, Sonic Youth kind of vibe. Originally it almost had a 60s sound. We used to call it ‘Bush Beat’ because we ripped off the beat from ‘Running Up That Hill’.”

Matt Flegel

21. Marissa Nadler “Drive”(from July)

“‘Drive’ is a song that deals with the dichotomy of two mindsets. Keep in mind this isn’t my current mindset but was at the time that I wrote the song. I’m traveling from town to town, feeling jaded and disillusioned at this stagnancy in my life. The time on the road had me reflecting on some turmoil of the past. During the choruses, there’s a sharp contrast to the feeling of freedom on the open road that I have when I’m touring. It’s a song about how songs, other people’s songs, become ingrained in your psyche and propel you forward when there’s not much else pushing you.”

Marissa Nadler

22. Caribou “All I Ever Need”(from Our Love)

23. Father John Misty “Bored In The USA”(single)

24. Bright Light Bright Light feat. Elton John “I Wish We Were Leaving”(from Life Is Easy)

“I sat down at my piano after a particularly depressing afternoon and wrote the song in the time it takes to sing it. It’s from a place of real sadness, but it’s a loving, not a hateful song. A very close friendship crossed a line and became something else and went very wrong. The lyrics are about saying a mental goodbye to someone – at least in a romantic sense, and letting them get on with whatever they want to do with someone else. For me, it’s the most personally honest I have been in a song on one of my albums. It came on a day where I’d realised that the relationship had come apart and the song just fell out. It took me by surprise really!

When I was up in the studio producing the track, Elton called to talk about a song I’d written on the previous album(a crazy sentence to write!!) and when I heard his voice in the context of putting the production together, I kept hearing his voice on the track. Eventually after I produced the song, and we talked about songs for my second record, I played it to him and he liked it and agreed to add his vocal. Which for me is beyond my wildest dreams. It’s also important for me as the second voice reminds me that there are two voices in every situation. Particularly this one. So it’s become quite a healing song for me – hearing the optimism in the sadness, and hearing the second “voice” to remember that you can’t see everything from only your own point of view.”

– Rod Thomas

25. The Autumn Defense “This Thing That I’ve Found”(from Fifth)

“‘This Thing That I Found’ was initially inspired by watching a documentary about Jeff Lynne, who I am a big fan of. I watched the documentary late one night before going to bed, and when I woke up the next morning I grabbed a guitar first thing and started strumming in a bold Jeff Lynne kind of way…and the first verse and chorus just appeared without any real effort. I really should try that more often…writing just after waking up when still in a bit of a dream state. Lots of people comment on how the song reminds them of George Harrison or even Roy Orbison, but actually it takes its cues from their producer Jeff Lynne.”

Pat Sansone

26. Fickle Friends “Swim”(single)

“We never intended to go down that 80’s revival route but the song just kind of fell into place after we brought a demo to producer James Earp(Bipolar Sunshine, Sons & Lovers). Having won Chef Jamie Olivers unsigned bands competition he went the extra mile and both put us in contact with, and paid for us to work with James. Locking ourselves away for a few days in rural Wales we came home with a song we knew we had to start the year with.

Lyrically the story is bittersweet, mostly stemming from various romantic encounters from my life and bundled into one metaphorical message. Unrequited love is a theme that runs throughout the lyrics in our songs… Again…not intentional, it’s just what flows out of me and onto paper. At our core we are an indie band…but our mutual love of the late 70’s and 80’s pop world and modern commercial dance, electronic and pop music are evident when it comes to writing and recording.

I think we got really lucky with ‘Swim’, after The 1975 dropped their album and Chvrches were dominating the airwaves…it felt like a case of right song – right time. The response truly wasn’t expected and the amount of people who have connected and identified with it musically and lyrically…it’s overwhelming.”

– Natassja Shiner

27. Withered Hand “Horseshoe”(from New Gods)

“When I was writing ‘Horseshoe’ I felt like I was reaching above myself, I knew it was an important song for me and would be the opener for what became the New Gods album. It is a vehicle for how I feel about love and human relationships and I feel like the way the words tumbled out was pretty much spot on. I also felt the melody and chord changes came to me without very much work, like something was willing me to write it. The song in essence didn’t change very much between demo and final recording.

The central metaphor refers to an old silent movie I used to watch as a kid, where I think Charlie Chaplin had a horseshoe in his boxing glove in order to knock out a much bigger opponent against improbable odds. Apart from being very funny, I have always empathised with the underdog, or the clown. Either side of that central metaphor I am basically riffing on how I feel about love and life. I ask the question over and over whether it is easy to pretend that nobody you love will ever die, I know that some of us find it easier to pretend than others. We need to pretend on a daily basis just to keep going but it’s good to stop and think once in a while.

Recording the song, it was obvious one of the central songs on the album and we tried a couple of versions I recall it ended up a bit faster than I originally planned. It was a very exciting song to record. The band were really revved up for it. We were tracking alot of stuff live but struggling to get the feel I was after so in the end we turned the click track off and just powered through it, so I think it actually speeds up very slightly over the track but I think it’s better for it. Then we retracked my vocals and acoustic guitar I think and the cherry on the cake was other friends coming later to add harmonies and piano etc. Like most of my songs, it’s extremely personal. Suffice to say, when my wife heard an early mix on a rare visit to the studio, she burst into tears. That’s usually a sign it’s good.”

Dan Willson

28. Snowbird “Bears On My Trail”(from Moon)

“The song is about finding moments experienced in planar reality where they have been frozen on the spiral out of linear earth time, and then harnessing the power still within them in the present moment without running any narrative of the pain story that might have surrounded them at the time. Essentially the story is about a maiden using time travel to access energy vibrations from her memory and using them for protection against wild bears. She lifts out of danger and straight into love from the past that still holds her safely.”

– Simon Raymonde

29. Donovan Blanc “Hungry A Long Time”(from Donovan Blanc)

“I wrote this song in 2009 and originally it was called ‘Itchy Throats’. The song is mostly about sexual frustration. The original demo was just voice and electric guitar with some electronic drums to keep the beat. In 2011 when we were recording songs for the Honeydrum EP ‘Vacation’, I found it and decided to use it. I kept the original guitar and voice and just overdubbed the rest of the instruments over it, replacing the old electronic drums with real ones played by my pal Marc. When we were signed to Captured Tracks last year, they wanted two more tracks than what we initially had prepared for the LP, and I decided that this song should be one of them, so it was almost not on this release.”

– Joseph Black

30. The New Pornographers “Dancehall Domine”(from Brill Bruisers)

“That is the song that I think sounds the most like a classic New Pornographers song. We definitely wanted it to be big. Once we had that giant synth bass, that’s when we thought ‘yeah, this is good’. That was part of what we call ‘the Sigue Sigue Sputnik influence’, we wanted songs that had that same arpeggiated beat, and I still like that. The ‘dancehall domine’ is somebody who controls the dancefloor. It’s sort of ironic, I was just thinking of how indie bands were singing about dancing. Like LCD Soundsystem did ‘Dance Yourself Clean’ and I would think ‘I don’t think you’re a good dancer?!’. Or the Dirty Projectors on one of their last singles sang something about dancing, and I’d be like ‘I have a feeling you’re not a very good dancer…’. I thought it was funny to just continue that theme of white indie rock guys singing about being the best dancer.”

Carl Newman

31. Kate Tempest “The Beigeness”(from Everybody Down)

32. Arc Iris “Whiskey Man”(from Arc Iris)

“One of the first pieces I ever wrote was a piece for cello and piano. It begins with the cello melody from ‘Whiskey Man’. In the middle of the piece there are raindrops dripping from both the cello and the piano and the two playfully mourning drip drop melodies run circles around each other. The sadness and rolls of dependence are passed between the cello and piano in a very fragile human way. Because of this fragility, I decided to use the cello line(originally written for Robin Ryczek) for ‘Whiskey Man’, a song written about an unbalanced and circular relationship. The weight of the world is carried at times with ease and at times with great difficulty.

The effects of social pressures and obligations can be unbearable for both the lover and the beloved, but what makes the lover hold on are those moments in which he or she gets a glimpse of their loved one unaffected by the thieves of time. No less, the flower in them blossoms so seldom that it is vibrant and untarnished. The well worn mask and confusion created by overused and unfertilized soil is forgotten just long enough for the sad little love cycle to start over again and again and again.”

Jocie Adams

33. Sloan “You’ve Got A Lot On Your Mind”(from Commonwealth)

“‘You’ve Got A Lot On Your Mind’ is a song that had been kicking around for a few years. I always had a verse melody but never was satisfied with a good chorus melody(nor lyrics that would fit the song properly). Actually, the melody that I had been singing over the chorus section is now the string melody that pops up halfway through the 2nd chorus. Chris in our band had always thought the song could be turned into something worthwhile, so I continued to try to finish it. I didn’t really hit upon a good chorus melody until one day I was just playing guitar along with the track at home, almost absent mindedly, and I hit upon the melody that eventually became the lead vocal. It was a relief after it had been sitting around for so long. 

The placement of the chorus vocal and the way it begins before the first chord of the chorus was actually an accident that would not have happened without modern computer recording. Ryan, our engineer, was editing my vocal and actually misplaced the vocal in Pro-Tools one bar ahead of where is was supposed to land(starting on the word ‘mind’ instead of ‘you’ve’). A total ‘eureka’ moment. Suddenly it was much better and more satisfying, and maybe catchier? Regardless, thank you Ryan for your slip of the hand/mouse. Lyrically it’s mostly about my girlfriend and references her situation on an extended stay in LA as I was getting to know her. Musically, with it’s layers of acoustic and Moog, I think I was under a heavy influential dose of ABBA, Phoenix and Wings(I mean, what else is there, anyhow?)…and not that it comes close to their awesome catalogues, by the way!”

– Jay Ferguson

34. Say Lou Lou feat. Lindstrøm “Games For Girls”

“The winter of 2012-13 we had been doing some writing with Noonie Bao, a Swedish artist/writer, so when we got the question if we wanted to write on one of Lindstrøm’s instrumentals/productions for his upcoming album we were like ‘we should do it with Noonie!’. I don’t really remember how we got in contact with Lindstrøm but I think his management reached out to us and played us some of the tracks. We picked the one we found most exciting which then was a disco track with some type of rendition of the hook from ‘U Can’t Touch This’ which might sound weird but it was a really cool and fun track that we instantly were drawn to.

We brought it to Noonie‘s, she had a little studio room behind her parents’ cafe in Södermalm where we used to do the sessions. It was winter. We had coffee and saffron buns. I can’t really remember exactly how it all happened but we got a Japanese school girl/Geisha vibe from the track and that’s why we started singing quite high and very girlish, and why the ‘ahaaha’ vocal in the chorus has that oriental feeling. It was almost like we just pretended we were foreign school girls and made it all up in one go. The song is almost like a girl power mantra, we wanted to highlight that love and sex can mean as little to girls as it does to some boys, that we can play the game and win. In popular culture it’s almost always the girls that fall in love and get hurt and the guys that are unattached, so we wanted to play with that using quite childish, simple metaphors. It’s very different from anything we’ve done before as Say Lou Lou, both in terms of melody and lyrics, but it was fun to try something completely different.

We recorded scrap vocals on that day with Noonie, and then after a few weeks we went back in alone and added some more vocals and details, and sent it off to Lindstrøm. We didn’t hear anything for like…more than a year. We were under the impression that he hadn’t liked it and that he wasn’t going to use it for his album, so we didn’t really think about it for a while. Then this spring 2014 he sent a new version kind of out of nowhere, with a whole new production, the existing one that is now. We loved it! We asked if we could use if for our next single, so we made a shorter Say Lou Lou version for us and added new vocals and harmonies, and he had his longer edit. The funniest thing about this whole collaboration is that Elektra and I still have never met him! Cyber 21st century song writing!!”

Miranda Kilbey-Jansson

35. François & The Atlas Mountains “La Vérité”(from Piano Ombre)

“I used to be easily impressed by the authorities, rich people and beautiful women. I ‘ve now realised that their greatest power is to pretend that they are above. They truly don’t know much more than I do and they certainly don’t have super powers to keep them from the problems that I’m going through. They just pretend they are fine and that what they do and think is the absolute truth.

Knowing that if I’m too honest and too kind will I ever succeed? I haven’t decided to turn nasty yet . I should at least start by playing at being pretentious, cool, modern, and sexier than Prince. I’ll try…

Whether the task of playing at being cool is actually less work than being actually good to the people around me…? I truly don’t know…”

François Marry

36. Markus Krunegård “Invandrarblues”(from Rastlöst Blod)

“Jag var i Helsingfors o hängde allena några dagar för att skriva låtar, det gick dåligt. Det slutade med att jag inte vågade beställa roomservice för att dom skulle höra att jag bröt på svenska i receptionen, så ur magknip av hunger o skam över att inte ens våga prata i telefon på finska föddes denna låt. Texten är väl rätt självförklarande. Jag skrev vers 1 redan till förra skivan men orkade inte göra klart den då, på demon lät den som Suicides gubbrock, så jag o Jari tillförde lite ungdomlig entusiasm o då kändes den bra. Vet inte varför, men jag tänkte först inte ha med den, men så blev det.”

Markus Krunegård

37. Christopher Sander “Kokong”(from Jorden Var Rund)

38. Hercules & Love Affair feat. Gustaph “Do You Feel The Same?”(from The Feast Of The Broken Heart)

39. FKA Twigs “Two Weeks”(from LP1)

40. Lykke Li “Silver Line”(from I Never Learn)

41. The Primitives “Spin-O-Rama”(from Spin-O-Rama)

“The initial idea was for the song to be the theme tune to an imagined British 70s children’s TV drama. In fact I wanted to write a whole album of songs around this idea, but it didn’t quite come off. The title was originally ‘Backwards Roundabout’ but that sounded a bit clunky, so I changed it to ‘Spin-O-Rama’, which sounds more like a slightly dark kids TV program from when we were kids. The song is about returning to a less complicated, more innocent existence, via some metaphysical fairground or playground ride. I was thinking about the carousel in Ray Bradbury‘s Something Wicked This Way Comes, where people grow old or young depending on which way the carousel revolves, and also about a mad afternoon in the early days of the band, when we got a bit “mystical” in a park, and Tracy ended up clinging to the underside of one of those spider web roundabouts, laughing her head off, as it spun faster and faster.

The arpeggio riff reminded me a bit of the ‘Rupert The Bear’ song by Jackie Lee, which, I guess, is where the kids TV theme idea started. We wanted the song to have certain classic Primitives elements; ‘Spacehead’ overdriven drums, layered jangle guitar, fuzzed bar chords etc, but also to sound like one of those big bubblegum glam pop hits from our childhood. When our bass player Raph heard the finished mix, he dubbed it ‘Bay City Stone Roses’, which I thought that was a pretty fair description of what we’d set out to achieve.”

Paul Court

42. Liam Finn “Wild Animal”(from The Nihilist)

“‘Wild Animal’ was one of the first songs I wrote for The Nihilist after moving to NY. I had just found myself a cool writing space to work out of , I was excited about the endless possibilities and what felt like a fresh beginning but also a bit daunted having moved to a new city and having to find my feet again.

I remember that the verse riff came first and I constructed an instrumental piece of music. The lyrics actually came really quick for ‘Wild Animal’. Most of the time I’ll get a verse and chorus whe I first start writing but then it takes me weeks, months, sometimes years to finish the rest off. ‘Wild Animal’ lyrics came all in one go. I guess it was a response to moving country with my girlfriend, to a new world and a new era in our lives and how you experience this as an individual and a couple simultaneously. The chorus I think I was trying to acknowledge that I was aware of how I get myself worked up(especially while writing) and become hard to reason with, sensitive and unpredictable. The harder anyone tries to calm me down the more I feel backed into a corner and irrational.

Everyday felt like a surreal experience at that time, kind of like living in a film. I was particularly horrified one day when walking past a coffee shop I saw young boy who was wearing one of those harness leashes parents put on to stop their kid from running off. Someone had tied him up to a bike rack outside the coffee shop like a dog while they went inside to buy coffee. The little boy was just losing his shit, screaming and bucking around much like the wild animal he was being treated like. I don’t blame him…”

Liam Finn

43. Dinosaur Feathers “Impossible”(from Control)

“I had written the music and melody quite a while ago, but could never seem to figure out any lyrics for it. Then, I had an experience playing pickup basketball in Oakland where I was harassed for being white. It was a difficult, but interesting experience. I was talking to Ryan about it and we thought it to just make ‘Impossible’ about that. I tried writing some lyrics, but continued to fail, so I asked Ryan to write them, because I just couldn’t get past this block. So, he wrote the lyrics about my experience in that game and as the song progresses, it sort of expands outwards, meditating on issues of class and identity.”

– Greg Sullo

44. The Night VI “Sienna”(single)

“The track was born of hostile encounter between guitarist Jack Gourlay and a new girlfriend’s ex, which got us thinking about the special hurt when you’re the one that’s been left behind. It was written in 2 days with our good friend Cass Lowe, who co produced it with Jack, we did our best to record as a 6 piece with the drummer in a separate room but ended up using a lot of the 1st vocal/guitar takes from the original demo. Sometimes the best takes are the ones you haven’t thought too hard over.”

– Sophie-Rose Harper

45. Hello Saferide “The Crawler”(from The Fox, The Hunter and Hello Saferide)

46. tUnE-yArDs “Left Behind”(from Nikki Nack)

47. How To Dress Well “Repeat Pleasure”(from What Is This Heart?)

48. Sun Kil Moon “Carissa”(from Benji)

49. Kent “Var Är Vi Nu?”(from Tigerdrottningen)

50. Susanne Sundfør “Fade Away”(single)

51. Tomas Barfod feat. Nina K “Busy Baby”(from Love Me)

“The story to this song is told through the perspective of different versions of myself. Or different versions of anybody really. We’re all diverse, stupid and smart, old and young, sad and happy. It can be pretty difficult to find a togetherness inside all of that and inside your different selves. So this song is a ‘what would I tell my younger self?’ kind of story. Or a ‘what would I tell my childish, stupid, sad or self-absorbed self?’ kind of story. How do I snap out of things with ‘only’ the different sides of myself as a weapon? I started writing it by the words ‘awful pale like a mother say yes’ which was, super cliché, scrabbled down on a piece of paper when I was really drunk and for a very long time I didn’t have any music to it. Then Tomas sent me a track from his album called ‘Destiny’s Child’. That’s the song I laid down the vocals to. I was so happy to hear what he built out of the vocals afterwards. What had originally been this sweet and easygoing song, became more of a disco anthem which I think is so much better. Especially with these lyrics.”

– Nina Kinert

52. Archie Bronson Outfit “We Are Floating”(from Wild Crush)

“‘We are Floating’ was the first track we wrote for Wild Crush, or more accurately, was the first track we decided was a ‘keeper’ for the album. It represents us deciding what the essence of Archie Bronson Outfit was, post Dor leaving the group.

There are some famous musical/riff nods in there! When we came to record it we wanted to elevate it, from what it essentially is, i.e. rockarama. In the studio therefore, we flexed our vocoder and creaky-synth muscles; these are very much elements Capitol K brought to the party.

I don’t really like explaining lyrics, but I like the line “newly gifting and body-shifting”. Also, “we are floating, but I can’t relax” is probably the most self-descriptive line I will ever write. There are lines that I can write now where I just know that once Sam is singing them, they will really work, as he brings a certain tension in his singing, and that is one of them!”

Mark “Arp” Cleveland

53. Hamilton Leithauser “Alexandra”(from Black Hours)

“The song was very spontaneous and fun to write. Just Rostam and myself in his apartment noodling around with his 12-string guitar. The bulk of the song really took about an hour to write. The mix, however, took about 3 months – and a lot of grief – to get right. A lot of the recording was actually done in Washington, DC at Inner Ear Studios…where I used to work in the 90’s.”

Hamilton Leithauser

54. Ex Hex “How You Got That Girl”(from Rips)

55. SOHN “Artifice”(from Tremors)

56. Hiss Golden Messenger “Saturday’s Song”(from Lateness Of Dancers)

57. Death From Above 1979 “White Is Red”(from The Physical World)

58. Fujiya & Miyagi “Little Stabs At Happiness”(from Artificial Sweeteners)

“The song started off very differently to how it finished. It began as a slow cluster type instrumental written on a farfisa. We then added the words but felt the song didn’t fit in with how we wanted the record to sound so we put it to one side and sort of forgot about it. Towards the end of making Artificial Sweeteners we were working out what songs we wanted to put on it and we remembered ‘Little Stabs at Happiness’. It sounded good but still didn’t fit with the feel of the record. So we took it apart and put it back together and it morphed into something else. It still had the originals melancholy but we added a bounce to the bassline and the synth became more off kilter. Maybe it could end up as a soundtrack for depressed ravers somewhere. I hope it has a chink of lightness and positivity to it though somewhere. Hopefully theres a nice contrast between the feel of the music and the words.

The title was borrowed from a 1960s film by Ken Jacobs, although the words haven’t got anything to do with that. I just liked the title. I suppose the song is about never quite being able to achieve what you want to achieve or never reaching a place where you are content. Maybe thats what drives people to keep going and thats where the light comes in.”

David Best

59. The Voluntary Butler Scheme “Honey In The Gravel Mixture”(from A Million Ways To Make Gold)

“The song was written not long after i learnt to play the trumpet. I just decided to take it up as an extra instrument between albums and as a result of that i ended up writing lots of songs based around brass riffs. The lyric is quite cynical maybe – but is non-sensical enough to disguise it. It’s kind of about that even if things are a bit shit – they can be made just a little better with some simple sweetness. The song was recorded in my house like all my music.”

– Rob Jones

60. Ásgeir “Summer Guest”(from In The Silence)

61. Timber Timbre “This Low Commotion”(from Hot Dreams)

62. Sharon Van Etten “Our Love”(from Are We There)

63. Gardens & Villa “Colony Glen”(from Dunes)

64. Tokyo Police Club “Hot Tonight”(from Forcefield)

65. Raury “God’s Whisper”(single)

66. Fatima “Underwater”(from Yellow Memories)

67. Greylag “Yours To Shake”(from Greylag)

“This song is alluding to the riskiness at the core love and relationships — in getting into them and in sustaining them. It’s saying, nothing we do is ever perfect, but if we’re giving it everything we have, we can make something beautiful together. But there’s never any guarantee it will work out the way you want — you both have to put yourself on the line and open yourself to the possibility of getting hurt, or it won’t work.”

– Andrew Stonestreet, Daniel Dixon and Brady Swan

68. Titiyo “Solna”(single)

På ‘Solna’ har Jonathan Johansson suttit och nästan intervjuat mig för att därefter skriva texten medan jag har gjort melodin. Ackorden kommer faktiskt från Martin Renck, lillebror till Johan Renck(alias Stakka Bo), och hans instrumentalprojekt Svartaste. Jag satt och lyssnade på honom och upptäckte de här ackorden och satte en melodi till dem. Sedan gjorde Dante och Sakarias en 90-talsinspirerad produktion till det, med en annan melodi och en annan text, som sedan byttes mot en ny melodi och så satte Jonathan en ny text till den. Så den har gått några vändor! Från början hette låten ‘Stockholm’. När Jonathan fick höra den och skulle komma med en text frågade han: ‘men är inte du från Solna?’. ‘Jo…’, sa jag, och insåg att här har vi något, eftersom det inte finns så många låtar som handlar om Solna, vad det nu beror på.”

– Titiyo

69. Woman’s Hour “To The End”(from Conversations)

“Our song ‘To The End’ was written in a unique way to the rest of our songs. The initial spark came whilst I was in Kendal and wrote the chorus chords and riff on the piano. I then sent an iPhone recording to the guys and each of us built it up our own parts in isolation from each other. In a sense it was one of the easiest songs to create as each of the parts we came up with worked really well with each other.”

Fiona Jane Burgess

70. Happyness “It’s On You”(from Happyness EP)

“‘It’s On You’ was the first song on the first EP we ever released and one of the first things we ever recorded. It originally just had the instrumental backing with a story spoken over the top about a man who never dried when he got out of the bath. Here’s the whole story:

‘There once was a man who never dried. Every morning he would wake up with everybody else. He would sit up, slide out, sway, walk and piss with everybody else. He would undress and self-examine, wash his body parts in an established sequence, pull the plug and feel the land rise around him. But he never dried.

And wherever he went, whether he was watching birds on the television or girls in the park, or in the evenings dripping in bars, people would say: “Why don’t you dry?'”

– Ash Cooper, Benji Compston and Jonny Allan

71. The Hidden Cameras “Year Of The Spawn”(from Age)

“I wrote ‘Year of the Spawn’ in 2004 actually. A long time ago. It was one of the first songs I wrote after buying a Gretsch guitar. It was recorded in 2008 I believe. I asked Chilly Gonzales to record piano on it in 2010 and it was mixed by Howie Beck in 2012.”

– Joel Gibb

72. The Aston Shuffle feat. Mayer Hawthorne “Never Take It Away”(from Photographs)

73. Goat “Hide From The Sun”(from Commune)

74. Bipolar Sunshine “Where Did The Love Go”(single)

75. The Delines “82nd Street”(from Colfax)

76. Kwabs “Pray For Love”(from Pray For Love EP)

77. Drive-By Truckers “Grand Canyon”(from English Oceans)

78. Neneh Cherry feat. Robyn “Out Of The Black”(from Blank Project)

79. Mark Morriss “It’s Hard To Be Good All The Time”(from A Flash Of Darkness)

80. Les Big Byrd “War In The Streets”(from They Worshipped Cats)

81. Miniature Tigers “Swimming Pool Blues”(from Cruel Runnings)

82. Mazes “It Is What It Is”(from Wooden Aquarium)

83. Tove Styrke “Even If I’m Loud It Doesn’t Mean I’m Talking To You”(from Borderline EP)

84. Sean Nicholas Savage “Empire”(from Bermuda Waterfall)

85. Grumbling Fur “All The Rays”(from Preternaturals)

86. Foxygen “How Can You Really”(from …And Star Power)

87. Banks “Beggin For Thread”(from Goddess)

88. Twin Shadow “To The Top”(single)

89. Chet Faker “1998”(from Built On Glass)

90. Black Lips “Make You Mine”(from Underneath The Rainbow)

91. DMA’s “Delete”(from DMA’s EP)

92. Owl John “Red Hand”(from Owl John)

93. Augustines “Cruel City”(from Augustines)

94. Kevin Morby “The Ballad Of Arlo Jones”(from Still Life)

95. Strand Of Oaks “Same Emotions”(from Heal)

96. Ryan Adams “Kim”(from Ryan Adams)

97. Generationals “Now Look At Me”(from Alix)

98. Reverend And The Makers feat. Steve Edwards “I Spy”(from Thirty Two)

99. Arthur Beatrice “Grand Union”(from Working Out)

100. Lo-Fang “Look Away”(from Blue Film)

LISTEN TO THE PLAYLIST VIA WiMP

LISTEN TO THE PLAYLIST VIA RARA

Interview: Nick Mulvey – “I don’t necessarily identify myself with acoustic rock”

nickbandwstageshot

Written by Tommy Juto

He’s had a good year, Nick Mulvey. 2014 saw the release of his first solo album, one that was recognized as one of the nominations for the Mercury Music Prize, and as he travels from one city to another, more people get to discover his sophisticated, world inspired folk rock. As he rode into Stockholm, I met up with him to have a few words.

Let’s begin with First Mind, your first solo album after leaving the Portico Quartet. What was the reason for going solo?

– Well, it’s been a natural change. Two things were happening. First, after being with the Portico Quartet for five years I wanted to return to the guitar from playing the hand drum. That had been going on for a couple of years, but then it became intolerable not playing the guitar. Also, I started to have a lot of ideas, and it was becoming a real body of work. Same thing goes for working with words and singing. I didn’t get all those three elements with the Portico Quartet, and I knew that it was gonna be too much to both be in the band and go solo. The other guys were going in one direction creatively and I went in another. This all happened before I was conscious of it, I wasn’t actually a creative functioning person within the Quartet, so it wasn’t really a choice I made as such. But I didn’t want us to go get some money from the record company to make another album and wait to tell them after all that, so I made the change before it went too far.

Did you write all the songs for the album during a long period?

– I wrote them in the two years after leaving the Portico Quartet, but they had a long time to grow, especially some of the guitar patterns. Certainly the way I play guitar did, the African influences, the way I use harmonies. Specific things I use within rhythm and expression, they all had a long time to gestate.

You play the classical guitar, was that an obvious choice instead of the steel-stringed?

– That was something I chose when I was a teenager, to prefer the classical guitar.

Do you use different tunings as well?

Not much. I use two different capos, though, so sometimes I play in a drop D tuning. When I use that I don’t have to change my bar chords.

For this album you brought in Dan Carey to produce. He’s not exactly known for working with folk musicians. What did you see in him?

– Probably because I don’t necessarily identify myself with acoustic rock. I met a lot of producers and made one track here, one track there, just to get a feel of different studios and different producers’ techniques. I released an EP of all those experiments, Fever To The Form, and one of those was me going down to Dan Carey’s house in South London, his studio is in the ground floor. In the two days it took to make Fever To The Form it became obvious to me that it was special, it was meaningful to meet him, and I don’t really believe it was a coincidence. I had immediate chemistry with Dan and he had a lot of the qualities I was specifically looking for since leaving the Portico Quartet.

One thing I’ve noticed is that you’re using double tracked vocals on a lot of the album. How come?

There’s a few things. I am constantly trying to position myself away from a typical acoustic singer-songwriter. All the respect in the world for that, but I want space as an artist. I like the effect, the sound of the double tracked vocals. You can feel that the studio process isn’t trying to be natural, and that was important to me. But I think I overdid it on this album.

Yeah?

– Yeah, personally I think that sometimes the second tracking was too high. It still hurts when I hear that. And to be perfectly honest with you, I’ve always felt confident as a guitarist, but it’s been a longer journey to get confidence as a vocalist.  I believe now that the double tracking was an act of compensation.

Reading reviews of First Mind, you draw a lot of comparisons to classic singer-songwriters like Nick Drake, John Martyn and Paul Simon. Myself, I think a little of José González. How do you feel about being compared to all those artists? Is it a burden or is it flattering?

– Well, it’s their comparison. I suppose it’s flattering but if I really feel flattered I guess I would also feel the opposite side of it, and that’s the burden. It’s great being mentioned in the same sentence as them, they’re all great artists, but I also think that the act of comparison is useless. Artists and journalists see it differently, perhaps.

When you write songs, do you consciously do it with the aim of a full band arrangement, or is it more like seeing where it goes once it’s finished?

– This album was written completely separately from any idea of a full band. Just me and the guitar, I wasn’t playing with other people at that point. On the record, I play most of the instruments. A guy called Shahzad Ismaily played the drums and laid down some synthesizers, Dan Carey did a few things. That is why there is so much humming. In my mind, in my isolation, I was humming what I in the future was going to make into the other parts. Basically, when I was writing I was thinking it was just for guitar, voice and a cello, but I decided very early on that I didn’t want the cello, because that would make it sound very similar to Nick Drake. So therefore I wanted to use analogue synthesizers, I had what was going to be a Prophet synth line, but when I came to the recording the hums had kind of settled as an actual feature, so they stayed. I don’t think I’ll do it on the next album, though.

Have you started working on the follow-up?

– Starting songs, yes, finishing songs is something else.

This year you were also nominated for the Mercury Music Prize but missed out, just as you did with the Portico Quartet a few years ago. Often awards isn’t that important to artists, but can you feel that it was nice to be acknowledged for your work?

– Yeah, but first of all I have to say that neither of those two times was the words “missed out” in my mind. Because, to be nominated for Album of the year was like, “holy fuck!”. The first time we were on the same list as Radiohead! Amazing. It’s a good recognition from the outside world saying “keep going, you’re doing something right”. I have always had a strong conviction that I’m doing what I’m best at. The right job, the right place. And if a song for me feels right, I’m confident, I know it’s gonna work. But releasing music is a different thing, you know. Creating an album, promoting an album, videos, artwork. This is lots of new stuff for me and not easy, so if anything, the nomination was a confirmation to me that I made the right choices.

You have toured a lot with Laura Marling, who is working in you genre. Do you feel that you learn things from eachother while touring?

Yeah, definitely. I really enjoyed touring with her and I watched her gig every night. Usually I don’t watch the person I’m touring with every night, but with her I knew it was going to be special, it would be a mistake to miss it. But that has really nothing to do with the sound, with both of us playing the guitar and singing. Much more it’s about how she is true to herself as a person and as an artist. I have just been touring with The Acid, and they have a project called RY X. Now, his musical choices are completely different, but I got a lot from touring with him. It’s very encouraging to see someone doing what you’re doing and doing it well. And with Laura

– I’ll say something specific I got from Laura was that she has no obligation to explain herself. Ever. And it’s fucking cool. Her fans adore her because of this music. She gives you… Do you know of Joseph Campbell’s The Hero With a Thousand Faces? I remember thinking this with her, she has so many different face. In the end of the concert she gives her audience so much of her in her world, and yet noone in the end knows any more about who Laura Marling is than they did at the beginning. Everyone says the same thing about Bob Dylan, you know, noone knows who he is. Most people who aren’t artists themselves don’t appreciate how much they give. If you can liberate yourself from a rigid sense of self, then you’re free to be much more useful as an artist because you can adopt and adapt and experiment with roles. She does that really well.

Finally, what do you wish for Christmas?

– I wish for… I really wish for a holiday. I’m actually going to Thailand with my girlfriend for a whole month, so I’m looking forward to that.

Interview: Ariel Pink – “It’s like no one should listen to what I say, because it’s full of shit”

THIS IS THE ENGLISH TRANSCRIPTION OF AN INTERVIEW IN SWEDISH ON BEHALF OF GAFFA.

Written by Tommy Juto.

When I get hold of Ariel Rosenberg at his London hotel room, I’m not sure what to expect. The past few days his form has been on a day-to-day basis, but he’s been talking. A lot. Some might say a little too much. His penchant for saying exactly what’s on his mind has put him in the line of fire more than once, the latest being that he didn’t think too much about Madonna‘s back catalogue, save for her first album, which led Canadian electronica producer Grimes to peg him as misogynist. And for every attempt to clear things up he digs himself deeper into it, by dropping one controversial comment after another, and himself feeling misunderstood, wearier with media by the hour. But let’s begin with the show he played in London the evening before our talk:

I understand that Jason Pierce played with you last night?

– Well, he was on the record on those two songs, and you know, since we were in town… It made sense and he was willing, so why would you turn that down?

Could you tell us a little about the work with your new album pom pom?

– It was recorded on various mediums, different programs at different times with different people. We sort of kept everybody in the dark about it, then connected it. I mean, it’s boring stuff, to explain every process would take ages. It’s great to have such wonderful musicians and good people working with you.

Kim Fowley contributed to the album as well. What did he do and how did that come to be?

– He helped out with some of the lyrics and melodies for some of the songs. He just called me up, you know, we’re both from L.A. I actually tried to contact him years ago, in 1999. They had a website that said he was for hire, but I never heard from him up until now. He’s a genius.

When you set out to make an album, do you have a clear idea of what you want it to sound like?

– No. As far as an album’s concerned I never know where it’ll end up. It’s really just a collection of songs. In a certain sense I know how every song goes from beginning to end, I have an idea of it since I came up with them. In that sense I know what all components of the album are, but I don’t have any overarching theme that I base songwriting on. There’s no idea for an album that I then write songs to, it’s just blank. The idea I might have is that it’s one giant collection of songs by different artists, it should be a survey of the different moods and musical tapestries that we have to offer.

Sounds to me like something along the veins of The Turtles present The Battle of the Bands?

– Yeah, or like The Dukes of Stratosphear or a Nuggets compilation.

At first listen, I detect a bit of The Who Sell Out on the album, would you agree on that?

– Yes, yes, yes, that’s good. A little bit of that, a little The Mothers Of Invention like We’re Only In It For The Money, Freak Out!, Absolutely Free. There’s a fair amount of The Cure’s Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me, it has that kind of sprawling double album vibe. It’s got Todd Rundgren, it’s got so many things. Take your pick. They’re all the same, they’re all different. They’re all influenced by eachother too, I mean, one proceeds from the other. Frank Zappa’s obviously an underappreciated influence in the world. He was an influence on Can, what does that say about the influence they have on others? They created metronomic, trance-inducing music. Does that mean that there’s something trance-inducing about Frank Zappa? Yes, there is.

I read somewhere that you don’t like writing lyrics, is that true?

– That’s really overstating it, obviously I like writing lyrics ‘cause I write them, you know. I don’t write songs per se, I don’t sit down with an acoustic guitar, come up with words, come up with the melody, that’s not what I do. I’m a studio musician, I record what seem like they’re songs, and they’re not. They’re musical pieces. They have an attitude in the end, they have a face, and I provide them with a face in every instance for my project. I’m not gonna sit around with a song in my head and write the lyrics out. If I have a basic gest of what I want a song to sound like eventually, in my mind I keep that, rather than the lyrics. At the very end, once I have all the music perfect, then I quickly rush off some lyrics and lay down the vocals, because if I have them written before that whole process I’m just gonna rewrite them a million times over and over and it’ll just kill the song. I’m not a poet or anything, I’m just the singer in a band.

Has it ever crossed your mind to make an album of different tracks but having the same lyrics on each one of them?

– Well, I do that all the time. On this record there are lyrics from other songs of mine that have been previously released, and even melodies that are grabbed from already used chord structures. I do that all the time. The whole thing doesn’t have to be new all the time. I have a lot of parts, components, that can all basically be thrown together in different combinations and it almost always results in something acceptable.

Have you ever thought about pulling your music from Spotify the way Taylor Swift recently did?

– No, because I don’t get paid for these records, I don’t own them. It’s down to 4AD to take it off Spotify, I don’t get any money from it anyway. I don’t care. The label rapes me, so it’s them I should square my issues with, not Spotify.

I know you’re probably fed up with questions regarding the controversies of late, so I’m not going to bring all of it up. But why do you think this happens as soon as you open your mouth?

– It’s a good question. I think that journalists and writers are paying attention to what everybody says, and they’re also in charge of their own careers. It’s on them to make something that gives them some sort of notice in the office to their upper management or whatever. To be a distinguished writer you have to pick up on these things and you have to sensationalize. Maybe not sensationalize, but shining a light on certain things that don’t necessarily need to be shined on. The temptation to do so is overwhelming, it’s just like money laundering if you know what I mean, a money transaction. I understand completely why it works the way it works, I appreciate that. Except that the masses and the youth culture in particular, they believe that they know what’s going on. Just because they think something’s wrong they can have an opinion about it. They’re being lied to, fed freeways, every way, back and forth. They know that the media lies, and yet they eat from it every single day. Or it’s not they, it’s us, we’re all the same.

So people are reading what you say too literally, you mean?

– Well yeah, duh! They’re not reading me literally, they read somebody else’s transcription of me taken out of context with their headline and Madonna’s picture. Like how Walter Benjamin always talked about controlling the gays in the movies. How you can easily manipulate the viewer in so many ways, you control what the viewer sees, as opposed to back in Shakesperean times where big gestures and drama was what got your attention in the concert hall. That’s why everything’s so exaggerated in the fictional realm ‘cause they’re trying to get your attention, they didn’t have to do that so much in film. These are things that are clear to me, but they’re not necessarily clear to everyone. I don’t pander to the court of the public opinion, I don’t need to deny that I said any of those things, I don’t need to admit it either. If I ever get burnt on the stake, that should tell you. I mean, I know myself and anyone that knows me and my intentions, and knows me as a person, they won’t call me a misogynist. Stupid.

Yes, that was on display the other day as well?

– I know, because whatever’s on display shows people what to think. I give them most of their material, like I’ll say that I’m something, and then they spit it back at me saying “he’s that”. Like I’ll say I’m a misogynist, I’ll say I’m a racist, then they all of a sudden go “he’s a racist, fuck him!”. It’s like no one should listen to what I say, because it’s full of shit. I mean, obviously we’re not covering any real facts in talking to me, and I’m not clarifying any kind of questions that anybody has, because the same questions keep on coming up. Like, “can you elaborate on what you meant by that?”, it’s just a giant history of me trying to clarify what I said before, which I didn’t even remember saying in the first place, it didn’t even matter. There’s nothing to clarify, it was just talk. When you print something that somebody says, it affects the brain in a different way. And if you hurt somebody saying it, you can all scrutinize it and it feels almost criminal, the opinions that people have.

Have you ever felt “that’s it, I’ve had it, I’m not giving any more interviews”?

– Oh yeah, I think about it all the time. Unfortunately, I have to promote the record. Instead of doing interviews with my family members or other members of the band, everybody wants to get the facts straight from me. As if I’m a wellspring of real reliable information. Even if I did say things that I wanted to use as media antics… I’m just trying to roll with it, I can’t just repeat myself every single time with people, I’ve done this enough times now that I can anticipate the questions with every record before they even come to me. They’re taken from the byline. They read about Kim Fowley being on the record, so they ask if I can talk about Kim Fowley. There’s nothing to talk about, he’s on the record! It’s like, you have a list of who’s on the record, why do you wanna waste my time talking about who’s on the record? Like “you dropped part of the name for this record, why did you do that?”, well, you can read another interview where I answer that question. ‘Cause they all ask the same questions, and it’s only because we made them take notice of those topics. Nobody’s really interested in me, nobody is interested in me. If so, they would know more about my life and they don’t.

Maybe that’s a good thing too, to keep stuff about your life private?

– It is absolutely a good thing. That’s the reason why I do what I do and keep on doing it, and ultimately I can’t see feminism really getting to the point where I would be driven to suicide for any of the things I say or harassment. I can’t imagine anything making me that upset, that I would stop making music. Somebody may chop my arms off and I’d still be making music. You’d have to kill me, you really would. If they want me to commit suicide I’m very far from that, I’ve got a huge ego. I like to complain a lot, though.

Well, people in general do, so why should you be any different?

– Yeah, you know, it’s mano a mano. I’ll listen to you if you listen to me.

Do you even feel that you long back to the early days when you started out at home all by yourself without this attention?

– I don’t long for those days at all. I mean, they are very much with me, the home recording days when Haunted Graffiti took off. I was already working and supporting myself when I did all those things, I remember the life that I was leading and the work that I was doing, where I had to give myself completely to the art form. You know I ate it, I ate shit for at least six or seven years. It was age 26 before I had any sort of acknowledgement for what I did. The Animal Collective recommended that I play live, and I never stopped because that was my means of income. If I wanted to continue making music and not have a job I had to play live so I had to figure out how to make it work and enjoy it. It kept me living substandard existence while I was supporting the band. You know trying to make strides, and dispel any notion of any kind of degree of unreliability on my part to deliver results, and my professionalism. There’s all things that have probably preceded me in reputation, and I might not like that, but that’s the fact. I’m sure there’s gonna be more rumours that circulate about me because of the most recent stuff, but anybody in the know should know the difference. I’m a very professional and ethical person.

On the other hand, when good news travel fast they also subside very quickly?

– Yes, it does subside quickly, but there’s also truth to the adage that “there’s no such thing as bad publicity”. Really, I’m much more satisfied with having my name entering the lives of new fans rather than making all the old fans happy. I’m much more interested in the 99,9999 % of the population that have never heard of me.

Hopefully people are beginning to take notice now, not only because of controversies in media but also because of your music.

– More than 90% of what I do is actually not the music, although that is what it should be about ultimately. But being the good artist never did anything for that artist, you have to be a person and professional and responsible to yourself. The reason why you know about me is partly because of the music, but mostly because of me and who I am, my people skills and the way I do business. You know, it’s an active thing, it doesn’t ever stop, it doesn’t end, the way I relate to and love people. I don’t hide in my hole, I’m not a recluse or an idiot savant. Most of what I do is administrative, you know? So it’s boring and not very artistic at all, but I never said I was an artist. I mean I feel like an artist, but I wouldn’t be an artist at whatever the cost. Many people seem to be married to that tragic, romantic thing.

Maybe Pom Pom will make people more interested in your music, what I’ve read has been positive so far anyway, so good luck with everything. Thanks for taking your time, it’s been a pleasure talking to you.

– Thank you, man, I hope you’re right. Take care.

Intervju: Tom Levin – “Skriva positiva texter har visat sig vara väldigt svårt!”

Idag släpper svenske sångaren och låtskrivaren Tom Levin sitt femte album, dubbeln Them Buffalo & Them Feet varav just Them Feet funnits ute digitalt i några månader. Den kraftfulla rösten, de nogsamt utarbetade sångtexterna, frisyrerna vi inte visste att vi skulle få ta del av, streamingtjänsternas inverkan på karriären. Allt detta och lite till berättar han om här nedan, dessutom får du ta del av 20 låtar som inspirerat honom i skräddarsydda spellistan “Tom Levins Inspirado”, med bl.a. Eels, Spiritualized, Frank Sinatra, Feist, Ben Harper och Pearl Jam. Återfinns längst ner!

Du släpper i dagarna nya dubbelalbumet Them Buffalo & Them Feet. Them Feet har dock funnits ute ett tag på egen hand, varför har du valt att inkludera det

– För mig hör Them Buffalo och Them Feet ihop. Jag spelade in dem i en följd med samma producentteam, Dark Lama, och texterna och produktionen följer samma tema. Them Feet släpptes aldrig i ett fysiskt format och eftersom skivorna för mig hör ihop så kändes det naturligt att Them Feet fick vara med när jag släppte CD och vinyl.

WiMP: Lyssna på Them Buffalo

Vad syftar titlarna på?

– Rent konkret så är Them Feet titeln på en av låtarna från det albumet. Jag är väldigt inspirerad av dans, och låten är ett löfte till min fru om att vi aldrig ska sluta dansa, ”I won’t let them feet get cold”.  Med ordet Them, vars användning som bestämd form har en koppling till äldre engelska, ville jag signalera att min musik är influerad av äldre musik.

– Them Buffalo kommer från att min värdfamiljssyster i Alaska föder upp bisonoxar, Buffalo, och ända sedan jag första gången kom i kontakt med djuren så har jag varit fascinerad av deras urkraft. Låten ”Thunder On” handlar också indirekt om bisonoxar. Albumet Them Buffalo har ett högre tempo än ”Them Feet” och då kändes det rätt att koppla namnet till djurets driv och kraft. Som en parentes så har även producentteamet Dark Lama under hela inspelningen av någon anledning kallat mig för Buffalo. Vi har även ett Remixprojekt tillsammans som heter Buffalo XT som troligtvis kommer släppa remixer av mina låtar till våren 2015.

Berätta lite om arbetet med albumet.

– När jag inledde samarbetet med Dark Lama så var jag väldigt tydlig med att jag inte ville upprepa vad jag gjort på mina tidigare album. Jag ville med mitt nya album, som då inte var tänkt att bli en dubbel, lämna min trygghetszon och experimentera i studion. Till en början var jag kvar i mitt kontrollbehov men efterhand som inspelningarna fortlöpte så kände jag mig allt friare och tillslut släppte jag sargen. Dark Lama har verkligen gjort ett fantastisk arbete och hjälpt mig att ta experimenterandet längre än vad jag kunnat hoppas på. Personligen gillar jag inte homogena album och min ambition har varit att skapa ett album där lyssnaren förhoppningsvis emellanåt överraskas. 

– Det har varit ett enormt berikande arbete och inte minst har jag har haft den stora glädjen att få jobba med fantastiska musiker så som Adam Börjesson, Kalle Persson, Rikard Carlsson, Carl Ekerstam, Johan Setterlind, Anders Börjesson och Aimee Bobruk.

– Ofta när man skriver så kan det vara en sorts självterapi och texterna blir då gärna mörka och kanske lite deppiga. När jag skrivit texterna till det här albumet har jag genomgående haft ”vad jag vill förmedla till min barn” som katalysator. Jag har haft en ambition att skriva positiva texter, vilket visat sig vara väldigt svårt! Att bibehålla djupet och inte fastna i ytliga klyschor. För att inte riskera att bli för enkelspårig eller upprepande så har jag skrivit några av texterna med andra låtskrivare, bland andra fantastiska Aimee Bobruk och Brian Hobbs.

Att ge ut dubbelalbum betraktas ofta som lite vågat. Hur ser du på det?

– Om man betraktar det som vågat så antar jag att man utgår ifrån vad andra ska tycka. Om jag gjorde det så skulle jag inte få mycket ur händerna. För mig är det nitton låtar som jag är väldigt stolt över och som alla har något att berätta. Jag har haft väldigt kul när jag skrivit och spelat in dem och fått möjligheten att jobba med fantastiska människor. Som en bonus har jag nu gjort en dubbel innan jag dör!

Hur ofta får du höra namnet Mark Lanegan nämnas i samma mening som ditt eget namn?

– Hans namn har nämnts några gånger i olika recensioner och jag brukar för att stilla min nyfikenhet lyssna på de artister som jag jämförs med. Jag blir så klart glad när jag jämförs med och på så sätt upptäcker artister som jag själv gillar.

När upptäckte du din djupa röst?

– Det har skett successivt men jag kommer ihåg ett speciellt tillfälle då jag var med i musikalen Jesus Christ Superstar och upptäckte att jag utan svårighet kunde sjunga med i Kajafas roll som har en väldigt låg stämma. När jag började sjunga så var det grunge som gällde och då pressade jag min röst in i ett högre register. Men efter hand så har jag omfamnat min bas och insett att det är mitt naturliga sätt att sjunga på. 

Du har texthjälp från Aimee Bobruk på några av albumets låtar. Varför har The House of Songs och Austin blivit en sådan bra grogrund för skandinavisk-amerikanska låtskrivarsamarbeten, tror du?

Troy Campbell som startat The House of Songs är väldigt noga med att det konstnärliga uttrycket sätts i det första rummet i de samarbeten han initierar. När jag var med så skapade han och Michael Blair en väldigt trygg atmosfär som gjorde att vi låtskrivare ville prestera vårt allra bästa. The House of Songs har också knutit till sig låtskrivare med, i alla fall för mig, rätt inställning. I vissa andra sammanhang som jag varit med om så är det  väldig fokus på att skapa hits och det dödar åtminstone för mig hela syftet med att skriva låtar. Att skriva musik med andra är för mig ganska enkelt men det är väldigt sällan jag hittar någon som jag kan skriva texter med. Därför är jag väldigt glad att jag genom The House of Songs träffade Aimee

“King Neptune” tillägnas bortgågne seglaren Magnus “Mange” Olsson. Vad hade ni för relation?

Magnus träffade jag första gången när jag jobbade för EF Education, med marknadsföring och events, i deras Whitbread Round the World-satsning, idag Volvo Ocean Race. Själv visste jag ingenting om segling och Mange ställde alltid upp och svarade på mina, för seglare, korkade frågor. Sen hade jag den stora glädjen att få jobba med honom till och från i olika seglingsprojekt. Senast gången var när jag gjorde den grafiska formgivningen till Ericssons andra Volvo Ocean Race-satsning 2008 – 2009. Han var en glädjespridare och en förebild, alla han träffade bemötte han alltid med en enorm värme och öppenhet. När han plötsligt gick bort kändes det självklart att skriva en låt om honom och jag hade den stora äran att få framföra låten på minnesstunden för Mange förra våren.

WiMP: Lyssna på Them Feet

Hur mycket av “Once I Almost Killed A Horse” är fakta respektive fiktion?

– Hela låten är faktiskt fakta. Det enda som är en halvsanning är att jag skrev min första låt i Sydney. Jag skrev något låtliknande precis innan jag flyttade dit men det var i Sydney jag började förstå att det var något jag hade talang för, vilket påverkade sättet jag såg på mig själv och min framtid. Låten är ett koncentrat av mitt liv och en påminnelse till mig själv om en massa fantastiska upplevelser jag fått vara med om.

Hur ser närmaste framtiden ut?

– Just nu är det fortsatt Sverigeturné som gäller. Sen hoppas jag kunna hitta möjligheter för att spela i USA i vår. Jag ska också, tillsammans med Dark Lama, sätta igång ett remixprojekt av mina låtar. Jag har hur mycket idéer som helst men med tanke på hur marknaden ser ut, med bl.a. streaming-tjänster, är det inte säkert att jag längre kan leva på min musik. Men jag antar att jag håller på så länge passionen och glädjen överträffar förnuftet.

Är streamingtjänsterna att jämföra med en dödskyss? Eller är det, som Daniel Ek själv var inne på i sitt debattinlägg häromdagen, det enda sättet att se till att artisterna får åtminstone någonting betalt?

– Nej, jag tror inte streamingtjänsterna i sig är någon dödskyss utan en naturlig följd av hur tekniken utvecklats och det i sig har lett till att vi konsumerar musik på ett annat sätt än tidigare. Det stora felet just nu är fördelningen av intäkterna från streamingtjänsterna. Det är en för liten del av intäkterna som når upphovsmännen och det i sig kan vara en dödskyss för många artister. Eftersom skivbolagen är delägare i Spotify så kommer fördelningen via den tjänsten aldrig bli helt rättvis men i takt med att det dyker upp fler alternativa tjänster så kommer det troligtvis ske en förändring till det bättre. Personligen tycker jag, att förutom att upphovsmännen borde få en större andel av intäkterna, att det vore bra om intäkterna tydligare var kopplade till vad respektive användare lyssnar på. Om jag som användare tex bara lyssnar på en specifik artist så ska det jag betalar, efter avdragna kostnader för att driva tjänsten, gå bara till den specifika artisten. 

Nya artister ser streaming som en öppning för att få ut sin musik medan de som får en dunderhit får god ersättning. Innebär det att en sådan som du hamnar lite mittemellan och drabbas hårdast?

– Streaming-tjänsterna har helt klart gjort det enklare att distribuera sin musik men jag måste erkänna att jag vet för lite för att uttala mig om de som har en dunderhit får en god ersättning. Jag misstänker att ersättningen är lägre än vad den var tidigare även för de som får en hit. Det har helt klart blivit svårare att som artist få en rimlig ersättning för sin musik. Utbudet har blivit större men det paradoxala är att det p.g.a. att det krävs allt större resurser för att bryta igenom bruset, leder till att nischad musik blir än mer marginaliserad och att det som är mainstream tar ännu större plats. 

– Digitaliseringen, och CD-skivans död, i kombination med streamingtjänster har för min del gjort att det helt klart ligger något i din fråga. Jag kunde tidigare leva på de CD-skivor jag sålde på konserter och jag var inte speciellt påverkad av den illegala nedladdningen. Innan streamingtjänsterna dök upp sålde jag dessutom hyfsat med musik via iTunes och liknande tjänster. Steget mellan att gilla något live och sedan gå hem och lyssna på det på tex Spotify är mycket längre än vad det var mellan att gilla något live och köpa CD-skivan och som jag nämnde nyss så är ersättningen för mig som artist väldigt låg via streamingtjänsterna.

Vad föranledde de märkliga “frisyrerna” på omslaget? Kan man anta att du ser aningen mer jämnansad ut idag…?

– Det började som en kul grej. Jag var med i Mustaschkampen och hade låtit hår och skägg växa, det blev sommar och jag tänkte att det kunde vara skönt att raka av mig allt hår, kom på idén med att raka mig på halva huvudet, ringde min vän fotografen Johan Töpel och insåg att bilderna passade bra till en dubbelskiva. Eftersom jag är mitt eget skivbolag så innebär det att jag inte bara är artist utan även jobbar med marknadsföring, försäljning, management osv. Och att hålla på med bilder av sig själv där man, förstås, ska vara till sin fördel så mycket som möjligt blir ganska jobbigt. Jag tröttnade helt enkelt på att försöka få mig själv att se så bra ut som möjligt och tyckte det var mer intressant att raka av mig håret och framställa mig själv som en flintisgubbe istället. Processen med bilderna har faktiskt gjort att jag idag bryr mig mindre om hur jag ser ut, och det känns ganska skönt. Just nu jobbar jag med en utvuxen monchichi-frilla.

WiMP: Lyssna på spellistan Tom Levins Inspirado

Interview: The Magic Numbers – “We hate being known as twee!”

Written by Tommy Juto

Roll with the changes. One of life’s immortal mottos whose meaning is so obvious we’ve almost forgotten exactly what it is. Still, in the age of rapid evolution, if there are some mottos more applicable on musicians today than others, that’s got to be one of them. For The Magic Numbers, whose praised career began just as the number of consumers buying their music in physical copies started its decline, the changes to their guild of choice has forced the group to, well, roll with them. Nowadays, touring is a necessity to keep them in business, not least proved by their second visit to Stockholm within a few months. But the grind of being on the road has also made them a better band, as well as they’re enjoying playing live even more now, the way singer/keyboardist Angela Gannon sees it:

– Yes, we’re definitely as eager to go touring as ever, we can’t get enough of it. Last night, we played for two and a half hours. We were only meant to play for an hour and forty minutes! So we love it, I think we’ve even learned to appreciate it more over the years. When we’ve had time off we have felt that we missed touring.

Do you think that the music business has changed a lot?

– Definitely. We did a tour in September, and you find that everybody’s on tour. So many other artists seem to be doing a European tour just like us, you look at the tour bill and virtually everyone you’ve met over summer are doing it again. It seems like this is the only time you can go out, ‘cause in summer no one really wants to pay for concerts, and then it’s the same for the Christmas period.

So you feel that you really have to do tours to be able to make a living?

– No doubt about it, that’s probably our main income now. It’s hard to see returns from record sales these days, especially since there’s so much music available out there.

While on tour, what’s the most insane thing that’s ever happened to you?

– It was in Sweden, actually, in Stockholm at Where The Action Is. About an hour and a half before I was supposed to go on stage I leaned back where I was sitting and there were candles right behind my head, so my hair caught fire! I had hairspray in it too. I heard this hissing sound and I thought it was my jacket, so I ripped it off and Sean and Michele went “No, it’s your hair!!!”. There are a few more incidents, but that one always sticks in my mind. Actually, it has happened to me twice, and both in Sweden. But the first time I was drunk lighting a cigarette…

One of the occupational hazards for a touring musician…?

– I guess so! No more candles in the dressing room!

Since you started out, have you noticed any changes to music journalism?

– I tend not to read too much, unless it’s an interview. Reviews and stuff I try not to read. Because it’s more like “I’ve made it, it’s out, can’t alter it now”. There’s no point even thinking what other people are gonna think. The only people we should be caring about is when we’re doing a show. But I think that in the older days you would recognize more of what was written. Nowadays it’s lots of blogs and other things. It’s all good, though. That means there’s more opinions now, people aren’t just listening to certain things, you get more variation.

Have you ever had to tell an interviewer to fuck off?

– No, but we have cut it short, in a polite way. It’s when you feel that neither part like eachother, why even carry on. It’s annoying when somebody’s been given a job to do, and they don’t really want to do it. ‘Cause you can tell, so what’s the point? It has to be somebody who’s really interested in asking you questions. I mean, even if you don’t like the interviewee, you can still be interested.

A friend of mine collects songs that use the drum intro from “Be My Baby”, the Ronettes song, in a specific playlist. You use that particular beat on “Roy Orbison”, was it with “Be My Baby” in mind you did that?

– I think it was just in Romeo’s head, how he wanted it to start. It’s a very similar beat. And it’s kind of a little bit in “Forever Lost” as well. Romeo probably heard it somewhere, and that kind of sparked off the lyrics, ‘cause we all called it “the Roy Orbison one”. Is that playlist on Spotify?

At this point, James Dale from supporting act Goldheart Assembly abruptly crashes the interview, unknowingly, to get a beer from the cooler in the dressing room where we’re sat down. He’s just on his way to go on stage, so we’re left to carry on again, several polite excuses later.

You’re doing lead vocals on “Thought I Wasn’t Ready”. Well, are you ready? I mean, to do a solo album of blue-eyed soul?

– I don’t know. Funny, I know I’ve got that soulful voice, and a lot of the songs I’ve sung on our albums have been that way. But if I was to make an album, I don’t think it would be quite like that. It would be a bit darker, moodier, like “Black Rose”, that’s much more my thing. I mean, I love singing those songs as well, I’m a big Janis Joplin fan, so that’s where it comes from.

But have you toyed with the idea of a solo album?

– I’ve thought about it. Michele has done it, and it’s great. But first of all I’m a singer, even though I play stuff, so it’s a whole different step. I think I’d have to work with somebody else to get the ball rolling.

On Alias, I detect a bit of paranoia in the lyrics, in particular in songs like “You K(no)w” and “Enough”.

– Yes, there is. We’ve always felt like our lyrics were quite dark, and I guess it’s come out more in the music now. That’s where Alias came from, The Magic Numbers are known for their sweet sound…

The “twee” sound…

– Yeah, we hate that!

Oops, sorry for mentioning it!

– No, but it’s true, though! That’s what people think! Like “Forever Lost” and “Love Me Like You“ are on the same album as “This Love”, which is like the saddest song we have. Upon the album release we were doing the same songs over and over during a whole string of in-stores, two a day, and by the end of the tour we were really tired because it’s really hard and awkward playing in a record shop. Right at the end a woman requested “This Love”, and we were like “oh, thank you!”, finally we get to do the darker stuff! And that’s probably one of the reasons this album is darker.

Is there anything in your sound that you want to change but you keep coming back to?

– When we play live, I think that the sound has changed over the years. It’s definitely got more rocky and dark. When we did the UK tour someone described us as an “indie prog band”, and we were like “finally, someone gets it”. I think it’s naturally changed over the years and it’s been a necessary journey. We’re better now than we were.

Why did it take four years to make the album?

– You know, with kids come along, and we’ve changed management, a new label. Changing all those things, it slows things down. The next one won’t be as long, promise.

You have introduced a new song in your live set, haven’t you? It’s unusually soon, isn’t it?

– Yes, Romeo wrote a new song called “Damned Anyways”. It will definitely be on the next album, it’s another introspective one, asking lots of questions. Playing it live so soon after the album we just released isn’t so common, no, but he can’t help himself! We haven’t recorded it yet. But we have recorded a new Christmas song, actually it’s an anti-Christmas song.

What’s your favourite Christmas song?

– “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas”. It’s a classic. That, and “Fairytale of New York”. Both of them have been overplayed, but still.

We’ve come to the end of what has been an enjoyable interview, and later as I watch the band shine with their live show, I realise that Angela laughs exactly the way she sings: powerful, auspicious and somewhat hoarse. The stage backdrop is an enlargement of the Alias album cover, and I begin to wonder who all those people are on the photos. Afterwards, when the band has moved down to meet and greet at the merch stand I grab hold of Michele Stodart and ask her how it was made:

– The people on the photos are both friends as well as ones we don’t know who are friends of friends Most of them, like ours, are passport photos, which is pretty cool. It took ages to assemble, a real labour of love. Some of them didn’t fit so well next to eachother, so we had to move them around a lot.

“A real labour of love”. Those words just about sums up what The Magic Numbers of 2014 are.

Albumrecension för GAFFA: Son Little “Things I Forgot”

SonLittle

LÄNK TILL MIN RECENSION AV ALBUMET FÖR GAFFA.