Reykjavík Grapevine - 18.05.2012, Blaðsíða 20

Reykjavík Grapevine - 18.05.2012, Blaðsíða 20
A lot of the preemptive commentary about ‘Valtari’ has characterized the album as a homecoming, a sort of ‘return to ambience.’ As though the last album had been a weird mutation, and now you’re somehow going back... Jón þór Birgisson: back to basics. Right. do you think of the record that way at all? As a harking back, maybe to ‘()’ or ‘ágætis byrjun’? Jónsi: We didn’t really think of it like that. Georg Hólm: That was not the point of departure, at least, when we were mak- ing this record. Jónsi: It just developed that way. But we had had this idea for many years to make an ambient record—like purely ambient, somehow. Some of the recordings on ‘Val- tari’ go back as far as six or seven years... Georg: Yes. And at the time they weren’t necessarily thought of as be- longing to this record. They were just some recordings, some ideas. It wasn’t until 2009 that we had our first session, specifically intending to make this re- cord. Jónsi: We’ve given up three times since then, I think. Georg: Yeah. Jónsi: Starting, stopping, putting things aside. What made you decide then to fi- nally release the record? Or to do it now? Jónsi: We just had enough material. And when we listened to it again after getting many years of distance from it, we realised that we actually had a re- cord on our hands. Georg: And that it was maybe better than we had thought. Given that the material was de- veloped over such a long period of time, and that it was maybe not originally conceived of as a whole, was it a challenge to make the piec- es fit together? Georg: I think that was maybe the most difficult part of the record, really. Be- cause it was all so different. So we had to somehow mold it all together. Jónsi: We took a few months, just now, to finalise it, and then something just came over it. Georg: Some kind of wholeness. There’s a quote on the band’s web- site where you say, Georg, that this is the only Sigur Rós record you lis- ten to at home, at your leisure. Why is that? Georg: This is maybe not the first re- cord that I’ve listened to at home. I said that just in conversation with our manager, after we had just finished the record. I was telling him that I was re- ally happy with it, because this was a record that we had given up on sev- eral times. And personally, before we came together for that final session, if you can call it that, I had in my head just sort of written it off. I just thought: no, we’re not going to finish this album. We’ll just throw it out, in its entirety. You couldn’t untangle it. Georg: Right. I wasn’t understanding it. But I stand by what I said, that some- times when I’m driving my car or when I’m sitting at home and I’m alone— which, however, isn’t often—then I like putting it on. There’s something about it... there are all sorts of images that come up in my head. But maybe it’s also just that I’m so tired of the other stuff, you know, that I wouldn’t necessarily go and listen to. Jónsi: I think there’s something strange about listening to your own music. Georg: It’s so self... Jónsi: Indulgent. Georg: Exactly. Jónsi: ‘Oh, damn this is good.’ Georg: Extremely weird. Jónsi : ‘Listen to that solo!’ You hear of a lot of hip-hop artists doing that. I think Kanye just sits at home listening... Jónsi: To himself. (Laughs.) Right. It’s just that you listen to it so much when you’re making it. In the studio a whole year goes into listening to the same songs over and over again. So you do get sick of it in a certain way, it just be- comes one big mash. But maybe when you’re older you do pick up these re- cords again and listen to them. Georg: I think it has to do with the memories too. And maybe also that you’re still thinking critically about the songs. You don’t have any distance from them. Georg: Exactly. But for example I lis- tened to ‘Von’ the other day, because it was being re-released on vinyl, and I just needed to do a test-drive, to check the sound quality, nothing else. And suddenly I started really enjoying the music. It occurred to me that this was a damn good record. Just, really good. Sounded better than I remembered. Is it different when you perform the songs live? Harder to get sick of them that way, because it’s an ex- perience that’s different each time? Jónsi: That just depends on how much you drink. (Laughter.) No, but sometimes it can be tedious and sometimes it feels like a job but usually it’s incredibly fun. To play in new places for new people. People give you a certain energy. It’s just fun playing for an audience if everything is as it should be: if there’s good sound on the stage and we are in good spirits. Then it’s in- credibly fun. Georg: It does depends a lot on mood. If there is the right kind of atmosphere on stage it can be fun to play any song, really. But then there can be... Jónsi: There can be days when every- thing is bad. Georg: A bad concert or just a bad song in the middle of a concert. Jónsi: If the sound is bad then it’s just absolute hell. What else are you listening to, for enjoyment? Jónsi: I’ve been listening a lot to the radio show, Morgunstund með KK, [on Icelandic National Broadcasting Ser- vice (RÚV), an NPR equivalent]. I don’t wake up that early but I listen to it on- line, almost everyday. Listen to it and read the papers. That’s really nice. They play vinyl on Fridays. Jónsi: Exactly. It’s great. Also my boy- friend has been working with Julianna Barwick, so that’s been playing at home a lot. There’s no getting by it. But it’s quite nice, of course. Georg: I’m trying but I can’t think of anything. Jónsi: You just listen to Sigur Rós. (Laughter.) Georg: There is one song I have been listening to a lot: “The Book of Love.” It’s actually a cover song by Peter Gabriel, I found out. I didn’t know it was a cover, I just thought it was Peter Gabriel. But I discovered it by accident, went out for a run the other day and it came on shuffle and since then I’ve been com- pletely hooked. Incredible song. That’s what I’ve been listening to these days. Jónsi: One song. (Laughter.) Georg: Yes, just one song. I’m sort of bad with music. I somehow just end up listening to the old classics. Like Led Zeppelin or something. Jónsi: My boyfriend Alex has also been working with Sin Fang, so I’ve been lis- tening a lot to him, to his new album. Georg: That’s a nice way to discover something new. THE BOYS ARE BACK IN TOWN ‘Valtari’—Sigur Rós’ much-anticipated sixth-release—is risky. Not that the band hasn’t, in its 18-years-active, established itself as a creative juggernaut of sorts, and cultivated an insatiable fan base. But ‘Valtari’ is risky in the way all matters of the heart are risky. Because it is uncalculated. Because it is driven by— devoted to—an abstract sentiment. Because it is blind to anything but the stars. ‘Valtari’ is also the record that nearly wasn’t. during over three years in labour, the group abandoned the project at least three times before giving it its final audition, the push that led to the definitive scheduling of the album’s release on May 28. For when it comes to releasing music, Sigur Rós offers us only that which comes organically to the band— regardless of, but not despite (as ‘Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust’ proved) the material’s marketability. It is in this way that ‘Valtari’ emerges as a testament to the band’s fierce creative independence, not only in content but also in process. Because apparently even the world’s most successful artists struggle with knots in their imaginations, and to this creative loyalty, ‘Valtari’ is likewise a tribute. In the attic of Iðnó, I sat down with Jón þór Birgisson (“Jónsi”) and Georg Hólm (“Goggi”) to discuss how the band navigated the creative riddle of their impending release. Words by Valgerður Þóroddsdóttir Photography by Lilja Birgisdóttir

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