Reykjavík Grapevine - 27.07.2007, Blaðsíða 22

Reykjavík Grapevine - 27.07.2007, Blaðsíða 22
RVK_GV_11_007_REVIEWS_76_REYKJAVÍK_GRAPEVINE_ISSUE 11_007_REVIEWS/MUSIC/LIVE The Culture House - Þjóðmenningarhúsið Hverfisgata 15, 101 Reykjavik Tel.: +354 545 1400, www.thjodmenning.is MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPTS – EDDAS AND SAGAS. EXHIBITION AT THE CULTURE HOUSE. Open daily between 11am and 5pm Eddas and Sagas Iceland’s national treasures The admission fee grants entry to all exhibitions at the Culture House. Adults ISK 300. Senior citizens ISK 200. Students ISK 200. Free entry for children 16 years of age or younger. Admission is free on Wednesdays. An open guided tour of the Manuscripts exhibition is offered every weekday except Wednesdays at 3:30 pm. “This song is about my mother,” began Þórir with his eyes on the floor, “Who unfortunately has never sat in Parliament.” The audience’s eyes, consequently, were all on him, clutching his guitar as he stood hovering delicately above the microphone. Halfway through his short set at 12 Tónar record shop, Þórir, or as he calls his one-man-band, My Summer as a Salvation Soldier, looked quite uncomfortable. Beginning this song, like every other, with a slow and pensive picking at his guitar, the shy looking twenty-something looked as though he was mentally preparing himself. Leisurely, his strumming grew into a melody. His voice, steady yet sensitive, crooned over the close crowd. Delivered with the sort of genuine non- pretension that one can’t help but praise, Þórir’s simple and delicate cogitations, heav- ily reminiscent of Bright Eyes, are impressive mostly in their candidness. Each short song manages, at its most sensitive of moments, to transcend the gritty clumsiness of the singer’s present, filled with more conviction than you thought him capable of. Slow, haunting, and painfully raw, like a dance with your crush at senior prom, Þórir’s songs are guiltily enjoy- able. “I’m going to play two more songs, then I have to go to work,” Þórir whispered. The adoration of the crowd climaxed with the apparently well-known chorus from one of the songs off of his newest album, Anarchists Are Hopeless Romantics. “After all that we’ve been through/ these are the memories that I will have of you/ when the years are dead and gone, not a single conversation just this song.” His lyrics were impressively grounded, a testament to the importance of good song writing, clever without being excessively ironic. “I’m feeling sick, I’ve had too much to think,” and “What are we in this world, what are we but our words?” being especially memo- rable. He began his last song a little less than thirty minutes into the set. It was nearly 6. A group of kids ran past the store screaming, al- lowing a biting contrast to the soft atmosphere inside. The audience stood cosily, holding their plastic cups full of free rose-wine courtesy of the record store. It was as if we had all taken part in a group meditation session and now, with the end in sight, were huddling together for one last song before being forced back out into the harsh, rain-wet streets of Reykjavík. For now we watched, easily entranced by this the last, and undoubtedly the best, song of the evening. Þórir was surely about to disap- pear as quietly as he had arrived and we were quite enjoying watching him, as uncomfortable as that may have made him. The song was ending yet the night was young, and it seemed that Þórir, surprisingly enough, was going to leave us with a nugget of hope. “And I’ll never sing the same old tune, my friends did before me/ I’ll be as true to this, as anyone could be.” I believed him. Hopeless Romantics Text by Valgerður Þóroddsdóttir Photo by Gulli Who: My Summer as a Salvation Soldier Where: 12 tónar When: July 20, 2007 Rumours about the imminent break-up of Mínus, Iceland’s biggest rock act, had circu- lated for weeks before second guitarist Frosti and bass player Þröstur recently quit the band – citing artistic differences. The three remaining members recruited a new bass player (Sigurður Oddsson, formerly of Future Future) and de- clared on their myspace.com site that they would “re-invent the Mínus art machine,” as a four-piece. This was their first real test. Musically, I think everyone can agree that it was not the band’s best performance to date. But, my feeling is that nobody cared as much about how they sounded as the fact that they were there to play in the first place. The band tore through material from their nine-year career, displaying their early metal core roots from debut album Hey Johnny and their breakthrough Jesus Christ Bobby, as well as the more refined stud rock sound of Halldór Laxness and the newly released The Great Northern Whalekill. New bassist, the clean-cut Sigurður, is steadily growing into his own as Þröstur’s re- placement and will find his footing with the band. As for the guitar situation, there were two tracks where I thought to myself that another guitar would have made a real dif- ference. But eventually, I suspect the band’s image will suffer more for the loss of their former bassist’s menacing presence and hard rock aura than it will musically with the loss of a second guitarist (or Þröstur’s bass playing for that matter) But the real difference in seeing this band play now and when I last saw them play three months ago had nothing to do with music. There was a moment towards the end of Mi- nus’ show that put their whole night in per- spective. Singer Krummi, by now half-naked and heavily perspiring, thanked the audience for coming out to see them with a contagious look of joy on his face. What their performance lacked in the flawless and professional execu- tion Mínus has developed through the years, they more than made up for with sheer joy and enthusiasm. The choice of venue might have played a part in their transmittable glee. Grand Rokk is the smallest venue this band has played in quite some time. Standing on a stage that is hardly more than a bulge in an otherwise tiny floor area, Mínus was face to face with their fans. The tight conditions in Grand Rokk created immediacy with the audience that the band has lacked when playing bigger stages. I hope I will soon have an opportunity to see them under such conditions again. The Mínus art machine still runs. It may need a little fine-tuning yet, but after nine years of revving at high rpm and a lot of mileage, it is only natural if some of the parts are worn out and need to be replaced. Once the overhaul is finished, I think the engine may turn out to be just as powerful as it ever was. Passing the Test Text by Sveinn Birkir Björnsson Photo by Gulli Who: Mínus Where: Grand Rokk When: July 14, 2007 When you identify your band as “rock,” you’re automatically recog- nizing your own fated mediocrity in a way. It almost predetermines the kind of grungy shows you’re designated for and just how big (and eclectic) your fan base will get before either a) your sound matures or b) you break up. It is an indulgent genre, with sim- ple chord progressions, rhythms, and an altogether lack of musical patience and restraint. Café Amsterdam offered the worst of the rock genres last Saturday night – the self-defacing Pub rock, the abysmal Nü-emo, and borderline OK “indie rock.” The surprising variety of the musical vacuum didn’t suck in a surprising number of people; I don’t think the crowd exceeded 50 the entire night. I entered maybe one song late into the set of the ambitious Vafur- logi. It became clear after just a few songs that Vafurlogi had a formula: a simple chord progression, change the rhythm maybe once, and then add a guitar solo with a new effect pedal for each song. Repeat for 50 minutes and you’ve got a Vafurlogi set. The Nü-emo Ten Steps Ahead speak the teenage language of sweepy bangs and eyeliner – the yelling, the My Chemical Romance, the bass player’s skull bandana. It was all too much for me and I had to go ten steps outside for a bit. I still have to hand it to these guys for playing their hearts out – and there’s always something to be said for the sincerity and authenticity of emo music. It’s just not going to be said here. When headliners Wulfgang came on, the crowd had dwindled to around 40 people, who were either friends of the band or members of Vafurlogi. I speculated that Ten Steps Ahead must’ve inspired everyone to look at their watches and hit the bars, and it was clear that the boys didn’t even stay to survey the damage done. Wulfgang was entertaining enough to watch: frontman The Mind (they’ve all got English rockonyms) shakes and contorts himself in ways that might give him the title the Elvis of Iceland. But, the bass was way too high during the set and it was disappointing not to hear the clever guitar lines that are distinct on their self-tiled debut. Suspecting that it wasn’t Café Amsterdam’s fault, I later received an explanation from one of the band members that the guitarist’s brand new amp had blown just be- forehand. It seemed that the respectable Wulfgang were settling when they decided to play this gig, for their sake I hope that next time they choose a venue higher up on Laugavegur, with much better opening bands. Borderline OK Text by Chandler Fredrick Photo by Gulli Who: Wulfgang, Ten Steps Ahead, Vafurlogi Where: Café Amsterdam When: July 20, 2007 Step into the Viking Age Experience Viking-Age Reykja­vík a­t the new Settlement Exhibition. The focus of the exhibition is a­n exca­va­ted longhouse site which da­tes from the 10th century ad. It includes relics of huma­n ha­bita­tion from a­bout 871, the oldest such site found in Icela­nd. Multimedia­ techniques bring Reykja­vík’s pa­st to life, providing visitors with insights into how people lived in the Viking Age, a­nd wha­t the Reykja­vík environment looked like to the first settlers. The exhibition a­nd museum shop a­re open da­ily 10–17 Aða­lstræti 16 101 Reykja­vík / Icela­nd Phone +(354) 411 6370 www.reykja­vikmuseum.is

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