Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.10.2007, Blaðsíða 8

Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.10.2007, Blaðsíða 8
14 | Reykjavík Grapevine | Issue 16 2007 | Previews Ben Frost originally studied music in Melbourne, Australia, and began making a career as a sound artist in the great down under. Of course with a name like that Iceland was the only possible desti- nation for a change of environment. He has based himself here for two years now and developed a solid name for himself in the local experimental music scene. He signed with the Bedroom Commu- nity label, headed by Björk’s long time collaborator Valgeir Sigurðsson, and released one album under this label ‘Theory of Machines’, which is accessible everywhere and has achieved some amazing re- views across the globe. My favourite is “Arvo Part as arranged by Trent Reznor.” He outright refuses to be categorised but could for these purposes be likened to a composer or sound artist, creating an aesthetic or an all en- compassing environment rather than reproducing a specific sound or style. And he’s not afraid to use absolutely everything within reach to create his music, slamming together instruments, tones, tim- bres, rhythms, noise and silence from opposite ends of the spectrum into beautiful and haunting com- positions. Expect more of a complete experience created during his gigs rather than a track-by-track set. He has said that since the move to Iceland, he has noticed some dramatic changes in his music. Travelling halfway across the globe has pro- vided his music, unsurprisingly, a more isolated quality. That is, isolated from genre borrowing, struc- tural considerations, and other influences that have previously tainted his unique vision. Like every art- ist, Ben Frost is in a constant process of refining his sound into something more internal, essential and pure. “My music has become more of itself than of its influences. It has its own space, more whole. Not built from ten different things but from its own source.” Expect tracks of indefinite length, played live by amplified musicians then sculpted live through a laptop to his own very specific and impeccable taste. The last time he played in Iceland was in Hall- grimskirkja. He brought six Marshall stacks into the church and had six equally ominous guitar play- ers thrashing away for the whole 10 or so minutes. I was expecting the windows to explode but with all sound diverted through his laptop an unexplain- able aching sound filled the space. It was sort of like a tsunami was being poured into a tiny funnel with utmost reverence and care; a truly unique ex- perience. I tried to tease out a hint of what his set is go- ing to be like at this year’s Airwaves but all I got was “I’d like to have 5 vocalists and a piano, but it could change”. Whatever it will be you can be sure it will be something you are not expecting. You can see the show in a sort of ‘Bedroom community’ night at Iðnó on Thursday the 18th, along with some other artists from the label. Text by Nick Candy Ben Frost What started out as a one-man project in the east- fjord town Egilsstaðir some two years back has quickly transformed into the more engrossing acts of the Icelandic music scene. Raggi, one of three siblings, took the computer he had used as his key instrument out of the closet and got his younger sister Lilja and her Faroese boyfriend Janus to back him up. The third and oldest family member, Hal- lur, didn’t want to be left out of the party and soon joined the group. They called themselves Blood- group. Bloodgroup plays powerful and funky rock- influenced electro-dance-pop. Over the past two years, their music has evolved, the sound developed and more instruments, synths and samples added to the mix. They recently included a fifth member, DJ Benni B-Ruff, which they say spices things up even more. The five-piece had just returned back from Berlin, where they performed twice at the Pop- komm festival, when the Grapevine caught up with them. “These were some great gigs. First we played a rather small venue and the place was almost packed,” says singer Lilja. Hallur continues: “We were really surprised about the turn-out as we haven’t released an album yet.” “We also played at a gay-club,” adds Lilja. “That was a crazy gig. Jens took his shirt of and some mad girls started groping him. That was just insane.” Up until now, their party-thirsty fan base has had to settle for listening to songs on the band’s Myspace site or attending their awesome live concerts, but that is all about to change. Blood- groop’s debut album, ‘Sticky Situation’, is finally ready and will hopefully be released by the end of the month. “The album contains 11 songs, both old ones from the time we had just started writing music together mixed with new ones,” says Hallur. “We wrote most of these songs this summer and recorded them ourselves.” The band’s intense live gigs have earned them quite a reputation. “I just want to have fun and flip out on stage,” explains über-energetic frontman Lilja. “I never really thought that we would become something, let alone release an album, so my goal was always just to have fun and make every single show be the best concert we had ever played. That hasn’t and will not change.” Bloodgroup will play the Iceland Airwaves fes- tival this year and promise a kick-ass performance. To warm up for the festival, two gigs are already lined up. On October 5 they will perform at NASA and open up for Skátar at Organ the next day. Text by Sveinn Birkir Björnsson Bloodgroup Fated by neighbouring cubicles their freshman years at the Academy of the Arts, Mr. Silla & Mongoose knew they were destined to be creative partners. After conjoining workspaces at the Academy where they study visual arts, Silla and Mongoose, Sigurlaug Gísladót- tir and Magnús B. Skarphéðinsson, melt- ed together their musical ventures quite literally when they were both sched- uled to play solo at Kaffi Hljómalind at Airwaves 2005. “The idea was to make the acts sort of glide into each other,” says Silla of the show. “So we ended up essentially playing our entire sets together.” Slowly but surely the two started to collabo- rate. “I asked Maggi to accompany me on this Electro night I was playing,” says Silla, “and from that we got this idea that maybe he would be on my record, but that ended up being kind of pointless because we were working and collabo- rating so much on each other’s material. So we just decided to be a band.” Two years later almost to the day, Mr. Silla & Mongoose are releasing their first record, Foxbite, on Airwaves week- end via the newly formed label rafraf. “We’re really just about to explode as far as putting this out there and starting something new,” says Maggi. “We started this record shortly after we met,” adds Silla. “We’ve found it quite difficult to move on before we got this out.” Though neither are formally trained in music, Silla and Maggi attri- bute their interest and well doing in the music world to informal training and a need for expression that brought them to a self-taught artistic form. “You always have to be doing something, I think,” says Maggi. “You try to keep yourself creative and find some release for it,” adds Silla. “Or at least that’s sort of the goal isn’t it, to try to find some medium in which to be creative.” Silla also sings in veteran krútt band múm, which has achieved some notoriety abroad and will be touring extensively this winter. “From my perspective it’s com- pletely different working as a duo, where in the other instances you’re pretty much putting forth someone else’s material. I don’t feel a great bit of difference between being alone and being onstage with Maggi,” says Silla. “I think we have the same kind of creative freedom as if we were alone,” says Maggi. “It’s just been working in- credibly well, all our ideas flow.” Read a review of Mr. Silla & Mon- goose’s recent concert at Organ, page 34. Mr. Silla & Mongoose will play Friday night of Iceland Airwaves 2007, 20:00 at NASA. Text by Valgerður Þóroddsdóttir “Sometimes, I think it might be fun to be in just one band, and focus on that,” says young musician Þórir. “But the reason I am in so many bands is that you form a band, and then the others don’t have time to do anything for two months and then you have to form a new band to keep occupied.” Þórir will probably be this year’s Airwaves busiest performer. He is a member of three bands that play during the festival. His solo project My Summer as a Salvation Soldier, the hardcore out- fit Gavin Portland, and finally Deathmetal Super- squad, which will play during the Nordic House special program on Saturday. “I haven’t finalised the schedule yet, but so far, I will be playing eight shows in four days.” Gavin Portland’s debut album, Views of Dis- tant Towns, met with great reviews last year. Follow- ing the release and their performance at last year’s Airwaves, Kerrang! editor Paul Brannigan offered the band a slot on a Kerrang! mini-tour of the U.K. in support of post-hardcore legends, Hell is for He- roes. “He sent us an email and asked us to come on tour. This was not a big deal really. Basically, there is just one person in the U.K. that likes Gavin Portland. It is just a coincidence that he is the editor of Ker- rang!.” Þórir’s solo project, My Summer as a Salva- tion Soldier stands in stark contrast to the abrasive Gavin Portland. Lo-fi and emotional melodies, usu- ally strummed on an acoustic guitar by the singer, although a band sometimes backs him. As a solo artist, Þórir has toured extensively, including a trip to SXSW and all over Europe. “I never thought this was music that many people would accept. I show up with an out-of-tune guitar and I can’t really sing, and singing about very personal stuff, I thought people would shut this out.” His next album is scheduled for release in two months and will be distributed by Cargo Records. “I recorded this album by myself. I just did it on my laptop in my room,” Þórir explains “I had some difficulties. My laptop crashed and I lost all my recordings. Eventually though, I had 45 songs ready, and I chose 12 for the album.” Despite the name, Deathmetal Supersquad has little to do with death metal. Originally, the band started as a project between two friends who played simple folk punk on an acoustic guitar and a drum kit. The most recent line-up features a bass player as well, and a third friend who was simply added so they could spend more time together. “The point with Deathmetal Supersquad was never for it to be a real band. It was just for us to be able to hang out together, because we were not playing together in any other band. We just decided to add him as well. He has never played bass before.” The band is working on an album that will be released early next year and plans for a tour are underway. So, which project does he enjoy the most? “When it comes to pure fun, I’d say Deathmetal Su- persquad because the only point with that band is to have fun together. If we don’t feel like rehearsing, we just go out for a pizza or listen to records and we never play shows unless it is something we en- joy.” Text by Sveinn Birkir Björnsson Mr. Silla & Mongoose Þórir Previews | Reykjavík Grapevine | Issue 16 2007 | 15 Airwaves Special

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