Reykjavík Grapevine - 01.06.2007, Blaðsíða 19

Reykjavík Grapevine - 01.06.2007, Blaðsíða 19
0_REYKJAVÍK_GRAPEVINE_ISSUE 07_007_REVIEWS/MUSIC/LIVE As a part of the Take Me Down to Reykjavík City concert series, the Grapevine assembled a handful of upstart bands from Reykjavík to showcase at Iðnó. The historical theatre house is not typically used for shows, even though it has a spacious main ballroom and a sizable antechamber. Sound at the theatre is clean and relatively professional; that is, when the bands aren’t cutting out every minute or so. But we’ll get to that later. American singer-songwriter Sam Amidon started the show with a set of what he claimed to be “old American songs,” but I’m pretty sure I heard some Tears for Fears in there. The native Vermonter’s first few songs sounded like an impressive mixture of southern folk and the Red House Painters. However, in the middle of one particularly gorgeous number he belted out two horrific shrieks, with accompanying eerie facial expressions. People carefully began to move away from the front of the stage in what seemed to be an act of self-defence. Fight or flight. A last minute addition, Amidon and his antics didn’t seem to fit in with the seriousness of the other bands that night. As for Hjaltalín, I typically get sceptical when a band I haven’t seen before gets on stage with instruments like the bassoon, the accordion or the cello. It can go either way with these bands: either they rock (like The Arcade Fire) or they come out overblown and pretentious, using layered instruments to cover up bad songwriting (think The Decemberists). Fortunately, Hjaltalín ended up being more like the former. The band had a well-rehearsed set, the power of Högni Egilsson’s lilting voice, and numerous clever string arrangements. “Good- bye July” was among the best performances that night. As far as the hype surrounding FM Belfast goes, I’m sold. The members dressed up like my grandparents and furiously dryhumped ev- erything in sight. Mastermind Árni +1 fingered away at a sticker-covered Mac while the others sang in high, cooing voices. With strong beats and scattered electronic blips and bleeps, they had at least 5% of the crowd dancing (which was more than any other band that night). Without a doubt, the sassy FM Belfast stole the show. I should say that if Sprengjuhöllin is the least impressive band on your ticket, you’re doing something right. The quintet isn’t going to break new musical ground anytime soon, but they do the pop thing well. An Icelandic rendition of the Motown favourite Heatwave was the highlight of their set. On came the long awaited (and debuting!) Motion Boys. Quite unexpectedly, singer Birgir Ísleifur opened up with a solo, an unplugged version of Hold Me Closer to Your Heart on the electric piano. A group chorus of “hoos” at the interlude indicated that a lot of the audience had done their homework. The band came out and played a few songs together, when suddenly the power blew out. The band, being either valiant troopers or too deaf to hear that they’d lost their loud keyboards, continued their song before finally realising that they had rocked too hard. The Boys looked unscathed, but the crowd was obviously disappointed. Eventually, Birgir Ísleifur finished the set solo and unplugged to a diminishing crowd. The Night the PA System Blew Text by Chandler Fredrick Photo by Gulli Who: Motion Boys, Sprengjuhöllin, FM Belfast and Hjaltalín Where: Iðnó When: May 24, 2007 The venue in East London known as Catch does have a catch – it’d be easier to track down one of the Jule lads in June than locate this bar, situated just outside the city’s main financial district in the fashionably scruffy Shoreditch area. Thankfully, the lost late-comers (and there were many) didn’t miss a note as Benni Hemm Hemm took some time to make the transition from tuning their plethora of instrumentation to full orchestral magnificence. At this point I have to admit that I was rather spoiled by my previous Benni Hemm Hemm experience. I saw them perform a joy- ous pre-Christmas gig in a Reykjavík theatre late last year with about 15 band members, including a full brass section supporting Bene- dikt Hermannsson’s whisper-smooth vocals and gentle guitar playing. Sadly, not all of the extended band members were present (the seven who did make the journey to London packed the small stage with a trombone, trum- pet, horn, drums and various guitars) but they more than made up for their lack of numbers with a genuinely delightful evening of unique music. Fight is one of the band’s few English lan- guage songs and its down-tempo attitude doesn’t showcase the band’s ability too well in comparison to their grander Icelandic-language songs, despite having some nice poetic lyrics about falling out with a spouse on a grey day. Other tracks from Kajak, their triumphant last album, followed and included the brilliantly bold Brekken plus “the saddest song ever writ- ten in Icelandic”, a slow-burning lullaby which was dedicated to the aluminium factories that are irreparably scarring Iceland’s landscape. When you see Benni Hemm Hemm it’s the little details that make them so memorable: the little zipping sound of a finger scraping against a guitar string as the chord changes; the brass instruments, including the eternally jolly French horn player, gently fading in and out of each song; and the pint glass of dried peas that joined the band. The peas were housed in a plastic beer glass with their own microphone and whenever the band reached one of their many crescendos the peas danced a merry jig in the glass, with a little help from the bass instruments, and added to the sound with a rhythmic rattling. Some were lost in ac- tion but thankfully the multi-tasking trumpet player had peas in reserve. After Benni Hemm Hemm departed the crammed stage to much applause from the modest crowd, the-band-that-nobody-dared- to-try-and-pronounce took their place and treated the audience to some lively folk rock instrumental work. Stórsveit Nix Noltes, to give them their full name, consists of two mysteri- ously beautiful ladies on accordion and violin and assorted members of Benni Hemm Henm and friends on various other instruments. The sound is chaotic, but not overly so, and could be likened to a gang of delinquent Romanian gypsies – who can hold their vodka and still turn out a decent tune or three – running riot at an Icelandic wedding party. Despite not hav- ing a single vocal contribution in their whole set, they offered something a little different to Benni Hemm Hemm and something very differ- ent to the dozens of guitar-based bands that were also playing in Shoreditch that night. Orchestral Manoeuvres in London Text and photo by Ben H. Murray Who: Benni Hemm Hemm and Stór- sveit Nix Noltes Where: Catch, London When: May 21, 2007 REYKJAVÍK_GRAPEVINE_ISSUE 07_007_OPINION_1 “You know what I think should be done about Flateyri? Nothing. Nothing at all. Not even a kilo of quota should go their way. No last-minute operations to glaze over the grim facts-of- the-matter, no patch on the gaping wound. Nothing.” Sitting in the now-abolished smoking sec- tion of Ísafjörður pub/café Langi Mangi my companion, a journalist for local newspaper BB, lit a cigarette, chugged the last of his beer and finished his sentiment. “It’s time people get confronted with the harsh reality of this system. Head on. It is doing exactly what it was designed for; this is how it works, this is what it amounts to and this is what they voted for, continually. So let them enjoy it!” What should be done about Flateyri in- deed? Mere days after the parliamentary elec- tions, word got out that the proprietors of Flateyri’s biggest employer (“sole employer” is hardly an overstatement), fishery Kambur, were liquidating the business. 120 townspeople, nearly half the population, stand to lose their jobs this fall. Their given reasons: inflation, the resulting strength of the Króna against foreign currencies and the high cost of renting quota (the highly debated Icelandic fishing regulatory system deserves many lengthy essays. It is quota based, and a few large fisheries now possess a huge portion of the allotted quota. Smaller businesses and independent operators need to rent theirs at a considerable price). Kambur’s owners will of course walk away with consider- able sums of money. That’s business. Regular readers of the Grapevine may re- member learning about Flateyri in issue 12 of last year, in an article entitled Flateyri and the fate of small town Iceland. It mainly dealt with the town’s continually diminishing size, its one- horse economy and the fact that an estimated third of it’s population of 300 (down from 500 in its heyday) is comprised of immigrants and immigrant-workers from Poland and the Philippines who sometimes have trouble fully adapting and participating in local culture. It portrayed a still proud small-town, struggling to find its legs in modernity following a series of setbacks. One of the people I interviewed for said article was Halldór Halldórsson, mayor of Ísaf- jarðarbær, the coalition township that unites Flateyri with several (closely) neighbouring towns. While he agreed that Flateyri had its fair share of problems, he expressed optimism for its future. “There’s plenty of jobs to be had,” he told me, “even though we need to import labour to operate the business [Kambur’s workforce is 90% immigrant]. Kambur is doing extremely well. The company had a record-year last year [2005], processing a full 8.000 tons of products.” So much for record-years. So much for jobs to be had. Luckily, God (or the Icelandic government) rarely closes a door without opening some windows. And behold! The viability of estab- lishing a large-scale oil refinery in the vicinity of Flateyri is already being researched and seriously discussed. It would provide the people of the northern Westfjords with 5-600 additional jobs. And they need them, as it is evident that the fishing industry on which these towns were originally founded has left the area for good, the region’s allotted quota quietly traded away by the robber barons that built (and later dis- mantled) their empires there. These are the Icelandic equivalents of Flint, Michigan. This is how the system works: it is doing exactly what it was designed for. Icelanders often speak of problems facing small communities such as Flateyri, problems shared by most if not all of the small towns lining the island’s shoreline, problems for which behemoth aluminium smelting plants (and now oil-refineries) are often our government’s proposed solution. Here are some examples: -Educated youngsters aren’t returning to the communities that fostered them. This is some- times referred to as brain drain. -Government jobs are severely unevenly distrib- uted around the country. Save for a precious few, most of them are located in Reykjavík, even those positions founded during the last decade when it was evident that smaller towns would need the boost they could provide. -Uniting with neighbouring towns (way of the future!) meant forfeiting certain modes of employment, such as common commerce and service jobs. As a result, available jobs are pointedly un-diverse. -Most of the community is employed by a single company. -A large part of that company’s workforce (at Kambur: 90%) is comprised of immigrants. -Language-barriers and scarce educational re- sources often isolate said immigrant portion from the rest of the community, making it hard for them to fully integrate. Surely, heavy industry will serve to solve these problems for good. The Fate of Small Town Iceland Text by Haukur S. Magnússon Luckily, God (or the Icelandic government) rarely closes a door without opening some windows. On May 15th, the President of Iceland, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, officially opened the Iceland Carbon Fund’s website at a prestigious gather- ing with great fanfare and media attention. The founding partners of the fund are the NGOs the Icelandic Forestry Association and the Icelandic Environment Association, while the Government of Iceland, Reykjavík Energy, and Kaupþing Bank supply the financial as- sistance. The aim of the Iceland Carbon Fund is to finance forestry in Iceland in order to dispel the effects of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere. Plants and vegetation bind CO2 through photosynthesis, turning the carbon (C) into plant mass, while releasing the oxygen (O2). The combination of continuing deforestation, and the ever-increasing release of CO2, mostly from transportation, is among the main contributors to global warming, so forestry seems to be an obvious path to pursue in the battle against greenhouse gases. In that context, the Iceland Carbon Fund is obviously a noble idea. Let me make one thing clear from the start. I fully believe that the Iceland Carbon Fund was created with the best of intentions and that the people behind it believed they were doing a genuinely good thing. And the idea per se, to bind CO2 through forestry, is a genuinely good idea. Still, something has gone horribly wrong. The fund offers individuals, companies and organizations the opportunity to ‘neutralise’ their yearly CO2 emission from transporta- tion by paying for the planting of a sufficient number of trees to reverse the effects of the CO2 they produce. To that end, the Govern- ment of Iceland has ‘neutralised’ all their flights to foreign shores this year. And yes, that is probably a shitload of trees, in case you were wondering. Myself? Well, I would need to pay the Iceland Carbon Fund around 5000 ISK to plant 35 trees to CO2 neutralise the family’s trusted Opel Zafira. And how is this a bad thing you may ask? Well, think of it in this context. In the past, the church sold absolution. If you committed a very small sin, you would buy the budget package and be absolved from your sin, but for a really big sin, say rape and pillage, you were obviously required to contribute more. See the similarities? In their defence, it must be said that on the Iceland Carbon Fund’s website it is stated that this should not be regarded as an absolution of sins. They point out that the most effective way of meeting the challenge of global warming is not to neutralise CO2 emission, but to seek ways to reduce CO2 emission. But, as I stated before, it is not really the Icelandic Carbon Fund that is causing me concern. It has hardly been two weeks since the project got off its feet, and already car dealer- ships are running ad campaigns claiming that every car they sell is environmentally friendly, since the dealership will pay for neutralising, nay, absolving, your new car’s CO2 emission… for the first year. This sounds all too much like the delusional gambler who always intends to pay off his gambling debts with the next big win. Now we are being bombarded with mes- sages from companies that have miraculously become “CO2 neutral.” Suddenly, every prod- uct you may want to buy is ‘green,’ because somewhere, someone is planting trees in- stead and now there is no real need for you to change your pattern of consumption. In the hands of the market, being green is not question of survival; it is a question of pushing a product. In reality, forestry is a band-aid fix that does nothing to eliminate the real problem, which is the un-sustainable mode of living that we have chosen. We need to reduce greenhouse gases by actually driving less, not by driving more. Forestry should be our way of bringing down CO2 emission, and there is certainly enough to go around, not neutralising added CO2 emission. Myself, I bought a bike and stopped driving to work. Sending out the message that it is even possible to somehow stay ‘neutral,’ when it comes to global warming is wrong. We should not entertain the idea of staying on the side- lines when it comes to this fight. As of now, we all belong in the ring. To bring the discussion to a close, I applaud every true effort to protect the environment, but being truly green takes more than slapping a bumper sticker at the back of your car. Kolviður: A Noble Idea Gone Wrong Text by Sveinn Birkir Björnsson This sounds all too much like the delusional gambler who always intends to pay off his gambling debts with the next big win. GREEN C M Y CM MY CY CMY K midi-concerts. df 4/11/07 10:55:30 AM Tourist Information / Upplýsingamiðstöð Austurvegur 2, 800 Selfoss www.tourinfo.arborg.is tourinfo@arborg.is 480 1990 Information - Internet - Art - Library Tour info Austurvegur 2, Selfoss

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