Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.03.2008, Side 12

Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.03.2008, Side 12
12 | Reykjavík Grapevine | Issue 03 2008 | Feature So, you’re nominated as songwriter and singer of the year at the IMAs. Hjaltalín, your band, was also nominated for song and re- cord of the year, as well as the Brightest Hope award. But how do you respond to the nomi- nations personally? Do you hold one award in higher regard than the others? No, not really. We were abroad when we heard the news, so it wasn’t like I was watching the news and heard Páll Magnússon saying my name, it wasn’t like that. I think it’s kind of strangely funny that I was nominated as singer of the year. It’s some- thing that comes as a bit of a surprise, and is sort of... not something I would have expected a year and a half ago. Why’s that? No it’s just that, this is the kind of nomination that the big-time singers get; Björgvin and Páll Óskar, Bubbi and Garðar Þór Cortes and so on. It’s funny to single me out as a singer because I’ve never re- ally seen myself as such. I’m in a choir, and was in one in high school for a long time, and I know that, you know, not everyone thought it was really cool to be in the choir at MH. Not cool? No. I mean, yeah it was of course really cool, you know, but naturally there were some hotshots who made fun of it, including some guys like the guys in Sprengjuhöllin. It’s damn good to have this nomination for their sake, to sort of make fun of them. When I interviewed the band right before Airwaves last year, your bassist, Guðmundur Óskar, said that the size of your group ex- plains to a certain extent why your songs are so long and contain so many diverse chap- ters. You compose and arrange for all these instruments and this big group, which must be a challenging task. Do you try to manage beforehand the length or size of the arrange- ment or song? Not exactly. I don’t think it’s completely accurate to say that the length of the songs correlates to the number of members; it’s not pandering to that number of people, having the song as long as pos- sible. It’s mostly just thickening the web of sound. The number of instruments gives more options in creating a varied musical texture. It doesn’t have a lot to do with length. It’s not like, ok now we have to have a chapter for the bassoon. But you are influenced by the musicians when you’re creating a song. It’s not like you come in with a concrete plan and say, “Ok, I’ve written a song, it’s six minutes long and you are going to do this.” It varies. The easiest method in all this is writing notes. Of course it’s possible that something great and original will come up if people are put togeth- er for some time in a group and they make some- thing without having decided beforehand what they’re going to do, but that also calls for a kind of communal thought process that takes time to develop and ripen. It’s not a very prolific work pro- cess to have everyone somehow conspiring. But with notes or something, you’ve laid some kind of plan that you can build on. Then it works as a kind of frame, both for the musicians and the song itself. The instrumentalists can then take this line that’s been decided and make something out of it and spin something around it. It’s not as though I write notes for everyone in the band. It’s mostly just coming up with something to spark some- thing off. I see it that way rather, that the notes and the arrangements are just to ignite something, and out of that we make a base and from that we can build even further. Is there a song on your new record that you’re particularly happy with? Something that was maybe especially memorable to write? I like the idea of hand-crafting, of the handiwork of a song, or some kind of handiwork in art. And when things work on paper really well, and when things are put together in a really, well I won’t say complicated, but in a somewhat elaborate way. Like when there are several groups of instruments put together, and out of it comes a kind of a thick web, a web of sound, which is kind of difficult to make, but with the right devices and the right technical execution it’s possible. You have maybe drums, bass, guitar, violin, singing, clarinet, bas- soon, brass, a choir and this thick sound comes out of it, and nothing gets tangled, there’s a trick to that too. But I think it works especially well in one song on the record, which is called Selur. There’s a pretty thick sound, with a choir and a variety of instruments, and there’s a kind of raging power in it. There are several songs like that, not all, but there are some. There are about five songs on the record that have that sound. And does that come about with just constant working and reworking the songs? Aiming for these large and intricate weavings? Yeah, it was a little bit like that. There was a kind of mantra following the record which was that “more is the new less.” Just really not holding back with ideas about letting things have wiggle room, not some kind of minimalism. We were really trying to go as big as possible. I understand that you get most of your lyrics from sources outside the band. Is it right to assume then that the music is written before and perhaps with little regard to the lyrics? Yes, the music is written before the lyrics, and consequently the music does not really stem from the lyrics. Instead, the words become essentially just another layer, a specific timbre on top of ev- erything else, all the other colours. Which I think is in itself a kind of interesting concept. There’s so much going on, and always some lines going all over the place, so somehow the attention doesn’t get directed towards the lyrics, instead they blend really well into this world of sound. How do you view their importance then, the words in your songs? I think it’s important that they work, that they sound good. This episode with meaning in lyr- ics, or some kind of narrative thing, that has just been taken out. It was kind of considered on an aesthetic level. We couldn’t put a lot of drive into meaning in the text that was never there. So what happens now, in the aftermath of re- cently releasing your first album? Have you started working on the next one? No, not at all. It would be great to put out another record right away. It’s kind of uncool to wait a re- ally long time and to make a big deal out of it, always to be making some kind of masterpiece. Mostly it’s just really fun to work with a lot of in- struments, to have a twelve-person group playing some chords. And writing for that, and conduct- ing it, and recording it, it’s just so much fun. A lot more fun than some acoustic guitar record with a couple of melodies. I think it’s really amazing when that works, like some musicians who do that, like Ólöf Arnalds and others, who are just alone but somehow manage to expand that, you know, to widen that form. It’s really impressive, but it’s something that I haven’t really mastered yet. I think in the meanwhile I’m just going to try to work on the other route that I’ve taken, try to tackle that in the interim. By Valgerður Þóroddsdóttir Högni Egilsson “There was a kind of mantra following the record which was that ‘more is the new less.’ Just really not holding back with ideas about letting things have wiggle room, not some kind of minimalism. We were really trying to go as big as possible.”

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