Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.07.2009, Qupperneq 44

Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.07.2009, Qupperneq 44
all screaming physical revolt, then you had Vespertine with its frail undertones of courtship and introspection... Well, Vespertine was... I made it around the time I bought my first laptop. It was very exciting. Everyone was so depressed, talking about ‘THE END OF MUSIC’ and ‘music is doomed, what with all the downloading’ and I was just... ‘No, it’s not. You just need some imagination.’ It was partly inspired by that. There was a collection of instruments on the record that all sound very good when they’re downloaded – like the harp, glockenspiel and celesta – and all the voices were whispered instead of sung at full blast. The soundscape was kind of virtual, more thought than physical. More mental and frozen. I decided: ‘OK, this world is not warm summer, it is a frozen winter. It’s cold, you turn off your body.’ In Vespertine, I made a record that you experience in a frozen state, from the cover artwork to the soundscape and all lyrics being about being in a pupal stage on a winter’s night. Hibernating. I was playing with that idea. It’s funny to think that in the year 2000, when I was making that record, people were acting very scared about the purported ‘end of music’. It’s always that same cliché. I liked turning it upside down. And now of course, almost ten years later, there’s a whole lot of music out there being made that’s directly inf luenced by what downloads well. Music being made by people that have been for the last decade listening to mp3 files at their house, and now they’re making music out of them. There’s no real focus now on listening to Dolby Stereo at your house. The bitrate can be shitty for that matter, there’s no right way to listen to music. Anyway, I thought that work with Vespertine was equally exciting and challenging. And then Volta was a very different affair... Up on the hill with a flag and a horn So what are you thinking or contemplating right now that might be reflected on Volta’s follow-up? My friend Gabríela [Friðriksdóttir, artist] is big on numerology. In the time leading up to Volta, she’d calculated that I was an eight, which means justice. I thought that was funny, especially since my dad is always working in the union movement and my mom has that gene in her... she went on hunger strike for eighteen days to try and stop the Kárahnjúkar dam from happening. So I thought it would be funny and humorous – although maybe no one but me gets the joke – to do a justice album, an EIGHT; up on the hill with a f lag and a horn. For the next record, if I can promise you anything about that, it’s that it will not be a justice record. It’s fun to run up the hill with a big f lag, demanding justice, but it can be a tiring feeling in the long run. Trying to think you can tell others what’s right and what they need to do. It was fun for two years but now I am done with that. I liked it, though, the raw energy with the brass girls and the hooliganism. But now I have something different. I will say that I am excited about all the new programs and instruments we’ve been talking about. ON ThE NáTTúRA ORGANiSATiON... Perhaps in line with Volta’s theme of justice, you have lately been very involved in grassroots organisations, promoting environmentalism and sustainability with the Náttúra group. The song you released in support of the project last fall (‘Náttúra’) was a big success, too. How is the Náttúra project going? Yes, well, at the moment we’re dedicated to running the website [www.nattura.info] and are in the process of deciding what our next move will be. We were kind of stunted during this spring’s election and that whole recession and economic collapse thing, that’s no secret, but we are working on a lot of ideas. There are currently many groups in Iceland – not just us, but all sorts of people to the left, right, green and not green – that are interested in creating what can be called a national assembly. We are also really keen on that idea. They do this in a lot of nations that are going through trouble. We would need a certain proportion of the 300.000 persons that make up Iceland, around 1.500 people, and we would meet with the aim of mapping out what we want Iceland to be in 20 years. We’ll get a wide assembly; Jón and Gunna from Bíldudalur, folks that wish to harness everything and build dams everywhere, and people that wish to harness nothing. Groups that want Iceland to become the biggest electric car country in the world, and people that want us to hunt more whales. The whole of us, planning out a course. We cannot be everything, and we cannot be nothing – there needs to be some sort of commitment. And as I said, we [the Náttúra group] might very well cooperate with another ten groups in calling together a nationwide meeting. These are some very different groups, many of whom totally disagree with us on most things. But I think that it’s the first step to a national assembly, that these groups work together. Are you aiming to do this in 2009? Yes, but I don’t know if we can do it. It’s a dream, participating in that. A dream we foster. This is in any case a good idea, and it came from the people themselves, not from an elite or politicians. People have lost a lot of faith in politicians. But I don’t know if I should be talking about this, I’m not at all sure it’s going to happen. It would take months to plan and put together. ON WhAT ShE’S LiSTENiNG TO... What are your current listening habits, what sort of music are you digging at the moment? I think it’s been an unusually fine year for pop music. The year is only halfway through and already I’ve found a lot of new releases that I genuinely like and will listen to at home. It’s a good year for pop music. Like Antony’s new record [Antony and the Johnsons’ The Crying Light], Animal Collective [Merriweather Post Pavilion], The Dirty Projectors [Bitte Orca]... I’m forgetting something. On the whole, I feel this is a really exciting year for music. There were a few years in between that I felt nothing exciting was going on. At least not to my tastes. But now, observing the new generation of Americans – the aforementioned, along with people like Joanna Newsom, Americans between 20 and 30 – I feel more excited. I feel I have more in common with that generation of Americans than with a lot of what’s been making the rounds these past years. So I am excited for the next generation. Maybe Bush saved the day by staying in power for eight years, so everyone got fed up with careerism and marketing and making money. It was always said that Europeans make pop music and they just try to make great music, not caring if it makes it to number one or not, but in the US people are always thinking about success. And I feel like that’s totally over now. Like Animal Collective and that whole generation, it’s like they´re on the whole other side of that coin. I’ve been living in New York and it’s been an exciting time, the extreme f lipside of materialism. The new generation isn’t even thinking of profit, it’s like, ‘forget it, I won’t even go there!’ And that’s fun to witness. The line now is that people are supposed to be creative and prolific, in line with nature. Making money or possessing money it is no longer the one two three of it all. So I like that, that’s my department. 32 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 10 — 2009 Viking hotel Viking restaurants Viking live entertainment Viking Souveniers For booking and further information: Tel.: (+354) 565-1213 vikings@vikingvillage.is - www.vikingvillage.is Strandgata 55 Hafnarfjordur VEGETARIAN CUISINE Skólavörðustígur 8 b, tel. 552 2028 Open from 11:30 am–21:00 pm www.graennkostur.is 100% Merino wool It keeps your body dry and warm and doesnot itch. JANUS woolen underwear is made from the finest Merino wool which is soft and comfortable. Tel +354 577 60 50 www.sixt.is Tel:+354 517 8088 WWW.CINTAMANI.IS ICelANdIC OuTdOOr equIpMeNT & SupplIeS IN The CITy CeNTer Who Was There? The Volta touring ensemble had a lot of people in it. Babysitters. Chefs. Organisers. Roadies. Engineers. Soundpeople. And musicians, too. The crew that performed at the tour included Mark Bell on computers and keyboards, Damian Taylor on keyboards and programming, Chris Corsano on drums and percussion, Jónas Sen on piano, harpsichord and church’s organ and the all female, all Icelandic ten piece brass section Wonderbrass on the horns. And Björk, of course. CONTiNUEd FROM PAGE 6 Where Did They Go, Now The Volta tour was the most extensive one Björk has embarked upon in her solo career. The following is a list of the countries the Volta touring outfit visited in 2007 and 2008. It is divided by continent. It has a lot of countries in it. NORTh AMERiCA California New York Illinois Colorado British Columbia Washington Ontario Michigan Texas Georgia Quebec Nevada SOUTh AMERiCA Brazil Argentina Chile Peru Colombia Mexico EUROPE The United Kingdom Belgium Poland Denmark Holland Spain Italy Switzerland France Ireland Scotland Iceland Lithuania Latvia Germany Greece Turkey Portugal OCEANiA New Zealand Australia ASiA Indonesia Korea Japan China hAUkUR S MAGNúSSON

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