Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.01.2011, Blaðsíða 23

Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.01.2011, Blaðsíða 23
23 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 1 — 2011 </2010 MUSIC> ENSÍMI – ‘ENSÍMI’ (2002) This bad boy pretty much set the standard, production- wise, for Icelandic rock in the... the whatever you call this decade. Oughties? Noughties? Something like that. Anyway, it blew all of its contemporaries out of the water, and also served as a kind of recap of the ‘90s, high- lighting Icelandic music’s attitudes in that far-off decade: it’s vain, cheesy, cocky and cliché, but man, does it rock. Veering from sneering, balls-out guitar machismo to in- dulgent synths and drum patterns, and yet somehow managing to string it all together, it perfectly encapsulates a balance between near-obsessive micromanagement in its production and crisp, vigorous energy in its delivery. BOTNLEDJA – ‘ICELAND NATIONAL PARK’ (2003) Unfortunately released the same summer that gave Iceland two of its most bombastic and self-indulgent rock al- bums, Maus’s ‘Musick’ and Mínus’s ‘Halldór Laxness’, Botnleðja’s last shot at the big time was unassuming, simple and recorded in a garage for very little (if any) money. This, coupled with the unspeakably awful mu- sic video to ‘Brains, Balls And Dolls’ (Why the fuck did they let Bjaddni Hell make so many videos? Why, in God’s name?), led to it quickly being forgotten and dismissed, and it is always noticeably absent from all “great Icelandic albums” lists, while all of Botnleðja’s previous releases (except for the rehab album, but they always leave those out) usually manage to make their way to the top twenty. I find this brutally unfair, as ‘Iceland National Park’ is a crashing romp of an al- bum that crackles with energy, enthusiasm and innovation, as brilliant as it is f lippant and off-kilter. It is the last album by one of those rare bands where every member is not only excellent at what he does, but shines do- ing it on virtually every track. Never forget! PORNOPOP – ‘AND THE SLOW SONGS ABOUT THE DEAD CALM IN YOUR ARMS’ (2006) Pornopop never quite man- aged to reach the heights of respect they so richly deserve, and although it was released to generally positive reviews, ATSSATDCI- YA (still a mouthful, even as an acronym) is hardly a fixture of iPods anywhere. This is, I suppose, understandable: it’s not a terribly inviting album, awash in limp-wristed res- ignation and nihilism, but underneath that is a core of amazing beauty and romance, packaged in production so slathered with carefully crafted reverb and drum patterns you could use it as steak sauce. Another sadly forgotten gem. NÚMER NÚLL – ‘LYKILL AÐ SKÍRLÍFS- BELTI’ (2008) Gestur Guðnason, Númer Núll’s front man, once told me that mak- ing this album so wiped them out that they didn’t really have the energy or inclination to do much promotion for it. This does not change the fact that it is one of the best guitar-pop albums I’ve ever heard. Gestur is a music teacher, and you can hear it in his guitar playing: the album’s lead guitar runs as a perfect satellite to its rhythm section, smoothly winding its way through clever, rambunctious scales without ever breaking into an outright solo. I bet that last sentence made the album sound boring, right? Well, the surprising thing is that the album also rocks in an awesomely fun way. The songs are simple, gutsy and inventive without be- ing pretentious, and the sound is that perfect combination of lo-fi garage and hi-fi power. Will they ever make another album? Prob- ably not, but that’s fine: this one is all they’ll ever need. GUSGUS – 24/7 (2009) I didn’t really get this album when it first came out last year. I mean, who makes a dance record with six tracks, all of them really long? And it’s all de- pressing; you can’t party to this. Then this summer, I drove to Mývatn (about 300 miles away) to pick up my girl- friend, and as she desperately wanted to get the fuck out of there, we drove back over- night. It was foggy and dark, I mean really, really dark. We put this album in the CD player, and then I got it. This is not a dance album. This shit is epic. It’s the best thing they’ve ever put out. It soars delay-drenched into eternity with its synths and sultry, ethereal vocals, and even though two of the songs clip the ten-minute mark, they’re still too short; you never want them to end. We listened to it about five or six times on that drive to Reykjavík. "And Some Things That Should Not Have Been Forgotten Were Lost." I don't really listen to music, so there weren't five, or ten, or indeed any Icelan- dic albums released this year that particu- larly caught my attention. The last decade has, however, yielded some important al- bums, if not for Iceland or the world, but for me, as this was the decade I had the sad misfortune to grow up in. This is also a kind of retrospective, I guess, as I didn't discover a few of these until long after they'd been released. Music | Bob Cluness Music | Sindri Eldon Five Albums That Shaped Bob Cluness’ Decade Sigur Rós – () (2002) The world’s most in- furiatingly enigmatic band. But man when they get it right they fucking get it right! I chose ‘()’ over ‘Takk’ as nobody in the world seemed to be making this kind of music at the time. Not so much ethereal, more oc- cupying a completely different place in space and time. Plus for some inexpli- cable reason, track 4 (or ‘Njósnavélin’) seems to make me cry every time I lis- ten to it. Shut up! Mínus – Jesus Christ Bobby (2000) An unyielding mass of spiteful noise that was the aural equivalent of firebombing your neighbour’s house and killing everyone due to a dispute over hedge bound- aries. The thing with JCB was that at times it was more noise than rock, thanks to their clever decision to have Curver produce the album. Still gives me nightmares involving trolls with dil- dos. GusGus – Attention (2002) The first GusGus al- bum I bought was 2007s ‘Forever’ and that is a great album. But somehow I just found this did the same stuff, better, and five years earlier as well. Sometimes on a Saturday night if I’m alone and before I go out, I like to put this on while dancing naked with a jar of pickles to get me in the mood. Nothing wrong in that is there? Singapore Sling - Life Is Killing My Rock 'N' Roll (2004) The group that is re- sponsible for creating a whole brand of Ice- landic death rock with numerous imi- tators but never bettered to be honest. Their whole sound can be perfectly en- capsulated in the track, ‘Guiding Light’ a shimmering vehicle that blazes across the devils highway wearing shades. Al- legedly. Björk – Volta (2007) The obligatory Björk entry. I found this al- bum was her most lis- tenable she had pro- duced in a long time. There is something in there for every- body from tribal rhythms to avant garde song structures, melodic pop hooks to fervent politics. She even made Ti- mabaland work as a producer for a change, so it can’t be all bad! Sigur Rós - Takk (2007) Takk received critical acclaim here, there and everywhere, went gold and made every- one sit up and take notice... again. FM Belfast - How To Make Friends (2008) An album that has been known to cause people to actually run down the street in their underwear. If this isn't music with a positive influence then İ don't know what is. Emiliana Torrini – Fisherman’s Woman (2005) Fisherman’s Woman made folk-lovers all over sit up and take notice and is just a really sweet album in general. Agent Fresco – Lightbulb Universe (2008) Everyone knew the lyr- ics before the album was even released. It goes without say- ing that this was one of the albums of the new millenium. Mugison – Mugi- mama: Is This Mon- key Music? (2004) The multi-talented Mugisson has influ- ence near and far and his 2004 album permanently placed him on the music map. Music | Bergrún Anna Hallsteinsdóttir Five Albums That Shaped Bergrún Anna Hallsteins- dóttir’s Decade Bob Cluness’s Favourite Albums Of 2010 1: Apparat Organ Quartet – ‘Pólýfónía’. After an eight year break these guys just came out of nowhere and completely eclipsed every other band in the country, just for the sport. I mean who else was going to touch them musically, Retro Stef- son? Don’t make me laugh! 2: Momentum – Fixation, At Rest: Of all the metal albums I’ve heard this year, ‘Fixation, At Rest’ had the biggest musical scope, the most ambition, the most balls to run with it to the sky. It was the little things like the use of scratched violins on the riff on ‘Metamorphose’ that told you they knew what they’re doing. 3: Various Artists – Hljóðaklettar ‘Dress Up’: Most of you won’t have heard this (as there were only 35 copies made!), but if there is a is a better compilation that shows the rude health Icelandic electronic music finds itself in 2010, then I’m not really do- ing my job properly. 4: Agent Fresco – ‘A Long Time Listen- ing’: Agent Fresco managed to break free from the shackles that ‘Eyes Of A Cloud Catcher’ was in danger of constraining them with by making an album that was both VERY in- telligent and at the same time rocked like the proverbial mother. I also found singer Arnór Dan’s trousers strangely tight and alluring. No idea why... 5: Nóra – ‘Er einhver að hlusta?’ While most other pop bands just faffed around with the idea of creating tunes (that were frankly as bland and off putting as week old slátur), Nóra produced music that was immediate, simple and powerful. Bergrún Anna Hallsteinsdóttir’s Fa- vourite Albums Of 2010 1. Orphic Oxtra – Orphic Oxtra They brought the sound of the Balkans to Iceland and injected the music scene with a much-needed dose of difference. 2. Ólafur Arnalds – ‘And they have escaped the weight of darkness’ Ólafur Arnalds wins at creating classical music that the kids can appreciate. 3. Retro Stefson – Kimbabwe Kimbawe brought some much needed positivity to these dark times. 4. Hjaltalín og Sinfó – Alpanon The symphony/band combo took Hjal- talín’s sound to new places with Alpanon. 5. Samúel Jón Samúelsson Big Band – Helvítis fokking fönk They made the year that much funkier for Iceland as a whole.

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