Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.06.2011, Blaðsíða 20

Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.06.2011, Blaðsíða 20
20 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 8 — 2011 HUMBLE BEGINNINGS What was the scene like when you guys were first starting out (in 1995)? How have things changed, for better or for worse? Biggi Veira: Electronica was different when it began, before the black kids in Detroit and Chicago established it as being something associated with the nightlife, the club, dancing and drugs. You’re talking about the ‘70s and ‘80s. BV: Well, yes, that came first, but come late-eighties and early-nineties (elec- tronic music) starts to become associ- ated with a particular scene. In the late ‘70s, everything is very arty, made by art-nutjobs, but since then electronica hasn’t really had much of a life outside dance music. Is that something GusGus have been trying to do, now or since the beginning, to take it back to being something arty, some- thing not tied to the club scene? BV: No, I wouldn’t say that. I did arty stuff in the ‘80s, but then dance music just comes along and takes me over. I’d been doing small indie-type stuff with my friends for a while when I was asked by someone if we knew of an artist he could book for a rave. I said “I can’t think of anyone, but I can probably put together a rave if you want”. So it was ’92, and one night we did some- thing very indie and experimental, and people sat and clapped and were very polite… Daníel Ágúst: At a rave? BV: No no, at the indie thing. Then the night after, we showed up at the rave with DAT player and some drums, and that was insane, everybody partying, pretty girls everywhere… I never went back. I just wanted to stay in that party. That’s been my input in GusGus, that party atmosphere. It’s interesting to see how things have evolved and how the ‘party’ has risen to dominate electronic music. DÁ: For me, GusGus was totally arty. I never touched that clubbing-rave-fun- party culture. I’ve always been more interested in the obscure, experimental side of it. BV: Yes, it was the same for Siggi Kin- ski [founding GusGus member who left in 2000]. A lot of the first songs were his songs that Maggi Lego [founding member who brief ly left in 2000, and then permanently left in 2006] and I arranged as electronic songs. DÁ: GusGus came from a lot of differ- ent directions, musically speaking. BV: Also, there was Maggi Jóns [aka Blake, another founding member who left in 1999], he was big into disco and Gary Numan-type new wave stuff. He wrote almost half the songs on the first album. There was even a new wave song on there… so the first album was this big melting pot, but was assigned the ‘trip-hop’ label that was in vogue at the time. DÁ: Because it was chilled-out dance music. BV: And we used a lot of samples. DÁ: Then in 2000, you went full-on into the club scene. BV: Yes. ‘This Is Normal’ [1999] didn’t quite go in the direction I wanted it to go… DÁ: It had no direction. It just went ev- erywhere. BV: Well, not to judge it, but yes, that was when everyone left, and the gear sluts, me Bongo and Maggi Lego were left with the remains of the band. So I took the chance and let my inf luences shine through, kind of ‘pre-eighties’, new wave and Soft Cell. I was also fas- cinated by that period where disco was dead everywhere except gay clubs, and the only new disco was being recorded with sequencers and drum machines. ‘Attention’ [2002] was very inf luenced by all that. We’ve been inf luenced as well by contemporary stuff, but we haven’t ever fit very well in with any kind of dance category. DÁ: When Urður came along, the party-clubbing atmosphere really took off, and hit its high point in 2007 with ‘Forever’. BV: We’d do gigs at [upscale local ven- ue] NASA four or five times a year, and that gathered around it a pretty decent crowd. We had a very good thing going, and then… DÁ: …and then Urður left… BV: …and that was the end of that. ARTY PARTY When you (Daníel ágúst) came back to the band, it became arty again. ‘Forever’ (2007) was such a party album, and then ‘24/7’ (2009) is far more minimal and obscure. The partying took a backseat to the music. DÁ: Oh yeah. Everything was turned on its head. BV: After Urður left, we were forced to make some kind of change. DÁ: Not try to recreate the party. BV: We needed to switch parties. It’s like if ‘Forever’ was the warm-up party, with Urður, the ‘girl party…’ DÁ: You know, fresh make-up, nice clothes… BV: Everyone’s still bouncy, not too drunk, lipstick isn’t smeared yet, but ‘24/7’ was like the after-after party, the ‘veteran’ after-party. It was the party ex- clusively for those tough enough to last into the small hours, the guys who pace themselves so they can party ‘til noon the next day. They’re not going to pass out at 4 AM like some amateur. It’s a perfect description, re- ally. So was ‘Arabian Horse’ a direct continuation of this kind of thinking? BV: When working on ‘24/7’ in the spring of 2008, we had the songs but no idea how to finish them. It was al- most summer, Urður had just left, so we had almost no songs to perform that summer. We then just crammed the stuff we had into the live setup, up- dated the effect chain, dub-style, with a tape-delay-pedal and small Kaoss pad, The After-After-After Party GusGus is the name given to an elite collective of party veterans, a col- lective that began life as a multi- method art troupe at the height of the gay nineties, and has since evolved into Iceland’s very own techno superstars. It’s seen found- ing members come and go, but the core of the band has always re- mained: Birgir Þórarinsson, or Biggi Veira, and Stephan Stephensen, or President Bongo. The group is today rounded up by Urður Háko- nardóttir, or Earth, who has been an on-and-off member since 2001, and Daníel ágúst Haraldsson, who was a founding member but took a ten-year hiatus to pursue other projects before returning in 2009. Their eighth studio album, 'Arabian Horse', was recently released to much critical acclaim; we sat down with Biggi Veira and Daníel ágúst to find out what all the fuss was about. GusGus discuss the Arabian Horse FM Belfast just released an awesome new album that's already being hailed as one of the year's best. As did GusGus. Listening to those great new records one is forced to conclude that the two bands are surely some sort of 'Twin Peaks' of Icelandic elec- tronic music. One might even ask them to dress for the occasion. Because, you know, it's fun. Now go read what they have to say! TWIN PEAKS Words Sindri Eldon Photography Hörður Sveinsson
Blaðsíða 1
Blaðsíða 2
Blaðsíða 3
Blaðsíða 4
Blaðsíða 5
Blaðsíða 6
Blaðsíða 7
Blaðsíða 8
Blaðsíða 9
Blaðsíða 10
Blaðsíða 11
Blaðsíða 12
Blaðsíða 13
Blaðsíða 14
Blaðsíða 15
Blaðsíða 16
Blaðsíða 17
Blaðsíða 18
Blaðsíða 19
Blaðsíða 20
Blaðsíða 21
Blaðsíða 22
Blaðsíða 23
Blaðsíða 24
Blaðsíða 25
Blaðsíða 26
Blaðsíða 27
Blaðsíða 28
Blaðsíða 29
Blaðsíða 30
Blaðsíða 31
Blaðsíða 32
Blaðsíða 33
Blaðsíða 34
Blaðsíða 35
Blaðsíða 36
Blaðsíða 37
Blaðsíða 38
Blaðsíða 39
Blaðsíða 40
Blaðsíða 41
Blaðsíða 42
Blaðsíða 43
Blaðsíða 44
Blaðsíða 45
Blaðsíða 46
Blaðsíða 47
Blaðsíða 48
Blaðsíða 49
Blaðsíða 50
Blaðsíða 51
Blaðsíða 52
Blaðsíða 53
Blaðsíða 54
Blaðsíða 55
Blaðsíða 56
Blaðsíða 57
Blaðsíða 58
Blaðsíða 59
Blaðsíða 60
Blaðsíða 61
Blaðsíða 62
Blaðsíða 63
Blaðsíða 64

x

Reykjavík Grapevine

Beinir tenglar

Ef þú vilt tengja á þennan titil, vinsamlegast notaðu þessa tengla:

Tengja á þennan titil: Reykjavík Grapevine
https://timarit.is/publication/943

Tengja á þetta tölublað:

Tengja á þessa síðu:

Tengja á þessa grein:

Vinsamlegast ekki tengja beint á myndir eða PDF skjöl á Tímarit.is þar sem slíkar slóðir geta breyst án fyrirvara. Notið slóðirnar hér fyrir ofan til að tengja á vefinn.