Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.06.2011, Síða 22

Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.06.2011, Síða 22
breakfast brunch lunch dinner drinks snacks gata food & drink reykjavík´s best kept secret kitchen hours sun-thu: 11:00-23:30 fri-sat: 10:00-00:00 laugavegur 3 www.gata.is tel: +354 5270077 http:// www. geysir. is Pioneer in delivering organic products for 25 years organic If you want to shop Yggdrasill is the place to go Yggdrasill • Rauðarárstíg 10 Phone: 562 4082 • Fax: 561 9299 e-mail: shop@yggdrasill.is Yggdrasill offers a wide range of premium quality, certified organic products, including a variety of organic fruits and vegetables. We are located down town, next to "Hlemmur", one of the two main bus terminals in Reykjavík. boring to be cool. I think it's much more fun to let yourself be a complete loser". "That's because we can't be any dif- ferent," says Árni Vilhjálmsson. The band lets all this uncoolness come out during their concerts. Árni Vil names an example: "We want to start each show by getting the audience to sing UB40’s 'Red, Red Wine". Árni Rúnar continues: "If you sing 'Red, Red Wine', scream it out, then you will become in- credibly happy. It's impossible to be re- ally cool while singing it". I ask them if they genuinely loved the song ‘Red, Red Wine’ or if their ap- preciation is ironic. Árni Rúnar is first to reply: "I feel it deep in my heart, but I still feel ashamed to say it out loud". Árni Vil was the one to make the song part of the group's identity, as he ex- plains: "I love this song. My friend made me a mix-disc that included it. I would drive around listening to it and when it came on, I'd scream along with the chorus. I picked Árni and Lóa up on Christmas Eve and we drove around lis- tening to the song, screaming the cho- rus, and we had goosebumps and were filled with happiness and goodwill for all". GROWING UP IN A BETA TEST Songs like 'Red, Red Wine' get them in touch with their preadolescent selves. Lóa says: "For me to think that UB40 is a lame band is learned behaviour. When I was a kid their records were played at home without anyone com- menting, but then when I was a teen- ager I found out that they were terrible and no one could know you listened to them. Same with Cat Stevens. I think I know all Cat Stevens songs by heart be- cause they were constantly played at my home, but then I learned from the cool crowd in Breiðholt [the neighbourhood of Reykjavík she grew up in] that you shouldn't mention that. You become so repressed as a teen. This changed later when I met kids from Hlíðar and Vesturbær [Reykjavík neighbourhoods close to downtown] and they'd put on Cat Stevens in parties. I'd shudder. I had to break free of the chains. I spent months of my teenage life repressing that I liked the Bryan Adams song from ‘Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves’, 'Ev- erything I Do (I Do It For You)’. Then, years later, I'm driving by myself in the car and it comes on and I start singing along and crying". "While you were repressing liking it", says Árni Vil, "I was in Vesturbær with all my friends, waiting for it to come on the radio so we could push the record button at just the right mo- ment." Lóa responds: "I wish I had been a teenager in Hlíðar". "Or 107 Reykjavík [the postcode for Vesturbær]", says Árni Vil. Lóa pro- tests: "No, then I would've gone to Ha- gaskóli [the school for 12–16 year-olds in Vesturbær] and become damaged. It's incredible how nice you are consid- ering you went to Hagaskóli". Árni Vil replies: "On the other hand, I wanted to kill many of the people I went to school with for many years, but I'm free of that now. I made a mistake before I entered Hagaskóli at 12. I went to Berlin and ar- rived halfway through the first school year. I just showed up one day wearing green jeans, a blue sweater, red denim jacket, and Harry Potter glasses, which were supposed to look like John Len- non's glasses. I hadn't been there two minutes before someone took my lunch money". I asked Árni Rúnar where he lived as a kid. "I grew up in Grafarvogur [Reykjavík neighbourhood], so I don't have a connection with any of that. She grew up in a cool semi-ghetto, he in an old, classy neighbourhood. I grew up in a beta test", which Lóa considers "a per- fect description of Grafarvogur in the ‘90s". "I know", says Árni Rúnar, "what kind of social consequences can result from poor urban planning. If you're building an entire new neighbourhood, do it over a long time. When you open a large school, Rimaskóli, and five hun- dred kids all start in it the same day, most will be armed, because they all want to conquer the school. Who can be the toughest, you know? Then kids were smoking pot during recess or beating each other up. I transferred out of that school after half a school year". Árni Vil continues: "In Vesturbær the problem is that there are three schools for 6-12 year-olds which merge to form one, Hagaskóli, and no one knows what will happen". Árni Rúnar replies: "At least there you have cliques of people who fight together, so at least 20 kids will conquer the school. In Rimaskóli everyone fought as an indi- vidual, it was like the first past the post system, with only one winner who'd beat up everyone else." THEY ARE NOT MAKING FUN OF YOU, WHY WOULD THEY? It is important to FM Belfast to be inclu- sive when they play, to not try to domi- nate their audience. Árni Rúnar said: "When we're playing live, we speak di- rectly to the crowd, tell them that all of us together will have a party". Audienc- es around the world respond differently to this sincerity. All three agree that, for instance, people in Poland understood them right away. "Poles are one of the most fun, thankful audiences you can play for. It's crazy. It's like they infect you with this incredibly positive ener- gy", Árni Vil remarks. “Usually we have to play a bunch of shows in a country before that hap- pens”, adds Lóa. “In France, at first it was like everyone was concerned with making sure we weren't making fun of them. They regarded us very sceptical- ly. The Swedes were the same. Like they were worried they were the subjects of our practical joke. I can understand that response. If I saw us on stage for the first time, I'd wonder if we were jok- ing or not: 'Why are they covering this song? Is it allowed to like that?' I'd be sceptical". "One thing that makes the shows fun", says Árni Vil, "both for us and the audience, is that we're open to new cra- ziness, into the structure we've created. For example, we were playing in Aus- tria the other day and just before the concert starts these three dudes in bal- lerina costumes offer to come on stage to dance. We had them enter the stage during the fifth song and they'd leave and come back during the set. It put an entertainingly crazy spin on the show. They danced very suggestively". "My jaw hit the f loor", says Lóa, "sud- denly all these bare-chested, handsome men jogged onto the stage. I think they were all over forty. They were clearly all dancers, very fit, but I could see from their faces that they were no teenagers, which made it much more interesting to me". "It's open up to a certain point", says Árni Rúnar. "But once in a while we lose control. We played Paris when our record was published on June 3rd. It was a great concert, with everything going great. We had some minor tech- nical issues, but they didn't matter be- cause the energy was so great and the audience was in such a positive mood. We had asked our opening band to join us on stage during the last song. Then one audience member comes onstage. Then another. Then the stage was rushed by the crowd". Lóa chimes in: "The stage was shaking. I tried to find a steady spot, but the whole thing shook". This is not the first time the struc- tural integrity of a concert hall has been tested during an FM Belfast show. Their friend Bóas remembers when they played at Q-Bar, around the time that their first album was released. "It's the only time I've gone to a con- cert and been more concerned about the load bearing capacity of the dance f loor rather than enjoying myself". Ac- cording to Bóas, who has seen them play live around sixty times, there has been the same energy onstage from their very first gig. "I don't know what came first. Whether that FM Belfast are what they are today because of that de- but gig [at Airwaves 2006] or whether the performance had been worked out beforehand. The main thing was that they were doing this to entertain them- “We're always in a hurry to get to the next venue to do a sound check, then sleep before the show, then the concert, then back to sleep, then back to driving” 22 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 8 — 2011 TWIN PEAKS Photo by Jói Kjartans

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