Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.10.2013, Síða 58

Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.10.2013, Síða 58
4 The Wonders of Volcanoes Volcano House Cinema – Dramatic and Informative Volcano House Café – Healthy and Volcanic Geological Exhibition, free entrance Tourist information and Booking Service Volcano House Boutique Open from 9.00 – 22,00. Films are shown every hour on the hour! Striking documentaries on eruptions in Iceland in amazing Emmy nominated footages. Shows every hour on the hour in English, from 09.00 – 21.00. German and French version upon request. The Volcano House Café presents the only volcanic menu in Iceland. Breakfast Lunch Meal of the day Light meals Happy Hour Deserts Volcanic Co!ee. Volcano House I Tryggvagata 11 I Tel. 555 1900 www.volcanohouse.is I info@volcanohouse.is DY N A M O R EY K JA V ÍK Simmering Iceland Airwaves O! Venue program Thurs, Fri, Sat, (31.10 -2.11) from 12.00 – 20.00.More on volcanohouse.is Magnús Trygvason Eliassen, “Maggi,” drums in local bands Amiina, Borko, Kippi Kaninus, Moses Hightower, Sin Fang, Tilbury, Snorri Helgason and a number of others on a rotating basis. He manages to balance domestic and inter- national touring, recording and practic- ing with all of them throughout the year, but from a peripheral view, it seems like trying to date several people at the same time, and Airwaves would be that week- end when they all happen to be in town at the same time. Last Airwaves, Maggi played 24 shows with various bands, running with his drums between venues in November weather that feels like someone is beat- ing you with a cold, wet towel. By most music festival standards, this is an in- sane number of shows to play, but by the standards of Reykjavík’s tight-knit mu- sic community, it’s kind of just expected. When I walked into the Airwaves office seeking the person scheduling the bands, or what I imagined would be a burnt-out intern crying in front of an Excel sheet, everyone seemed wildly caffeinated and totally unshaken by my insistence that 24 shows in five days was abnormal. “Everyone in an Icelandic band is playing, like, ten shows,” some- one chimed in. “It’s actually a rush I really like, playing all that and running between venues,” Maggi says offhandedly, as if 23 shows would have been too boring. This year he’ll be playing with just seven bands in nine shows given that he has to miss the first two days of the festival. I try to imagine a Brooklyn-based indie band playing more than twenty shows in a weekend because they were supporting friends in other projects. Perhaps Reyk- javík hasn’t been cursed by the rigidity that came with tight pants and the ultra- competitive music scenes of larger cities. “I don’t feel the music scene here is very competitive,” Maggi says. “I want to see great drummers here play and succeed. I think most musicians in Ice- land are like that.” Maggi posits that the music scene in Reykjavík is less about an aesthetic than it is about people who found a type of music they love and then threw themselves into it. “Musicians here don’t make a lot of money so if you’re making music it’s something that you really love. You don’t have to listen to the Replacements and wear Cheap Mon- days to play in an indie band here.” Guitarist Örn Eldjárn, who will play with Maggi in Borko and Tilbury this year, played fifteen Airwaves shows last year. “The music community here is small, we all just hang out and play to- gether,” he says. Equally ambiguous about what was beginning to seem like a musician’s mafia, Albert Finnbogason, of bands Grísalappalísa and Skelkur í bringu and accompaniment to sóley, says he can’t explain how it all works out. This year he’s slated to play upwards of 14 shows and he doesn’t think it’s that big of a deal. “It seems like a lot but I think ev- eryone’s doing it,” he says. “If you play a brass instrument it’s likely more than that.” Both he and Maggi mentioned the Airwaves 2011 Wonder Woman Ragnhil- dur Gunnarsdóttir, the trumpeter of Of Monsters And Men, who played thirty shows including three with the biggest bands on Saturday night. Perhaps that’s the local enigma of the festival—that if you miss your friend in one band, you’ll be able to see them at least five or six other times. “Airwaves is a festival to go see something you’ve never heard before,” Maggi says. Played, perhaps, by an arrangement of people you’ve seen only every-elsewhere. MUSICIANv ISSUE 16 — 2013GRAPEVINE AIRWAVES Maybe Reykjavík’s tight-knit music community is just one big band —Words by Alex Baumhardt Gu!mundur Vignir Karlsson

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