Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.06.2014, Side 32

Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.06.2014, Side 32
It’s pretty windy up there Visitors are welcome to the interactive exhibition on renewable energy at Búrfell hydropower station, a 90 minute drive from Reykjavik. North of the station you XJMMmOE-BOETWJSLKVOTmSTUXJOEUVSCJOFT XIFSFQSFMJNJOBSZSFTVMUTTVHHFTUB bright future for Icelandic wind farming. Búrfell: Interactive exhibition every day 10am-5pm Kárahnjúkar: Guided tours Wed & Sat 2pm-5pm Wind farm: Guided tours Sat in July 2pm-5pm ,SBnBGeothermal exhibition every day 10am-5pm Free admission www.landsvirkjun.com/visitus MUSIC 32 The Reykjavík GrapevineIssue 06 — 2014 Tell Me About Yourself I was born in Selfoss in 1949. When it was time to go to high school I didn’t want to live in a dorm so I moved to Reykjavík to attend Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík. I actually just attended my 45-year high school reunion the other day. I lived at Nýlendugata with three other girls. I felt like they were old ladies even though they were only two years older. When they came home from work on Friday they’d bought a half-bottle of vodka to share between the three of them. That wouldn’t be considered much today, I think. They went to the dances at Hótel Saga and sported bouffants pretty much every weekend. I never joined them; it wasn’t my cup of tea. They liked The Beatles and all, they weren’t particularly old-fashioned, but something changed with my generation. The Beatles belong to us—the class of ‘69. The speeches at my reunion largely revolved around The Beatles. Because they changed everything—music and mentality. It was a liberation. How did you party back then? I grew up during the ‘sveitaball’ [country- style dance] era. I started going to those at 14. IDs weren’t introduced in Iceland until I was 16. I don’t mean the old-fashioned sveitaball with accordion. I’m talking about gigs with Hljómar and Mánar and other rock bands. I’d go by myself and meet up with other girls from the Selfoss area. This was considered brazen, because the reputation of sveitaball attendees wasn’t exactly flattering. But it was completely untrue. Some people were drunk, others not really and some not at all. I learned to drink anything—lukewarm brennivín mixed with coke or preferably brennivín with appelsín [orange soda]. During verslunarmannahelgin [bank holiday, first weekend of August] in 1968 we went to an outdoor festival. The buses were searched for booze so some people would bury their bottles on the festival site a few days early. I was working at the milk factory and the engineers came up with an even smarter scheme. You signed up for vodka or rosé, and then they canned the booze in the middle of the night and labelled it ‘UHT Milk.’ Once you arrived at the campsite you could pick up your ‘milk’ without a problem. That’s crazy! So you didn’t get plastered in the city? In those years I preferred going to Selfoss. In Reykjavík, you had to stay indoors. But at a sveitaball you could go outside. And people were generally more free spirited in the country. See, in the sixties and seventies, the clubs in Reykjavík would have dress codes. You couldn’t wear these trousers or those shoes or that jacket. People tried hard to make people wear their parents’ clothes. But I think Reykja- vík is wonderful. I wouldn’t live anywhere else. I still think it’s a beautiful city—al- though this may be changing. There are too many hotels for my taste. Right now, there’s a beautiful tree on Grettisgata that they’re tearing up. I don’t blame Samfylkingin [The Social Democrats] for those awful towers in Borgartún, but I feel like they’re following that path and I don’t appreciate it. You don’t like how the city is de- veloping? I like how the city has developed, but I’m afraid of all these hotels. And now the hotels are even complaining about noise coming from the bars! I find these people stupid…I don’t know who they “I was working at the milk factory and the en- gineers came up with an even smarter scheme. You signed up for vodka or rosé, and then they canned the booze in the middle of the night and labelled it ‘UHT Milk.” INTER VIEW Words Atli Bollason She must be the coolest 65-year-old in Iceland. Long, flowing silver hair. Black coat, black trousers, black ‘With the Beatles’ shirt. George Harrison pin on her left, John Lennon pin on her right. Between the two, a huge ‘peace’ necklace. Now top that off with a Pirate Party pin. Andrea Jónsdóttir is a well-known DJ in town. Every weekend you’ll find her sitting on a shelf at the back of Dillon Whiskey Bar flipping through bind- ers full of CDs and blasting classic rock song after classic rock song. You might also recognise her voice from the National Radio where she’s hosted a number of shows. Consider her the oldest and wisest bar guide ever. Reykjavík's DJ Queen Andrea Jónsdóttir says silence is too loud Photo Hörður Sveinsson

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