Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.11.2016, Side 23

Reykjavík Grapevine - 11.11.2016, Side 23
White sun Jófríður started doing low-key shows under the new moniker of JFDR last year, and from the very first perfor- mances it was apparent that some- thing special was coming. Her solo songs seem to possess a more devel- oped poetic voice than before, and they’re delivered with a subtle but noticeable sense of belief and assur- ance. From the opening notes of the dreamlike “White Sun,” to the spine- tingling, pin-drop quiet “Anything Goes” and the cyclical chord progres- sion of closing track “Journey,” the al- bum—entitled ‘Brazil’—is a wonderful collection. It began almost by accident. “I’d never had that vision of being a solo artist until I met [producer, drum- mer, multi-instrumentalist] Shahzad Ismaily,” says Jófríður. “He said, ‘I feel like you shouldn’t be in a band, you should do something solo.’ I just laughed, I had my bands and my proj- ects. Then we met one day walking down the street, and we said: ‘Hey, we were going to do something together, shall we just go and do it?’ We went to his studio in the middle of the night and recorded ‘White Sun.’ That record- ing is the version on the album.” The two worked on the record in- tensively, with Shahzad encouraging Jófríður to take control in the studio. “We put so much into it,” she contin- ues. “Shahzad and I put everything we have into that record—we allowed our- selves to do that. We did sessions in the middle of the night, and invited differ- ent people to contribute. I learned that you gain so much when you let people be themselves inside your music.” The dominant themes of the album, which was written during a twelve- month period of near-constant travel, are journeys and cycles—whether it’s the journey undertaken in the course of a year, or the opening and closing cycle of a relationship. The lyrics are littered with insights, small revela- tions, and quiet, unassuming wisdom. “I write a lot of lyrics, and I keep learning things about myself from them later,” says Jófríður. “One time, there was this strange thing… when I wrote ‘White Sun’ in 2014, I was at the very beginning of a relationship. We were living in different countries, so it’s about waiting for someone and having this ‘parted heart’ you have when you want someone to be there, and you’re very much in love. It’s also about finding a path, and having a home, or not having a home; having a heart, but not really having the heart, you know? “But around that time, I had a jour- ney from the Keflavík airport into the city for a few days,” she continues. “I was watching the sun—it was white, and I started thinking about that, and it became lyrics. Exactly a year later, that same relationship was fading. It had been a journey of tumbling, learn- ing, experiencing; finding things and figuring things out. There was a verse in the song that I wrote, not knowing what I meant by it at the time: ‘The sun will be white tonight, tomorrow will be red and bright.’ I had an eve- ning flight in the middle of summer, and the sun was literally bright red— so very bright. I stared at it, I thought about everything: how it had been a year. I started crying. It was this strange feeling of me telling myself something from the past to my future self, and knowing things I had no idea I knew at the time. I just knew that the relationship was over. It was the end of the cycle. I’d seen the sign.” Heart record Jófríður speaks fondly about the col- laborative, easygoing and spontane- ous process of making ‘Brazil’. Writ- ten and recorded during a personally challenging time period, the resulting record is something special—an ac- complished work that captures and expresses a complex range of feelings, moments, experiences and thoughts. “I didn’t think I’d be a person who sang about love,” Jófríður says. “But there’s something very human and beautiful and inspiring about it. I think it’s important to do a love re- cord. It’s a heart record! It’s about the heart. Breaking something, starting something—doing something, that then melts away. It’s about the cycles opening and closing. Maybe wherever you are in the cycle of a relationship, you can place yourself in those songs.” The album, with its themes of jour- neys and cycles, endings and begin- nings, marks the start of an exciting new chapter for Jófríður. “Pascal Pinon was about getting material written in my bedroom out of there—anywhere,” she says. “Samaris was finding that the bedroom wasn’t fearless enough— we wanted to dance and wear wonky costumes. GANGLY is a collaborative project between myself and two oth- er songwriters. It’s anonymous and highly conceptual. “JFDR is combining all these and finding my true voice,” she finishes. “It’s tender and pure, like it was in the bedroom; it’s fearless and wild like the sixteen-year-old me who wanted to crank it up and dance. It’s elegant, like the carefully curated songwriting and production of GANGLY. I want to pres- ent all of this in my solo project. It’s a new and long journey I’m entering.”

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