Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.01.2017, Blaðsíða 27

Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.01.2017, Blaðsíða 27
Samaris — 'Black Lights' Track By Track 'Black Lights' Words JÓFRÍÐUR ÁKADÓTTIR Wanted 2 Say Oh, what a tune! I remember the day Doddi sent this one to me. I immedi- ately recorded demo vocals and kept humming the “wanted to say” line… when it came to writing the lyrics, I couldn’t get it out of my head, so we decided to stick with it. It’s a mixture of wanting to protect, preserve and appreciate nature, and joking about singing in English, and singing like Björk. Black Lights The working title for this one was “Nofríður” for a long time, because I wasn’t in the studio when the beat and chords were laid down, and the guys replaced vocals with Doddi singing into a vocoder. We were so obsessed with the chords we would listen to it on a loop for hours. That’s why it’s still six minutes… the first version was ac- tually about twenty. Gradient Sky This is the most sensual track of the album. It’s an unusual mantra—it’s structured as if you’re desperately holding onto something you can’t stop repeating. But all things change, like a gradient sky. T3MPO This is one of those remix back-and- forth songs. We’d made something, recorded something, and the next thing you know, Doddi had completely changed it! I think, for me, “T3MPO” is our ultimate 90s anthem… a tribute to a musical era we more or less missed. I Will When we started making this album we went to Berlin, rented an Airbnb flat and borrowed some speakers from a friend. We wrote a bunch of songs there, none of which made it to the album—except for a high-pitched sample of my voice crying “I WILL” in a very dramatic way. That became the core element of this song. R4VIN One of my favourites from the album. I’m a sucker for long, complicated and busy melodies. I had to fight, and com- promise a bit, to keep it in. The lyrics are this beautiful and pointless high— like, you can just listen and decide for yourself, but it’s inspired by how I felt living in Reykjavík that summer. Every- one was so high up in the sky. 3y3 This one was mostly composed by Doddi. He did such a beautiful job. When he showed us the demo, we loved it, but we had a hard time figur- ing out how we could add something to it. In the end, it was more or less some whispering, written and record- ed in the last recording session with Oculus in December. T4ngled This is one for the girls! We had been listening to so much RnB in the car when we were touring the year before, we had to have a go at making our own tribute. The melodies were all played live in Hljódriti and we got some help from the super-talented producer An- dri Dagur from Gervisykur. In Deep This is one of Doddi’s remixes. I think we’re just gonna make tracks like this in the future. Dancefloor stuff! All the clarinets were recorded in the stair- case. It just sounded better somehow. Don’t listen to what people tell you about the best mic in the room or pre- amp or whatever. They create a sys- tem to rely on so they don’t have to be creative and spontaneous. Have fun, and trust your guts! Cool is only ever what you say it is! WHY THEY WON First, the title track of “Black Lights” was nominated as song of the year. Then so was “Wanted 2 Say.” Then “R4ven.” And then it hit us. It’s just an all-around good album. Moving on from 2014’s ‘Silkidran- gar’, Samaris have advanced to a new level. “They’ve really stepped up their sound,” one panelist said. “They’re singing in English and Doddi’s production is fucking stun- ning—they’re just more present.” The panel went on talking about the production on this album, suggest- ing a reach into “James Blake ter- ritory.” The panel noted that even though the three band members were living in three different coun- tries while the album was coming together, they managed to make it completely cohesive. “It’s not just a collection of singles but something that makes sense,” one panellist says. “It kind of reminds me of how a concept album works. I’m a sucker for concept albums.” From Behind The Godhead Of The Synth Stack HATARI is 2016's Best Live Band Words HANNAH JANE COHEN HATARI has one song on the internet. That’s right, one song. Yet, the band has taken the underground scene of Reykjavík by storm. This one song— ‘Ódýr’—was played through shitty MacBook speakers at both the pre- game I was at for Halloween as well as the afterparty. Since, I’ve heard it blasted by all types: goths, black metal fans, techno-heads, even a few cool hipsters. That’s how versatile their music is. This isn't your average, uh, cybergoth-thing-act. The band is the lovechild of Kl- emens Hannigan, Matthías Tryg- gvi Haraldson, and Einar Stéfansson. This year they played five shows before their domination at Airwaves: once in Reykjavík, then Eistnaflug, then Lun- gA Festival and finally Norðanpaunk. That’s right. Our best live band only started playing live this year. If you’ve never seen them live, the whole thing is a bit Bioshock. They wear steampunk outfits and com- mand a sort of ritual-esque atmo- sphere. But with each twisted, bitter scream, HATARI spews digital fire and brimstone unto their audience; an apocalyptic cavalcade of fragment- ed beats twixt with broken, blazing horns. This dark outfit doesn’t just catch attention—they commanded it, ripping each and every solipsistic spider from the blackest corners of the soul. This may not be a band you would listen to at home—for obvious reasons—but from behind the godhead of the synth stack, shrouded in red, pix- elated mist, HATARI call for blood and we’re more than happy to oblige. An 8-bit shadow springs forth from the ashes of 2016 in small, square shades, a crew cut, and an overcoat, bellowing each syllable in a brood- ing baritone. Each set is a nihilistic Nuremburg rally, a charge into the millennial void, and you are given no choice but to follow them into the dust. If you can find them, that is—their brutality is matched only by their mystery. Erratic performers they might be, these shady, anony- mous canaries are conspiring to bomb the coalmine this year—we hope this award will appease them before they take the rest of us down with them. 27The Reykjavík GrapevineIssue 17 — 2016
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