Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.04.2017, Síða 34

Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.04.2017, Síða 34
Music Icelandic pop singer Glowie, who was one of the nine emerging artists on the cover of our special Iceland Airwaves magazine last year, has signed a major label deal with Columbia Records/ RCA. Glowie said, on Facebook: “Everything is possible if you just believe. My dad stamped this in my head when I was ten years old, when I told him I was going to become a professional singer and dancer when I grew up. Many obstacles have arisen along the way, but I’ve signed my first record deal with Columbia Records in London, and RCA in the USA. The feeling is indescribable. Now begins a new adventure.” Góða ferð, Glowie! The annual national battle-of-the- bands competition Músíktilraunir (“Music Experiments,” in English) recently came to its climax with a concert held at Harpa. The winners were Between Mountains, a duo from the the Westfjords. Second came the charmingly named Phlegm, and third were Omotrack. Previous winners and runners-up have gone on to garner a lot of attention in Iceland and beyond, with Músíktilraunir’s notable alums in- cluding Samaris, Mammút, Of Monsters and Men, Agent Fresco and Vök. The Extreme Chill festival have an- nounced the first names from their 2017 lineup. The headliners, both from the UK, will be The Orb and Mixmaster Morris. The homegrown acts an- nounced so far include Gyða Valtys- dóttir, Jónas Sen, Stereo Hypnosis, Jón Ólafsson & Futuregrapher, Tonik Ensemble and SiGRÚN, with more to be announced. The 2017 edition will happen in Reykjavík for the first time, between July 7-9. Tickets are on sale now at midi.is, priced at 7,900 ISK— previous editions have sold out. Icelandic musicians old and new have been getting busy in the Americas. At the Reykjavík Festival, to be held in the LA Disney Hall, attendees will be treated to a lineup that includes múm, JFDR, DJ flugvél og geimskip, Jóhann Jóhannsson, the Bedroom Community collective, and Sigur rós, amongst oth- ers. The shows happen April 4-17, after which 'Björk Digital' will be on display from May 19-June 4. Just across the border in Mexico, Björk also played to a rapturous crowd at the Ceremonia Fes- tival, appearing a day late after it was almost cancelled due to a windstorm that damaged the stage, leading a lo- cal newspaper to declare “Björk Saves Ceremonia!” Finally, Low Roar are also midway through a long tour of the US in support of their forthcoming album, entitled ‘Once In A Long, Long While’. JR MUSIC NEWS English Folk Hits Reykjavík Words: Gabriel Dunsmith Photo: Gisli Egill Hrafnsson Chris Foster’s ‘Hadelin’ release concert Sat., April 8, Mengi, 21:00, 2,000 ISK English folk ballads don’t get much attention these days on a musi- cal stage saturated with grunge- hip-techno-disco-pop. But here to give them the attention they de- serve is Chris Foster, a Somerset native who has lived in Reykjavík since 2004. Chris’s work preserv- ing and promoting traditional Icelandic music—and reviving old Icelandic instruments such as the langspil and fiðla—is worthy of praise in its own right, but for his upcoming album release con- cert at Mengi, Chris returns to his roots. At the artsy venue just off Skólavörðustígur, Chris will debut ‘Hadelin’, his first solo album in nine years and a tour-de-force of heart-tugging, story-laden song. Though pop culture’s obsession with all that is glitzy, ostentatious and cacophonous threatens to rel- egate the ballad as a form to dusty Oxford archives, Chris insists on his website that these songs “are not museum pieces.” Instead, “they refer to the natural world, the rhythm of the seasons, birth, life, death, love, betrayal, the ebb and flow of the struggle for justice and human rights.” In digging up old songs and painting them in a new light, Chris effectively re- claims the ballad and insists they are worthy of singing. What is a ballad, you ask? Sim- ply put, it is a song that tells a story in narrative form. It often lacks a chorus, instead relying on a se- ries of verses that carry the same melody. Ballads have their origins in medieval Europe, where they were initially accompanied by dancing. They were often passed down orally, leading their style, in- strumentation and lyrics to change frequently across the centuries—a fluidity which Chris embraces in his album. In adapting such an- cient songs for the 21st century, Chris argues that ballads infuse our lives with something vital. In a world beset by wars and op- pression, the ballads open a win- dow into how we might mourn. Take this verse, for example, from “The Trees They Grow So High,” the seventh track on Chris’s album: She made for him a shroud of the hadelin so fine and every stitch she put in it, her tears came trickling down, crying, “Once I had a bonny boy, but now I have got never a one, so fare you well my bonny boy forever.” The song tells of an arranged mar- riage between a woman of twenty- one and a man of sixteen, whose sudden death leaves his widow stricken. Though the lyrics may appear antiquated at first glance, the song’s power lies in the raw- ness of its emotions and its capac- ity to bring grief to the surface of life. Ballads force us to confront our own darkness as well as the darkness of the world, and in that way can function as instruments of healing. Chris sings with such deftness that you can hear in his voice his sense of home, his drive for jus- tice and his deep love of life. He is an artist in the truest sense: one who is dedicated to his craft, who desires to tell a story rather than entertain. His show at Mengi promises to be—like his album title—a thread of sorts, infusing the current generation with the gems of the past. LISTEN &SHARE: gpv.is/dun05 LET’S TACO ‘BOUT IT We are located at: Höfðatorg, Smáralind, Spöngin, N1 Hringbraut, Kringlan, N1 Bíldshöfði, Dalshraun, Nýbýlavegur and Akureyri. Mexican food that is a true fiesta for your taste buds! Laugavegur 24 | #publichouse101 publichouse.is THE COOLEST GASTROPUB IN TOWN Kitchen open until 23

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