Atlantica - 01.02.2002, Blaðsíða 44

Atlantica - 01.02.2002, Blaðsíða 44
P H O TO P Á LL S TE FÁ N S S O N i-site❍ Tell us about the new album? What kind of sound has it got and who have you been working with? Our album Jinx has definitely got the most energetic sound of the albums Quarashi has done so far. It should definitely give the serial killer inspiration as well as the party-goers. I tried to give the mixes a vio- lent sound. As to the people we’ve been working with...there’s Brendan O’Brien, who’s worked with the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Soundgarden and Limp Bizkit. He mixed our opening track and the first single, ‘Stick ‘em Up’. We also collaborated with Cypress Hill’s Muggs in LA – he worked on a track called ‘Catch 22’, but it’s not on the album. Where do you buy music in Reykjavík? I try not to buy music in the big record stores because they take advantage of their monopoly situation here and overprice the music. But there are some other places like Gódi Hirdirinn and Safnarabúdin that are always useful when in need of some good music. An old Icelandic saying states that ‘it's better to go barefoot than without books’. Do you agree? Yes, to a certain extent. Obviously, this saying shows that literature has always played a significant part in people’s everyday lives here. Are you patriotic? I would like to think so, even though the word might have a different meaning today than it had a hundred years ago. Quarashi recently collaborated for a live event with the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra. Do you think Icelanders are particularly open-minded where music's concerned? Yes. It’s in the nature of small nations to be very open-mind- ed. They have to be, and Iceland is no exception to that. This is also one of our strongest quali- ties. In Iceland, no band wants be like another, and so we’ve got all kinds of music. Individualism is very strong and that comes from our forefathers... the Australians. Imagine you have a ‘holodeck’ at home, like on the Starship Enterprise, and you can beam in six characters, dead or alive, for a party at your place. Who's on the guest list? That’s a hard one... Fidel Castro, John F. Kennedy, Chuck D, Igor Stravinsky, Flea and Hemingway. Fidel, Hemingway and JFK would take care of the party. I would lay down some beats and have Flea do some grooves. Stravinsky would add the melodies and Chuck would bust some rhymes. What more could you ask for? Are you more productive in the winter or summer months? Definitely in the win- ter. There’s nothing much else to do except work dur- ing winter here...you get so angry at the weather and that produces the best music. Where do you take visitors for wining and dining? Nonnabiti...great place with great service and it’s open all night. If heaven and hell were places in Iceland, where would they be? I always figured hell would be Akureyri. After all, it’s Reykjavík’s main rival. And heaven is, of course, my favourite spot in the country, the disappearing Snæfellsjökull glacier. Reykjavík aside, which cities do you most enjoy and why? Buenos Aires, the capital of Argentina, because the best people in the world live there. Then New York City, both before and after the 11th of September. There’s no city in the world that has so much to offer everybody. And finally, La Paz, the capital of Bolivia. I’ve got some really crazy memories from that city, but it’s also really hard to breathe there, so that’s why La Paz comes in third. 42 A T L A N T I C A Punk-rock-rooted rap outfit Quarashi are releasing their first single from the forthcoming album Jinx worldwide in February. The band’s producer and songwriter, Sölvi Blöndal, took some time out to face the Atlantica firing squad. Interview by Jennifer McCormack. The Atlantica INQUISITION 033-042 I-site Atl102 14.12.2001 16:36 Page 42
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