Atlantica - 01.06.2011, Síða 43

Atlantica - 01.06.2011, Síða 43
 A t L A n t i c A 41 gusgus a behind the counter of the local organic store. “I wanted to do something different, like work on my solo project, but in reality I really didn’t know what I wanted—so I just walked around in circles for a couple of years and then came back home.” Biggi veira of GusGus worked with Hákonar– dóttir on her upcoming solo album, which she defines as “electronic pop; girly and sing-along but with dark undertones. Or that is how I see it now anyway, but you never know how it will end up.” She describes Biggi veira as a “mathematical genius and synth genius. With all the plug-ins and chords, never in a lifetime could I understand half of what goes on in his studio.” Hákonardóttir in turn helped out with choruses for Arabian Horse. “Then, they were going to do some live shows, and asked ‘Aren’t you going to come along?’” And just like that, she was back. The band members are best friends both on stage and off. “We’re like a family, in a way. They are very nice guys to hang out with; we are all very similar people. We are on the same wavelength.” Urdur Hákonardóttir is currently working on her solo album. “Great at making melodies. Very strange melo- dies.” -Högni Egilsson “One of the most soulful singers around. She sings her heart out every time. She is magical.” –Daníel Ágúst The Young Blood HögNI EgILSSON “I never planned to be a musician,” says Högni Egilsson, one of the biggest talents to emerge from the Icelandic music scene in recent years. Wearing a woolen sweater, with a blonde beard, and with wild yellow hair tied carelessly in a bun above his head, Egilsson is the handsome embodi- ment of the modern-day Icelandic viking. His ener- gy is contagious and his charisma captivating, not least to the legion of female admirers that has already sprung up in his wake. Egilsson shrugs his shoulders, almost puzzled. “I don’t know… I don’t really think about it. It is nice, but at the end of the day it doesn’t pay the rent… or maybe it does?” Egilsson became involved in music through the violin, which he played from the age of five until the age of fifteen. “But I wasn’t that much into music, it never really interested me”. That was until a school friend, singer-songwriter Snorri Helgason, started to feed him with albums. Aged seventeen, Egilsson bought himself a guitar. And when his art school teacher noticed that he was more inter- ested in music than art, he switched over to study composition at the Iceland Academy of the Arts. Egilsson has since made his way to the frontline of Icelandic music. Known primarily for fronting indie act Hjaltalín, he has also made music for theaters, performed solo at the 2011 Reykjavik Arts Festival, produced arrangements for indie stal- warts múm, and he has a solo project in the works, too. At only twenty-five, Egilsson’s talent and vision belie his age. What drives him? “I am so fascinated with music; creating something from nothing. And I like the human aspect of it. The idea of people coming together, sharing their personal endeavors and making connections. There’s strong human warmth in it. That is why I like to make music with lots of different people; it is fun to connect with people through something like that.” With a tiny but energetic music scene, Iceland is the perfect environment for an outgoing art- ist. “I was just walking down Skólavördustígur Street and came across Stephan Stephensen on his way to lunch with David Thór Jónsson [multi- instrumentalist who worked on arrangements for Arabian Horse], and I said, ‘I’ll join you guys.’ From that, the whole thing started for me.” Egilsson sings three songs on the album (for which he contrib- uted melodies and lyrics) including ‘Within You’, the unofficial Icelandic summer hit of 2011. The leap from a concert hall to a club floor is long, but it is one that Egilsson makes comfortably: “It is purely electric, which is of course a major dif- ference from Hjaltalín, where the approach was always organic and acoustic. Also, the music works on different parameters. The state of mind is more in the foreground, the state of the audience, the mass of music—it is very different, but very inter- esting music,” he explains, offering nothing but the highest praise for his collaborators. “Biggi veira is the craziest technology genius. He’s got millions of cables and he puts all of it into this one flight case. It is the most compact flight case I have ever seen,” he says. As for President Bongo, “he has a very good ear for what elements matter—good at pressing the mute button. That is really his instru- ment, the mute button.” And with GusGus he feels right at home, “I’ve only made music for 6 years or so. I don’t really have roots that I have to connect to, I feel like it is very easy for me to jump aboard with GusGus, because I don’t feel that I am going against some- thing I stand for. I guess what I stand for is just versatility.” Högni Egilsson is currently working on a solo project. His band Hjaltalín will start working on a new album later this summer. “The handsome boy star, the young blood… He is a musical genius; he amazes me. You can put him in front of a mike with a track and he will make up the most beautiful melodies.” -Urdur Hákonardóttir “A well-educated musician and very keen on try- ing different styles and making interesting stuff for our ears. He has this broad voice and very good control as a musician.” -Daníel Ágúst a Z ZZZ Z
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Atlantica

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