Iceland review - 2019, Side 84

Iceland review - 2019, Side 84
82 Iceland Review Earlier this year, members of the band Hjaltalín surprised their fans by releasing their first single in five years. Even though the band’s members are all active in other projects, the innovative group seemed to be in hibernation for years, with many assuming that we’d seen the last of them. Turns out, Hjaltalín hadn’t quit. It hadn’t even been hibernating. Life just got in the way. Don’t call it a comeback I meet up with a couple of members of Hjaltalín in a small but cosy apartment in the old city centre. The environment is just like Hjaltalín, timeless yet modern. Sigríður Thorlacius and Hjörtur Ingvi Jóhannsson are still basking in the afterglow of a successful weekend of concerts at Harpa concert hall, billed as their biggest ever. “We feel pretty good these days,” Hjörtur tells me. According to Sigríður, the concert felt like the band breaking the cocoon of their creative hiberna- tion. “I think it was healthy for us to do something together. Things have been, not at a standstill, but if we’ve been working, it’s been on our own, privately. We decided at the beginning of the year to release a new song, just to get a little reaction, because when you get that reaction, it makes the work flow better. Then it’s like ‘OK, we’re doing something.’” Hjörtur is as excited as Sigríður about the recent concerts. “It’s like when you’ve spent a long time nurturing your garden and you’re starting to see some potatoes and swedes peeking out of the ground.” Even though Hjaltalín hasn’t been releas- ing new music or playing concerts regularly, they’ve been hard at work on an album, to be released later this year. Hjörtur tells me it’s been a long process. “We’ve been in this creative phase for a while now, about 3-5 years, recording and working on the new album. When it comes out, that’s harvest season.” A new kind of pop Hjaltalín has been one of the country’s most pop- ular groups since their first single Goodbye July (Margt að ugga) became a surprise hit in 2007, followed by their debut album, Sleepdrunk Seasons. All former schoolmates, the band has been working together in its current form for more than a decade. Every member of the group is a trained musician, and their pallette of instruments is much broader than you’d usually hear in a pop band. Hjörtur explains that their unique sound can be attributed to trained musicians bringing different skills and influences together to create something new. He tells me, “Högni entered the band as he started
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Iceland review

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