Reykjavík Grapevine - jun. 2023, Síða 27

Reykjavík Grapevine - jun. 2023, Síða 27
27 Music Filthy Interview The Main- land Is Shaking False Majesty’s Deathcore From The Islands Track By Track Fragments Virgin Orchestra’s Sonically Packed Debut EXPLORE UNSEEN ICELAND ON THE ULTIMATE FLYING RIDE OPEN EVERY DAY | flyovericeland.com MUSEUM OF DESIGN AND APPLIED ART GARÐATORG 1 210 GARÐABÆR OPEN TUE–SUN 12–17 WWW.HONNUNARSAFN.IS Instagram Facebook honnunarsafn PERMANENT EXHIBITION HÖNNUNARSAFNIÐ SEM HEIMILI AT HOME IN THE DESIGN MUSEUM THE PLATFORM HABITATIONS 4TH GRADERS TAKE ON INTERIOR DESIGN 18.04.–03.09. EXHIBITION PRESENCE NEW SWEATERS BY ÝRÚRARÍ 28.04.–27.08. WORDS Francesca Stoppani IMAGE Jenny Retschkowski Iceland is trembling and the epi- center is the Westman Islands. How- ever, it’s not an earthquake causing the rumble; it’s the sound of amps blasting deathcore. For this edition of the Filthy Interview series, I had a virtual sit down with False Majesty drummer Skæringur Óli Þórarinsson and guitarist Trausti Mar Sigurðar- son. AGE IS OVERRATED The majority of False Majesty’s members have been playing togeth- er in the local music scene for more than 15 years. They’re adults, most with children of their own, who want- ed a hobby outside their daily lives. They began talking about forming the band in 2017 and, in 2020, they had their first official practice.  False Majesty’s lineup was complete when Trausti joined as the vocalist last summer, solidifying their sound and drastically lowering the average age of the band. Trausti also plays in another Westman Islands metal band, Merkúr. “The age difference is quite big in False Majesty, but the band experience itself is not too far off from being in Merkúr,” Trausti says, explaining that while Merkúr aims to be as “headbangable as possible,” False Majesty’s focus is on melody and technical skill. FROM FIRE, REBORN “The local music scene in the West- man Islands is small but growing,” says Skæringur. “It has its own local legends and had around 40 active bands around 15 years ago.” Unfor- tunately, a major setback occurred when the main rehearsal space in a fish factory burned down. But a reviv- al is underway. Skæringur explains that the band has always been drawn towards technical and complex music be- cause it requires skill and effort. This focus on technique was an unspoken agreement among the band mem- bers. Some of their biggest influenc- es include bands like Slaughter to Prevail, Archspire and Lorna Shore. SHORT LIFE, GREAT AC- COMPLISHMENTS False Majesty took part in this year’s Wacken Metal Battle, where they faced off against this year’s winners Krownest. Skæringur and Trausti were humbled to learn in a previous interview that Krownest was intimi- dated by them. “We are so amazed to hear that, especially consider- ing False Majesty’s relatively short presence in the scene.” In fact, their Wacken set was only their second time performing with Trausti on vocals. WELCOMED WITH OPEN ARMS Being from a small island and having to take a boat to reach the mainland adds an extra level of excitement and hype to their performances. “We have never been excluded because we are not from the capital area,“ Skæringur says. They are, however, exploring the possibility of hosting gigs on the Westman Islands and inviting the whole Reykjavík scene to come cliff-swinging their black hearts out. “We have the perfect venues on the islands. We would love to set up a stage inside of one of the volcanic craters,” says Skæringur, dead serious. False Majesty has an upcoming gig at Gaukurinn alongside Epidermal Veil, Slor and Sóðaskapur on June 10. They also have their sights set on the Reykjavík Death Fest in Septem- ber. Have you already saved the date for June 10? Then, see you at Gaukurinn. If not, see you in hell. You can stay up to date with False Majesty’s on their Instagram page, @falsemajestyband WORDS Virgin Orchestra IMAGE Supplied by Virgin Or- chestra Released on May 12 via Smekkleysa, Fragments is Virgin Or- chestra’s debut album. Exhibiting a range of influences from post-punk to trip-hop, the album is “sonically packed,” in one band member’s own words. Virgin Orchestra walked us through their newest release track by track. INTRO This song was born out of an im- provised jam session. We created a drum loop and just started playing the first thing that came to mind on top of it. It soon turned into a song that’s constantly expanding and gets louder and more aggressive the longer it goes. OFF GUARD Most songs on the album were written while we were in separate countries since Stefanía spent the first half of 2022 in Berlin as an exchange student. This song was written in many different places. Stefanía sent the original demo from Berlin and Starri worked on it in Barcelona and Glasgow and Rún worked on it in Reykjavík. ON YOUR KNEES One of the first songs we ever wrote together back in the very early days of the band. We had talked about writing an album that was influenced by wartime and horror as a critique on the world today but this is kind of the only track that kept that initial idea as the rest of the tracks be- came more abstract. GIVE IN This song went through many trans- formations before we settled on a structure we liked. Similar to “on your knees,” this was written before Rún was in the band, but her strings really elevated them. It gave us the missing piece of the puzzle that the songs needed. The vocals and lyrics are very early one-take and impro- vised but we liked how free it felt so we decided to keep it. BOND The title of this song comes from the fact that something about the chord progression and build-up of the song reminded us of a Bond theme. When we were recording the album, this was the song we spent the most time on by far as we just kept on recording more and more layers using various instruments and gadgets available to us at the studio. A sonically packed song. SKIN The most minimalistic song on the album. This song was mostly written in our hotel room in Berlin a couple of weeks before we went into the studio. Writing it in that setting and under those circumstances had a big impact on the raw, stripped back nature the song took on. Stefanía only finished writing the lyrics five minutes before recording the vocals at the studio. Not because we were slacking, but because it just felt somehow right to finish the lyrics at the last moment to channel some kind of rawness and “in the moment feeling.” REWIND This song came together remark- ably fast. Stefanía wrote the synth, drum loop and sampled bits from an old Gloria Ann Taylor song and im- mediately we just got so many ideas for what we could do. We just start- ed writing with full force. The quiet ambient ending was partially born at the studio and we loved how it just kept on and on. No decisions had been made about how to end it. We had access to an old tape delay at the studio, so we recorded a bunch of cello and the synths through that which created this warbly and dreamy soundscape.

x

Reykjavík Grapevine

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Reykjavík Grapevine
https://timarit.is/publication/943

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.