Discover Narnia – The Magical World of Nordic Music

📷 @bleirvik

Is there anything more magical than an expansive tract of land carpeted with thick pile, powdery snow, imbued with a sense of hush and serenity?  As one soaks up its daz-white emptiness offset by a stunning azure blue sky and high noon sun of the type more associated with the Mediterranean, the purest air seeps into ones lungs, invigorating, healing, giving one an unexpected head-rush of dizzying proportions.  This is mid-Norway in early February and despite its minus three temperatures, it has a clement, almost springlike feel to its late winter weather.

As if by way of silent solidarity, the weather replicates the colourful iridescence and paradoxical cold charm, that like a pair of oversized, ice-tipped wings, so much of the music from this region drapes itself in.

Norwegian music has for many years held me in its thrall, with its effortless scaling of Himalayan vocal heights, pristine tonal clarity and sheer unadulterated enthusiasm.  Time and again, it has drawn me to its Narnia-esque snowscapes, lured by its easy charm and communal spirit, each visit proving a little more enticing, each foray drawing me a little deeper into its ‘norsk kultur’.

Enough of the Danubian hyperbolic flow!  A recent trip to Norway brought about the opportunity for several interesting interviews, some of which were, it was agreed, to be published by a rather large online publication.  However and most regrettably, despite having received written agreement prior to the event, said publication has since reneged on its commitment and those long hunched over transcripts have gone unseen.

So, by way of small reparation to those artists who were promised a space in the much broader columns of that blog which shall remain nameless, I have decided to do a three-part Norwegian special to kick off my new Discover series featuring the best of Nordic music.  The two posts will be made up of a sprinkling of those artists who are doubtless feeling very much aggrieved (you’re not on your own!) and a smattering of others to whom my ears are oft’ inclined.  Enjoy, Derv x

WHO? KATRIN FRODER

Bergen born Katrin Frøder who goes by her surname, is one of many artists signed to the Toothfairy label, who are fast becoming ‘a thing’ in their native patch.  Best known for her unmistakable signature vocal that resides up there somewhere alongside the seraphims, Frøder crafts hypnotic electronic-based music saturated in more technological quirks than would challenge the best spark.

Having taken some time out to recalibrate, the Norwegian who is currently beavering away at penning new songs, says a revitalised return to form has inspired new music even stronger and more alive than that of her self-titled debut.

With several lives dates down and appearances at top festivals under her belt, the singer opted out of the chance to play at SXSW, choosing instead to stay closer to home to continue with her songwriting.  She has most recently been releasing collaborations with fellow label mate and renowned electronic producer Carl Louis, best known this side of the North Sea for his work with ARY.

Quirky, with an idiosyncratic style and a penchant for a bit of blue hue, Frøder is an artist who stands out from the crowd while her unorthodox creative style lends itself to weaving both spiralling sonic fascinators and beat-driven crowd pleasers.  Most recent releases see her featuring on Carl Louis’ Easy and this wistful wonder, Come With Me. Expect new solo music later this year.

WHO? LUDVIG MOON

Each time I go to write a review of LM’s music, I have to return to their FB page to count up just how many of them there are in this sprawling indie horde (there are 7).  Ludvig Moon, signed to Norwegian indie label Riot Factory, are a band who I would classify as ‘still maturing’, a group within touching distance of nailing their sound.

Their debut album Kin had all the ingredients for a runaway success but alas, as seems to be the norm with much indigenous Norwegian ‘pop’ music, it didn’t really figure in their music charts scheme of things.  Highly acclaimed and critically well received, it was, is, give or take the odd hiccup, an extremely well produced compendium of thrillers and seducers.

Ludvig Moon aren’t just another indie band – they are the sum of extremely talented instrumental parts, complete with a duet of vocals that are a synchronised match made in harmony heaven.  While they may look a little top heavy on the instrumental side, and are usually found spilling over the side of any industry standard stage, when you strip back to component level the wealth of the individual threads doesn’t just validate it compounds the splendour of the overall weave.

Ludvig Moon say they’re in a happier place and it shows. What’s also evident is an abundance of freshly charged high voltage energy.

Blankets their latest from the forthcoming All Our Friends EP, due out on 26th April,  (there doesn’t appear to be a pre-order so keep your eyes peeled) is a collaboration with The Little Hands of Asphalt and Team Me, possibly the only band to be able to lay claim to having c.99% of Norway’s musician population pass through its line-up since its inception.

There’s a touch of the poppier side of alt-rockers MSP to this track which drifts nicely back to a mid-90s landscape of Britpop when boys could be girls and girls could be whoever the damn hell they wanted to be.  A video montage of ‘home “let’s get shit-faced” movies’ and archive film footage shows humour, personality and too much tongue.  New music due date, 26/4/2017.

WHO? LOVESPEAKE

Ooh, one sip of this seductive sweetness and you’ll be intoxicated for hours.  An anaesthetic for a bad day, heartbreak or general pain in the ass-iness, Novocaine is our new musical drug of choice as produced by the colourpop hit factory that is Lovespeake.

Every picture tells a story, and this track’s artwork alone, should give music fans a good indication as to the optimistic mindset and rainbow of creativity behind this Norwegian ensemble.  Headed up by Alexander ‘Pav’ Pavelich, who I had the pleasure of running into recently at an Einar Stray gig, Lovespeake and their album DNA were one of the runaway musical successes of 2016.  Their precisely conjured cocktails of sun-kissed melodies, Caribbean beats and retro-disco are the product of the most fertile of musical imaginations combined with a rush of vital dynamism.

Lovespeake cosy up to singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Max Frost, who seems to have a lyrical thing for pills of a certain persuasion #Adderall, on their latest piece of colourful wizardry, with the Texan adding a deep south raspy drawl to counter Pav’s spotless polar falsetto. Two things strike you when you first hear this track – Frost’s deliberately spacious vocal and the song’s ’70s disco groove.

This audacious combination produces something to the effect of a mash-up of a slowed down Someday by The Strokes and A Night To Remember, the 1978 smash by the most classy of all funksters Shalamar.

Like the most delicious dessert laced with bourbon, this is toxic saccharin; a moment on the lips, a myriad soporific trips.

WHO? SIGRID

Uncredited

Following the lead of Adele, Aurora and er, A-Rihanna, newcomer Sigrid goes by forename alone.

The baby sister of singer/songwriter Tellef Raabe, she was singing backing vocals to his headliner at the Norwegian Trondheim Calling festival in February 2016. What a difference a year makes!

Despite the fact that her first single Sun, which she released in 2013 at the tender age of 16, was a smash hit, it wasn’t until she signed to Island Records that the wheels began to seriously turn for this youngster.  With the full force of the Island wind-machine behind her, Don’t Kill My Vibe didn’t just land, it torpedoed its way into our musical space.

Frighteningly perfect pop, it’s like an angry feline with an itch and the odd human to scratch. “You think you’re so important to me, don’t you” she swipes at some envious no-mark, her pitch-perfect vocal sung with that confidence only the young can muster, bouncing off echoey drum-claps and negotiating the melody’s high altitudes with the sort of conviction most of her peers will never achieve.

One of the latterday signs that you have ‘arrived’ is when you acquire your own Wikipedia page … Sigrid, but in case we need to reaffirm just how good this girl is, here’s the acoustic version of her global (yes global!) hit, Kill My Vibe. Watch, listen, shiver.

WHO? JENNY HVAL

Writer, musical architect, experimenter, songsmith and latterday Norwegian icon, Jenny Hval is revered the same way in Norway as Bjork is in Iceland.

A protagonist at the fore of the current zeitgeist of female avant-gardists taking the oft maligned genre of art-pop to the masses, she is as lauded for her outspoken social commentary as she is for her creative brilliance.  If music could be an ‘installation’ in the same way art is, Hval’s work would be first in the door of the Tate Modern swiftly followed by a stint in the Astrup Fearnley.

Her last record Blood Bitch was a highly acclaimed concept album influenced by all things hematic. It was rapturously received by critics who universally heaped it critical acclaim.  Cited by every influential publication in their ‘best of’ lists for 2016, it was the overall winner of the annual Phonofile Nordic Music Prize for best Nordic album, the award being presented to Hval during the renowned By:Larm international music festival.

Most recently Hval has been in the news with her bonafide collaboration with Welsh producer Kelly Lee Owens, who famously reworked her track Kingsize back in 2015.  Recalling Owen’s “personal affinity for water” Anxi slips and slides its techno persona through the musica obscura that lies between ambient and pop. Pulsing through a myriad metamorphoses, it maintains a mood of dark foreboding as Hval intersperses the electronic narrative with bizarre spoken word vocals – a monologue which moves at a pace that is quirkily out of sync with the pull of Owen’s beat.

The song swoops up out of the darkness into a brighter soundscape at the heart of which is a steady techno pulse, until apropos of nothing, it swerves right back down again, into an otherworldly void. Art that manifests a host of unorthodox ideas, music which reaches far beyond its natural boundaries; that is probably how Hval’s work is best described.

Jenny Hval will perform in Dublin’s NCH on 6th October as part of their Perspectives series. Tickets http://www.nch.ie

Nordic music, Norwegian in particular, has evolved and grown so spectacularly over the past decade that it is now hard to remember a time when it wasn’t part of our natural musical make-up.  If you haven’t previously come across any of the five featured artists hopefully this first chapter in a new Nordic themed series will have sufficiently opened your minds to excavate further down into this magical, musical mine.  If not, please do come back, there’s plenty more coming down the tracks.

As usual, no music series worth its salt would come without a complementary playlist.  Here’s our ‘starter for five’, which we will add to week on week with each new blog-post.

DervSwerve

 

Why Norwegian Music Needs Trondheim Calling

Ludvig Moon, Live at Trondheim Calling Photo Austin Muirhead

Ludvig Moon, Live at Trondheim Calling
Photo Austin Muirhead

Of all the Norwegian music festivals held every year, Trondheim Calling is possibly the most important.  Sure, it doesn’t feature international stars in its line-up like it’s sister fest Øyafestivalen or former ‘ones to watch’ who have cracked their respective national music glass-ceilings as seen at by:Larm, but what it does, it does exceedingly well.  More importantly, what it sets out to achieve – showcase upcoming Norwegian musical talent to a wide and diverse audience – it nails, with aplomb.

While Klubb-Øya features emerging artists for a pre-festival one night only, and Off:Larm sees newbies playing venues on the the periphery of the main festival campus, Trondheim Calling gives the rising stars of Norway’s music scene its complete attention. They are the cogs on which its ever growing wheel turns, central to its very being, not accessories to the fact.

No other music festival in Norway invests as much time, energy and money in importing international delegates to help export indigenous talent.  With the assistance of industry bigwigs like Music Norway, NRK P3 and a plethora of press, bookers, agents and PR folks, as well as a horde of volunteers, the festival organising committee brings together a crack team of international industry heavies to mentor, advise, critique and encourage.

Central to the festival is a three day conference programme put together with complete interactivity in mind. It includes workshops, Q&A, presentations, interviews (this year saw mega-watt Talk Talk producer Phill Brown in conversation with Gary Bromham), as well as interactive studio, networking and pitching sessions.

Over the course of three days, a carefully selected expert delegation impart cold hard industry facts, deliver priceless advice and recount a variety of personal and business anecdotes, often with hilarious results.  A little levity is always good to soften a professional environ, which for inexperienced ‘just wanna make music’ musicians, can be more than a little daunting.  Daytime TC is a well oiled, professionally run, conference machine.

This year’s festival saw a new addition to its programme in the form of a pitch/mentoring experimental concept which the organisers hoped would better connect the conference and concert programmes.  Entitled ‘Norway Calling’ it centred around seven acts presenting and playing to an international listening panel who subsequently offered feedback on the artist’s live performance, chosen song(s) and promo-pitching techniques.  The aim was to help give “export ready” artists a bit of an edge, to add a little bit of polish to diamonds still in the rough!

The seven acts featured in the inaugural session were Ludvig Moon, Henrik the Artist, Frøder, Dreamarcher, AGY, Elsa & Emilie and Hajk.  Each act had to make a three minute presentation to all of the festival delegation – national and international – which was then followed up with a series of pre-arranged speed-networking sessions with mentors of the artist’s choice.

Frøder
Frøder

The seven presentations of mixed quality, were very diverse indeed, ranging from heartfelt ad lib to Michael Moore style docu-films. What quickly became apparent were the varying levels of preparedness, assuredness and nous with which each act approached and handled their pitch.  What was also evident was the level to which the acts had had their presenting skills honed by their label/management/pr teams, or not.

This is why festivals like Trondheim Calling are so, so important to indigenous emerging artists.  In 2017, it’s no longer just about the music, the PA system or even the lyrics. These days music artists need to be semi-professional sales people on top of being highly skilled creatives.  They need to know how, when and where to sell themselves and their music.  How to grab the attention of bookers and press suffering from indie overload and electronic ennui.

Like all ‘aspiring’ brands, and ultimately branding is an integral piece of the holy grail jigsaw, bands need an USP. “This is what I’ve always wanted to do since I was a child” no longer cuts it in a world spliced open by social media apps giving endless platforms to anyone and everyone from wannabe vlogger to gottabe fashion stylist. Today’s music artists don’t just need a new, unique sound, they also need a well honed elevator pitch!!

The TC conference programme aims to take musicians out of their comfort zones, opening them up to facts and figures to which they might not normally have access.  With self-promotion, marketing and quality music writing focal points of the conference programme, the organising committee has ensured that Trondheim Calling stands apart from its festival peers.

By corralling delegates in a single festival space, TC affords Norway’s rising star musicians an unparalleled opportunity to speed-date their way around industry connoisseurs and aficionados, networking and connecting with people who in either the immediate or long terms, may be able to help them get onto the next rung of the music ladder.

Nocturnal TC is “all about the bass” and 2017’s line-up showcased the best of the latest crop of musicians who remain just under the parapet. Wall to wall music in every shape and shade performed by more than 70 artists, belts out from 10+ cross-Trondheim venues. With the bars and clubs in close quarters, it’s easy to hop from one venue to the next as one zig zags their way through jam packed, spoilt for choice nightly schedules.

Amish 82 Live at Rockheim
Amish 82 Live at Rockheim

With all tickets sold out, gaining entry to some of the smaller venues proved impossible, as anyone who turned up to bijou Moskus to see Pom Poko found out.  However, in the main, queues moved quickly and gaining access to the majority of live performances was relatively easy.  Strong, energised performances and hyped up, super enthusiastic audiences were the order of the festival.  Yes, there were a few sound issues, but Albert Hall aside, aren’t there always!

What the artists playing TC lack in major league experience and slickly polished production they make up for in unbridled passion, raw undiluted talent and an energy of a wattage second only to that of the national grid.  Audience after audience radiated excitement, danced exuberantly and sing-screamed appreciation.  And at the end of a live set, no artist can ask for better than that.

In the world of emerging talent the unparalleled role played by Trondheim Calling is pivotal.  This mid-Winter festival fulfils its brief and more. A three day support and networking hub for musical ingenues by day, stellar sonic showcase of rising stars that more than entertains cross-cultural, cross-generational audiences by night.  It’s the perfect destination-fest for lovers of both music and travel alike.

Details of Trondheim Calling 2018 can be found here.  Norwegian Airlines and SAS fly direct to Trondheim from multiple UK locations, or via Oslo or Stockholm from Dublin.  The Clarion Hotel & Congress Trondheim is the festival’s HQ; rates and details can be found on their website.

Move Over Sweden, Norway Has Arrived #Sigrid

sigrid-raabe

Introducing Sigrid Raabe, the Norwegian challenger to the Larsson throne!

One year ago this month, I stood in Trondheim’s Dokkhuset watching headliner Tellef Raabe close the Trondheim Calling music festival.  Last week, in that very same city, I sat on a sofa in the Clarion Congress hotel with the head of another music festival.  We were discussing the Norwegian music artists we felt were going to go #gold in 2017.  Top of that list came the afore-mentioned Tellef’s baby sister, Sigrid.

Coming from a family who immersed themselves in music and culture, all of whom are musically talented, Sigrid Raabe who began her career as her brother’s backing singer, has finally stepped out of the shadow of her older siblings.  And with a GIANT step at that!

Recently signed to the Island Records division of Universal Music, Sigrid, who goes by her first name a la Kylie & Adele, has just released her debut single, ‘Don’t Kill My Vibe‘, and it’s 100% electrocket-pop.

With a big and bold voice scuffed by a grungy, gravelly texture that is the antithesis of the her ice-tipped Norwegian peers, Sigrid doesn’t just sing, she punches out a formidable yet mellifluous vocal with a plucky confidence and ease honed by years of on-stage experience, that belie her young age.

Opening with modulated vocals and sombre piano chords the song quickly perks up with the addition of rapid synth sequences, underground basslines, bombastic percussion and Sigrid’s feisty vocal. A vocal that picks up and rugby tackles the 2-fingered gutsy attitude of the track’s lyrics.

“You’re acting like you hurt me but I’m not even listening …

You think you’re so important to me don’t you, but I wanted you to know that you don’t belong here” 

alesund

‘Don’t Kill My Vibe’ is a pop song in the mould of Zara Larsson, another Nordic singer who isn’t afraid to sound off about how she feels.  Similarly to the Swede’s street style, the track builds from the ground upwards on a foundation inlaid with the #hiphop beats that give it a refreshing newness and raw energy lacking in many of today’s ‘same old’ churn.

Swede Zara Larsson is to glam-meets-street pop as Norwegian Sigrid is to dance-pop with a feisty urban twist, and while Ms Zara has been one of the top Scandinavian exports of the past few years, the Queen of the Nordic territories just might be about to lose her golden crown to a formidable new challenger!!  Time will tell, but for my money, I don’t see why not!  Likewise, I can also see a world in which both Scandi sirens can ‘do’ dual world domination! #girlpower

Sigrid’s single, ‘Don’t Kill My Vibe’ is out now on Island Records with an accompanying video due to be released shortly.  Listen to her ‘packs a punch’ pop track here,

Sigrid is set to play by:Larm in March and TGE (UK) in May – if you’re anywhere near Oslo or Brighton on either occasion you know what to do!  Follow Sigrid on Facebook and Twitter – and you’ll find me likewise @ #DervSwerve

Pom Poko – Unleash New Single Ahead of Trondheim Calling & Cruise Into Urort Final!

Pom Poko Urortfinalen 2017
Pom Poko Urortfinalen 2017

Norwegian modernist collective Pom Poko have just released their third single ‘It’s a Trap’ accompanied by an impressive avant-garde ‘toon visual, the work of Olav Fangel Jamtveit, brother of the band’s vocalist, Ragnhild FJ.

A song about release and arrival, letting go to achieve self-awareness, ‘It’s a Trap’ is a quirky, punchy little sherbet that fizzes with pops of 90’s post-punk with more than a hint of glam psych.  Without doubt the track benefits from the experimental nous and masterly hand of Highasakite‘s Kristoffer Lo, a man who knows his way around more than a few instruments.  Adding his trademark guitar, brass and a.n.other sounds to the mix, Lo has taken Pom Poko’s sound in a more experimental and diverse direction, giving the original live jam the same depth and texture he brings to all his collaborations.

While the instrumental backdrop has some sharp edges, it is chasmed by sufficient wide spaces to counter-balance the intensity. As usual, vocal duties of the infinitely starlit variety are carried off with effortless ease by Ragnhild Fangel Jamtveit and if her previous live vocal performances are the benchmark to go by, Pom Poko’s two gigs at Trondheim Calling should be something else and then some more!  During TC the band will also perform a live sesh for P3’s Ruben.  Unfortunately for me it’s happening on the Wednesday, ahead of my arrival ‘on scene’.

In addition to their saffron shot nocturnal cartoon visual accompaniment, Pom Poko have adorned their single with the cutest, candy-coloured artwork by Norwegian illustrator Erlend Peder which you can see here!  The floral bedecked character is as yet to be identified!

Illustration Erlend Peder
Illustration Erlend Peder

In other news, Pom Poko have made it to the Urort Final 2017 (a Norwegian national award for promising emerging artists); if you like what you hear, you can vote for Pom Poko to win this prestigious award, here. #doit

It is a testament to their punky quirkiness that Pom Poko give their facebook page “unofficial status” – hook up with it here to touch base with the band and keep up to speed with their lives at Trondheim Calling and their Urort escapades!

The future is definitely as bright as the characters in their ‘It’s a Trap’ video for this effervescent four-piece – I hope you’ll join me in wishing them all the luck in the world – for Trondheim Calling, for Urort and we-ell, for the future.

‘It’s a Trap’ is available now via Phonofile – http://phonofile.link/its-a-trap  .  Watch the captivating fam-made visual here.

As Far As I’m Concerned, ESO Are Beyond Impressive

eso-nov-2016-by-christian-zervos
eso-nov-2016-by-christian-zervos

Sandvika natives, Einar Stray Orchestra are to indie music what the Divine Comedy are to alt-pop.  In fact, with his suave baritone and predilection for quirky, on-point lyrics and gregarious, orchestral manoeuvres, Einar Stray is for all intents and purposes, the Norwegian Neil Hannon.  Tbh, I can’t help fantasising about what spectacular sonic soap-operas the pairing of Stray with Hannon could magic-up … ah, one can dream.

Einar Stray’s five-piece ‘orchestra’, for orchestral they are, have just released ‘As Far As I’m Concerned‘ the second single from their upcoming album set for a 2017 release via Sinnbus & Toothfairy.  The follow-up to 2016’s ‘Penny For Your Thoughts’, it’s a lavish affair, awash with resplendent string sequences, bright vivacious melodies and smoothly manoeuvred time changes underpinned by dynamic contributions from the R/S.

Vocally, the sweet lightness of Ofelia Østrem Ossum’s soft mezzo is the perfect foil for the dark shade of Stray’s rich baritone, while lyrically, this cleverly worded opus centres on the theme of the fear of change. “The fear of turning into someone the old you despite. The fear of throwing your life away going in the wrong direction. Moving forward can be terrifying – yet it’s the only way.” 

ESO have announced an upcoming European tour kicking off in one of my favourite cities, Vienna, on 13th April. The tour will see them play countries such as Switzerland, Belgium and the UK amongst others but alas, no Irish dates seem to be on the cards! ESO are however lined-up to play Norway’s Trondheim Calling festival and for those of you who like me will be lucky enough to grace those snowy paths from 2nd to 4th February, full details of the artist schedule and conference programme are here.

2017 also sees the release of Einar Stray Orchestra’s third album, which, if the two superb singles are indicative of its overall quality, should be pretty much splendidly symphonic, colourfully creative and in two words, beyond impressive.

Full details of ESO’s tour and their upcoming album release can be found on their Facebook page.  Follow them there and on their Twitter page to keep up to speed with their musical escapades and a possible collaboration with our own Neil Hannon (well, stranger things have happened!).

To read about my own upcoming escapades over at Trondheim Calling, check into my blog, or hang out here on FB or Twitter.

Dagny Shines An Ultraviolet Light On The World Of Pop

Dagny Photo Andrea Edmondson, London's Courtyard Theatre
Dagny Photo Andrea Edmondson, London’s Courtyard Theatre

I’ve met Dagny … she’s the funny, self-deprecating, bubbly young woman, with whom I spent an hour chit-chattering before cajoling her into posing for a daft photo in the foyer of the Clarion hotel in Trondheim.

That was back in a snow-ridden February, just before she was due to play to her live set as part of the Trondheim Calling Festival.  The Norwegian popstrel wasn’t feeling 100%.  Her throat was a little scratchy. She made herself a hot drink and went up to have some quiet time in her bedroom.

Three hours later she blew the sox off a capacity crowd sardined into the massive glass menagerie that is the Rockefeller venue, with a kick ass performance that had them screaming their appreciation and baying for more.

She was going to the States she told me, to work with some top liners, producers, other musicians, play some lives, shoot the breeze, soak it all up, #livethedream.  It was all hopefully gonna kick off for Dagny before the end of the year.

Now here we are in September, the sun is getting low in the sky and the evenings longer.  What better way to transition from the azure days of Summer (what Summer?) to the hazy shades of Autumn with the sun-soaked, rainbow hued pop songs of Dagny’s debut EP, ‘Ultraviolet‘.

Five nuggets of pure pop gold, ‘Ultraviolet’ has had UK music media in its thrall since its release a few days ago.  We’re thinking especially of PopJustice Ed in Chief, Peter Robinson, who’s been raving about it with a capital R!

This bouquet of punchy pop kicks off with a retro-vibing, beat-tastic bamarama.  With its guitar licks carved out of the ’70s and a melody dug up out of the garden of Now That’s What I Call The ’80s, ‘Fight Sleep’ is what you might expect to hear if legendary singer/songwriter Cathy Dennisshe of Kylie mega-hit ‘Can’t Get You Outta My Head’ fame, was to do a disco remix of tub-thumper ‘War Baby’ (just don’t tell TRB!).

Dagny has a strong voice and carries this weighty track well, but, and this is just a personal observation, maybe the vocal would be served better with a little less of the accentuated end of line upticks!

Lead track ‘Ultraviolet’ is the perfect ‘getting ready with the girls before a night out‘ anthem.  Rife with ‘all American’ rock riffs and rollin’ percussion, this is the kind of number the Pinks of this world do so well, and, which the US of A, home of all things rock-pop with a danceable pulse, buys by the Platinum-coated bucket load.  This is slick, strobe-lit, high-school pop, and with its upbeat, ‘oh-so-memorable’ catchy hooks, ‘Ultraviolet’ should have gaggles of teens and tweens everywhere reaching for their hairbrushes.

Photo DMc Cloat
Dagny Oyafestivalen 2016 Photo DMc Cloat

Mid-stream finds us in Taylor Swift/Ariana Grande territory with the pure pop beats of ‘Too Young‘, a track that sees Dagny show a more youthful, lighter side to her oft smoky vocal.  This hands in the air head-bobber, is pure iridescent spinning disco ball.  An NRG driven sing-along that will demand you dance your ass off to its compelling gold-plated melody lines and pulsating beats.

Next up, it’s the big one.  ‘Backbeat’, the track that propelled Dagny’s into the world of mainstream pop and etched her name in the minds of Euro-pop-media.  Released in late 2015, it lingers long with its infectious OHs and speed of light handclaps, hyperactive drumming and driving guitars.  An instrumental winner wrapped around shimmering synth loops, it’s enriched by an intense vocal delivery, and yeah ok, we have those Dagny upticks again, but in this instance, they kinda work.

To be fair, I guess when you’re starting out and trying to be remembered, you need to nail an evo-stick trademark.  I get it guys!

The EP finale comes in the form of flamboyant, ‘Fool’s Gold.  A sparkling stunner of a pop diamond, it’s fuelled by a propulsive mid-line of synth wrapped guitars and blood pumping percussion.  If this doesn’t get your toes tapping, head nodding and hips swinging then see a doctor about getting your pulse checked, as it’s quite probable that you’re dead.

With 5million plus streams on Spotify, it’s a class A pop rocket.  A turbo charged stomper that perfectly book-ends this blast of an EP.

If multi-coloured, heart stoppin’, summer lovin’, fluorescent, pure unadulterated pop is your thing, then Dagny‘s music is for you. Five star recommendation for teens, tweens, popstrels, party girls, girls who just wanna have fun, boys who like girls who like boys, and high heeled, sequin swept, glammed up disco queens.  Do It!

Dagny’s ‘Ultravoilet’ EP is available to buy, stream, download via all the usual digital channels, links here.

Music/iTunes:http://republicrec.co/DagnyUltravioletEP
Music/Apple:http://republicrec.co/DagnyUltravioletEPAM
Google Play:http://republicrec.co/DagnyUltravioletEPGP
Amazon:http://republicrec.co/DagnyUltravioletEPAZ
Spotify:http://republicrec.co/DagnyUltravioletEPSP

Øyafestivalen Feature : ARY – The Time Is Now!

Foto of ARY by Mohammed Sarmadawy
Foto of ARY by Mohammed Sarmadawy

When I first started writing about Nordic music, Norwegian music in particular, one name kept cropping up again, and again, and again … ARY.

Ary! Ary? Ary who?  No amount of googling pulled up any ‘Ary’ until finally one day some intensive searching pulled up a track listed under Norwegian electronica kingpin, Carl Louis‘Telescope’, released in September 2015, is a dazzling ride across an inky night sky, illuminated by the radiant warmth and playful colour of featured artist, ARY’s vocal.

Subsequent deep diving brought me ‘Higher’ to the now internationally recognised more feelgood than sugar, serotonin inducing electro-pop hit – 750k plays on Spotify alone and counting!  Released earlier in 2015 as part of the various artists Orange Collection, ‘Higher’ is the track which propelled ARY from the shadows into the glare of international media.

But just who is ARY? Twentysomething Ariadne Loinsworth hails from Trondheim, the mecca of Norwegian music, a city to which musicians flock like bees to honey.  A little over 18 months ago, Ariadne, or Ary (written ARY) for short, was just another young girl, working by day and playing her music to small crowds of café society in her spare time.  Plucked from obscurity by the razor sharp A&R minds of indigenous Norwegian record label Toothfairy, ARY relocated to Sandvika, which since then has not just acted as home, but also as the musical and creative hub from and within which she has sparked off fellow label mates, producers, and other upcoming musicians.

Earlier this year, I travelled to Trondheim for the annual TC festival.  One of the highlights of my trip was meeting this upcoming songstrel, who as it turns out, makes for hilarious, fascinating and hugely entertaining company!  The pleasure was all mine, and you can read the write up for The 405 here.  ARY played a killer set (along with Carl Louis and Fay Wildhagen) at TC, from which she moved on to play by:Larm before knocking it outta the Danish park at Roskilde.

Late spring saw the release of ‘Quaaludes’ (you can read my review here) a song which was released as part of an audio-visual experimental project, and on which ARY collaborated with electro-master Olefonken.  This track, particularly the wonderfully nuanced, exceptionally evocative vocal delivery, took this upcoming artist to an altogether other level.  One can clearly perceive how both vocally and personally, this young artist has matured from the slightly timid ingénue of ‘Telescope’ to the more elegantly provocative on ‘Quaaludes’.  There are constants throughout this transition and one of them is playfulness – ARY is indeed mistress of the art of playful delivery.  The hint of mischief is always there, both on and off stage!

In between amazing festival goers across the Euro circuit, ARY has continued to work in studio with various producers on new music, some of which has already been performed live on her festival sets; ID tracks dipping their toes into the sea of music connoisseurs to test the market as it were.

As ARY now prepares to take the stage to play to the biggest audience of her career, it surely can’t be long now before we are treated to an ARY solo/debut release.  The time is now, the time is ARY.  Grab it girl, it’s yours!

ARY plays Øyafestivalen Wednesday 10th Hagen Stage 20.55 – full details of this and links to the rest of the line up here, http://oyafestivalen.com/artist/ary/

Trondheim Calling : Gig Review – Kari Harneshaug

Photo DMc Cloat
Photo DMc Cloat

Standing near the front of the stage in Dokkhuset Scene watching Kari Harneshaug perform on the last night of Trondheim Calling, it slowly became apparent to me that I was undergoing both a mental and musical shift.  While I had always found Kari’s music both interesting to listen to, and fascinating to explore, it was with rapt astonishment that I watched her performance unfold over the too short course of thirty minutes.

Kari performed her six-track setlist accompanied by a 5-piece backing band comprising of none other than slick n savvy Snøskred aficionados, Karl Klaseie (on guitar) and Kyrre Laastad (on synths).

Standing in the centre of the dimly lit stage, the singer cut a diminutive, elfin like figure, but my God when she started to sing did it become obvious that there was nothing nanoscopic about her commanding vocal presence.  Kari Harneshaug cuts a most deceiving figure – what she lacks in physical stature she sure as hell makes up for in vocal weight.

Song after song was vocalised with requisite exuberant energy, theatrical drama or understated potency.  The link that bound was the vice like grip the singer had over her breath control, pitch and delivery.  Harneshaug wields her vocal tools with pinpoint precision and as a result, was in full control of her performance throughout.

Experimental and eclectic, her multi-textured, many splendored songs, allow for varied artistic interpretation, ranging from  subtle to melodramatic; an experienced performer, Kari gave carefully considered deliveries that perfectly expressed the varying waves of emotions rolling through her songs.

Highlights of her set included ‘The Great Sea’ and latest single, ‘Wild One’, but it was the track ‘Lower My Eyes’ that blew me away and IMO stole the show. This highly evocative, somewhat provocative slinky jazz-blues number, sizzled with Klaseie’s spotlight hogging, electrifying guitar playing, that was nicely balanced by some relaxed percussion, trickling rivulets of synth and shots of piano.  Laid back lush, sung with a smoky vocal, this had (and still has), all the hallmarks of a sensational blues infused hit song.

Kari Harneshaug’s live set gave her music a 3D quality I would not have hitherto  believed possible.  Intensely atmospheric, superbly instrumented and exquisitely vocalised, it was a perfect performance.

Perfect performances are rare, not for Kari Harneshaug.  5/5.

”Lower My Eyes’ features on Kari’s upcoming record, ‘We Were Closer To The End’, due for release on 26th via NO FOREVERS, (so you’ll be able to listen to it then!) and you can follow Kari on Facebook, to keep up with all her musical endeavours.

Kari Harneshaug Setlist : The Signs Have Been Telling Me, The Great Sea, For Our Love, When The Day Creeps Up On Us,  Lower My Eyes, Wild One

Trondheim Calling : Gig Review – ARY

ARY-winter_0194-med
Photo Olav Stubberud

Norwegian newbie ARY has a vocal that swings from Susanne Sundfor – delicately delightful as on ‘Telescope’ – to Bjork – gaminely quirky as with hit single, ‘Higher’ – depending on the mood of the track she’s performing.

A girl with an otherwordly presence, she has as yet only streamed three songs, one solo and two collaborative offerings; three very different tracks that perfectly exemplify her unique musical abilities.

So it was then that her set at Trondheim Calling was the perfect opportunity for ARY to showcase unreleased musical wares and, she did so in splendid fashion.  Joined on stage by fellow Norwegians, Fay Wildhagen, and, Anders Kjaer, she spliced performances of ‘known’ tracks, ‘Higher’, ‘Telescope’ and ‘Human Again’ with unknown temperature testers, all of which were warmly and favourably received by the crowd.

ARY has a captivating charm that brings real warmth and animation to the cold electronic sound of her music, and whilst her ID songs had an unfinished feel to them, it didn’t detract from the overall sense of enjoyment that pervaded the packed auditorium of the classy Rockheim venue.

Captivatingly beguiling and refreshingly unpolished, ARY put the spark into sparkle with a poised and engaging performance, which although sating the short term appetite, left one with a lingering desire to hear what is still to come.

Expect to hear a lot more from and about ARY in the future – with an aura as bright as hers, her rapidly rising star is set to fire and shine quite brilliantly.

ARY will play two sets at upcoming by:Larm festival, Oslo, on Thurs 3rd 22.30hrs and Sat 5th 01.30hrs, full details, here.

You can follow ARY on Facebook and Spotify.

Trondheim Calling : Gig Review – Slutface

Photo DMc Cloat
Photo DMc Cloat

Total ‘must see’ for me during the Trondheim Calling music festival was the Saturday night Slutface gig at the legendary Øra Studio.  The setup was at the back of the studio proper, in a room that was as high as it was wide – perfect acoustics – wood panelled with both walls and floor bedecked with rugs, artwork and shuttering.  The smallish crowd of about 50 or so, spilled in  – well small for TC but at 100% capacity for the room – and sat on the large deep pile rug.  Not for long …

In bounced Slutface lead by feisty, tour-de-force frontwoman Hayley Shea, who instantly said the magic Norwegian words required to have the crowd jumping to their feet.  That was the signal I was waiting for.  Slutface have form for encouraging serious crowd interaction and sure enough, this 30 minute set was a masterclass in how to perform a top notch gig slam bang in the middle of your audience.  Slutface literally sang while their fans were standing by their side – from my vantage point in the “wings”, it was compelling viewing.

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Slutface ripped their way through a frenergetic turbo-charged set with more vim than a Dirty Vimto.  ‘Shave my Head’, ‘Bad Party’, ‘Angst’ – each one sung at full pelt by Shea without once having a quiver in her voice.  Trust me, it takes a lot to sing high-octane tracks non-stop for 30minutes without faltering at least once – and she didn’t – which goes to prove that Shea is much more than a mere competent singer.  This girl has a driving, gutsy, wide-ranging vocal that she controls with a vice-like grip!  It takes a lot of command and determination to be able to do that, particularly at such a young age, but then again, this IS Hayley Shea we’re talking about.

Musically, this was pure rocket fuel, with the guys giving a tight, well synced performance during which they never put a foot wrong.  An hyper-active Lasse Lokøy knocked socks out his bass-guitar whilst performing adrenalin fuelled acrobatics through the crowd, while behind him, drummer Halvard Skeie Wiencke knocked seven shades of hell out of his drum kit – albeit very skillfully!  Both of them double-jobbed as backing vocalists, which was a pretty good pull-off considering they were so physically interactive.

Photo of Halvard Skeie Wiencke, DMc Cloat
Photo of Halvard Skeie Wiencke, DMc Cloat

Tor-Arne Vikingstad is as fine a guitar player as I heard all weekend and he pretty much stripped the varnish off the panelling with the fire coming from his scorching guitarwork.  The decibel level must have hit pretty close to 85dB, all the more amazing given the fact that Vikingstad & co were had been equipped with only two speakers!

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The Slutface gig was the only one I attended during Trondheim Calling, where the artist 100% completely engaged with, and even more importantly, engaged the crowd, and the resultant energy that the crowd channeled back to the band, was electrifying.   By the time the gig was half way through, the crowd, encouraged by Shea, had completely surrounded her, whilst she sang, pogoed and bounced like Jumping Jack Flash around the floor. (The only other band I saw interact in similar fashion were equally awesome fuzzpunkers, Rick Ashtray, who led by ‘Tambourine Man’, Chris Omdahl danced their way through the packed crowd on the final night in Dokkhuset).

This was one seriously fiery, hard hitting gig – alive and on fire – and one of the most energetic and animated of the festival.  Slutface are a great band of the future, whose present is in a rapid ascendancy  who gave a volcanic performance, memorable for its energy, honesty, musicianship, and, it’s unparalleled sense of “community” and unorthodox “meet and greet” style.

In a word, #Refreshing.

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You can follow Slutface on Facebook and Twitter.

You can follow DervSwerve on Facebook and Twitter.