Cities of the Plain

I love Sweden.  The people are friendly.  The country as a whole understands that socialized medical care is deserving of acceptance, not vitriol.  The days are 22 hours long in the summer.  The countryside is beautiful.  Many are easy on the eyes and most speak English (note: I’m not xenophobic about learning languages, just practical… 10 million people speak Swedish, compared to some 400 million, 490 million, 900 million and 1.2 billion for Spanish, Hindi/Urdu, English and Mandarin respectively.  For most foreigners, there’s little sense in learning Swedish, good on the Swedes for recognizing as much).  Stockholm is a wonderful city, a rich mix of the charms of old Europe and the modernity we all associate with Scandinavia.  If it weren’t so dark in winter, I’d move there.  Even the currency — a singular krona, multiple kronor — has a cool name.

And the music?  Oh, the music.  Who can say what it is about living in Sweden that has captured the imagination of musicians?  The raw number of fantastic artists coming from Sweden in recent years is staggering, even more so when considering that the country’s population is roughly equivalent to that of North Carolina.

The Knife, Fever Ray, Peter Bjorn and John, Adam Tensta, Lykke Li, Air France, Jens Lekman, The Tallest Man on Earth, The Radio Dept., The Sound of Arrows, the Swedish House Mafia (Axwell, Steve Angello and Sebastian Ingrosso), Eric Prydz, Shout Out Louds, The Mary Onettes, Teddybears, The Tough Alliance, The Hives, Basshunter, Agnes and Rosanna are all from Swedish and have come up through the ranks in the last decade or so.  And it’s not just the sheer number of artists, it’s the quality of what’s being produced and the new directions they’re taking pop music.

As you’ve surely noticed, the first-lady of Swedish pop was omitted from the previous paragraph.  No, I’m not referring to any of ABBA’s members, nor Nina Persson of The Cardigans… it’s Robyn who was conspicuously absent.  This past weekend, at a ceremony to award Björk the Polar Music Prize for career musical achievement, Robyn covered Björk’s massive hit “Hyperballad” with the backing of a full orchestra, to splendid results.

The video came out yesterday, which was also my birthday, so I’d like to send a personal thanks to Robyn and the Polar Music Prize ceremony people for planning what they did, when they did.  It was the proverbial cherry on top.

(Two funny things about this video: Björk did not appear impressed — though, I suppose it’d be weird to hear someone cover a song I wrote 15 years ago and probably have lost some of my connection to — and Robyn’s ear armor.)

Morning Streams

I’ve been listening over and over to these two tracks on SoundCloud.  For now, they’re only available for streaming, but keep an eye out for the official release of both very soon.

Robyn - Hang With Me (Starsmith Remix)

Zero 7 - Futures (Error Operator Remix ft. Jose Gonzalez)

G5, All Interview Edition

  1. Aloe Blacc, cool as a porcupine in winter
  2. Robyn with The AV Club: “It’s pop music. It’s supposed to be there to inspire people. It’s not only about me, you know. And being a little looser with those things is always good for the music, and always good for how the music seems in the future as well.”
  3. I just love this random quote from Rhymefest’s talk with OkayPlayer on part of why he’s moving to Houston: “I think Texas is like the black man’s California.”  I can neither confirm nor deny this.
  4. Donald Glover (rap pseudonym: Childish Gambino) sat down with Complex to discuss his rap career and different roles as a stand-up, an actor and sketch comedian
  5. This is two weeks old, but I enjoyed this quick interview with up and coming Irish band Solar Bears

I am sort of falling in love with Robyn. The second installment of her Body Talk trilogy is out soon and features “Hang With Me”, just another slow-burning dance floor anthem in a long string that she has released in the past couple of months. Also, definitely check out the Fred Falke remix of previous single “Dancing On My Own”.

Royksopp and Bat For Lashes are Dominating


A couple days ago we finally got another single off of Royksopp’s upcoming Junior, with “The Girl and the Robot”. The song features Swedish pop-damsel Robyn and is quite fantastic. Combined with album opener “Happy Up Here”, Junior was shaping up to be quite the killer. Well, now we can put speculation aside and listen to the thing in full over at their MySpace. Obvious standouts include “Tricky Tricky” and “This Must Be It”. No coincidence that CotP favorite/crush Karen Dreijer appears on both tracks. Junior is officially out 3/23 on Astralwerks.

mp3:Royksopp - The Girl and the Robot (ft Robyn)
mp3:Royksopp - Happy Up Here

In other parts of the world, Natasha Khan, aka Bat for Lashes is making serious moves in the lead-up to her sophomore release Two Suns. A ways back we first got a glimpse of the new LP with “Glass”. Filled with thudding drums and her enchanting voice the track hinted at a much more refined and powerful album than Fur and gold. I think it is safe to say that the official first single “Daniel” confirms those suspicions. Haunting violin and gauzy vocals combine for a sort of Let it Die era Fiest meets Saturday = youth, m83, which I think the video reflects rather nicely. Plus it is now clear to me that there is also a karate kid theme going on here (yeah, I was little slow to pick up on that one). Two Suns is out 4/6 also on Astralwerks.

Daniel - Bat For Lashes


mp3:Bat for Lashes - Daniel