Showing posts with label Björn Ehrling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Björn Ehrling. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2026

BJÖRN EHRLING – Utan gräns (YTF, 1976)

  
Swedish vocals, a cappella
International relevance: *

Visa singer Björn Ehrling is previously represented here with his second and final album ”Frihetens fantomer” from 1978. ”Utan gräns” is highly political as shown by Swedish versions of the anti-fascist ”Los Gallos” and the oft-recorded ”Venceremos”. The album has a Spanish and Chilean slant, but there are also songs of Soviet, East German and Swedish origins. The best song however is ”Till Allende” written by Troels Trier from Danish agitprop band Røde Mor.

”Utan gräns” is mostly a singer/songwriter (or visa) album but it has a few proggish features thanks to Björn J:son Lindh's and session drummer Claes Wang's presence. Final track ”Uppmuntran” even has some spacey electric piano effects. It's a tolerable album overall, especially coming from the overtly political side, but it's a long, long way from essential.

Full album playlist 

Saturday, February 14, 2026

VARIOUS ARTISTS – Spanien 75: Solidaritet mot fascismen (YTF, 1976)

 
Featured artists: Malin Ek / Jeja Sundström / Eva-Lisa Lennartsson / Narren / Jan Malmsjö / Stefan Demert / Björn Ehrling / 27 Septembergruppen / José Barba / Monica Nielsen / Lasse Johansson / Stog Järrel / Kristina Adolphson, Grynet Molvig & Lis Nilheim
Swedish vocals, other languages, spoken word
International relevance: -

A charity album for Swedish Spanish Volunteers' Companions' Association Solidarity Fund (say that fast ten times) recorded live at an anti-fascist meeting against the Spanish Franco regime in 1975, the same year Franco died. The performers came from various genres. There's visa singers Jeja Sundström & Stefan Demert and Björn Ehrling, singing actors like Jan Malmsjö and Grynet Molvig, and a couple of acts closer to progg such as Monica Nielsen and Narren. Poetry recitals mix with Spanish and Swedish songs, and none of it is interesting to listen to fifty years on. As with basically every album such as this, it's a document frozen in time and it hasn't aged well at all. There's not one single track on this album worth hearing now. Once the proceeds from this album were transfered to the Swedish Spanish Volunteers' Companions' Association Solidarity Fund, ”Spanien 75” died just like artefacts of a purely temprary value die.

José Barba & 27 Septembergruppen - Julián Grimau 

Monday, May 17, 2021

BJÖRN EHRLING – Frihetens legender (YTF, 1978)

 
Swedish vocals

International relevance: *

Björn Ehrling was a 'visa' singer, that particular Swedish brand of singer/songwriters that was widely popular in the 60s and 70s. Ehrling released only a few albums during his recording career, two of them on the YTF imprint. This is his second LP, and with a title like ”Frihetens legender” (”the legends of freedom”) you might expect politically inclined songs with a possible Spanish or Latin flair. If so, you're almost right – the material is chosen entirely from the Portugal's rich fado tradition and then translated to Swedish.

Ehrling's got a decent voice used in the same slightly over-zealous style that often comes with the visa genre. It's a largely forgettable album included here only as a favour to the Turid completists out there as she adds backing vocals to the track ”Nu är vi fria”. Bear in mind though that her effort is of minimal proportions, and unless you knew it's actually her, you could mistake her for just about any angel-voiced chanteuse.

Nu har vi fest