Showing posts with label Nationalteatern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nationalteatern. Show all posts

Thursday, July 17, 2025

A SEVEN INCH SPECIAL, VOL. 5: Political and religious


THE VERGERS – Se dig för / Fader vår (Celesta, 1969)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

”Se dig för” is included on ”Frälst!” but B side ”Fader vår” remains uncomped. Not a very good one, weaker than the A side, so there's no need to look for this 45 if you have ”Frälst!”. This was the last of The Vergers' four singles.

 
FRIA PROTEATERN – Chile (Folksång, 1974)
Swedish vocals:
International relevance: *

Two tracks unique to this Chile solidarity single, although side one's ”Ett enat folk” is available in a live version on ”Koncert I København Okt. 1973”. Side B has ”IB, ÖB och SÄPO” about the political scandal described in some detail here. For Fria Proteatern fans only.


OPPONER – Alfa blues / Till min make (Opponer, 1975)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

Two tracks not on Opponer's full length album. ”Alfa blues” is exacrly that, a blues number of no particular merir, while ”Till min make” is a traditional tune with new lyrics by Opponer singer Anna Olofsson and bassist Mats Sönnfors. A much better song with that sweet melancholy typical to the best Swedish folk tunes. Released with the aid from the workers at pump facorty Alfa Laval.


ELEVER PÅ MUSIKLÄRARSKOLAN SÄMUS I GÖTEBORG / FRIA PROTEATERNVietnam Kambodja befriade (Befria Södern, 1975)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

As the Vietnam war ended in 1975, so did the stream of releases from De Förenade FNL-grupperna and their cohorts. This was the last of those, a three track EP split between Fria Proteatern and Elever på musiklärarskolan SÄMUS i Göteborg (students at the Gothenburg school for music teachers). Released to celebrate the war's end, it's typical political stuff very much in line with the other Vietnam albums and singles, and so best ignored. Fria Proteatern's ”Balladen om Rune Henry Johansson” is also on ”Sånger från ljugarbänken”.



BJÖRN AFZELIUS BAND / NATIONALTEATERN – Kamrater, Bodenarbetare / Rädda varven! (Nacksving, 1978)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

Two exclusive tracks, one by Björn Afzelius Band and one by Nationalteatern. Afzelius's ”Kamrater, Bodenarbetare” is in support of the strikers at Boden's car factory in 1978. It's a pretty good track with slight folk rock shadings, good especially for Björn Afzelius. Nationalteatern's ”Rädda varven!” is a call to save the Gothenburg boatyard threatened by shutdown which eventually happened. A weak track in an undistinguished Gothenburg/Nacksving rock style.


EN RÖD KÖR OCH SÅNGGRUPPEN DEN MÄNSKLIGA FAKTORN – Säj nej! 
(no label, EP 1980)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

A privately pressed single released in 1980, the year of the Swedish nuclear power referendum and has anti-nuclear message. It has two acts, the choir En Röd Kör and vocal folk group Den Mänskliga Faktorn, although it's hard to say if it all involves the same people. Acoustic as it is it could easily fall into the Fria Proteatern trap but there's something very charming and disarming about the unpretentious atmosphere. The rock & roll pastiche ”The Sysselsättning Rock” is pretty terrible but the other songs are in fact rather catchy. Well, perhaps I wouldn't call the title track exactly catchy, but it's a quite atmospheric adaptation of a Czech herding song. It's nothing I would particularly recommend, but I've heard far worse and way more self-important examples of political songs than these.

The Vergers:
Se dig för (Bandcamp)
Fader vår
Fria Proteatern:
Ett enat folk (El Pueblo Unido)
IB, ÖB och SÄPO
Opponer:
Alfa blues
Till min make
Vietnam Kambodja befriade:
SÄMUS - Vietnam är befriat
Fria Proteatern - Balladen om Rune Henry Johansson
SÄMUS - Kambodja är befriat 
Björn Afzelius/Nationalteatern:
Björn Afzelius Band - Kamrater, Bodenarbetare
Nationalteatern - Rädda varven!
En Röd Kör och sånggruppen Den Mänskliga Faktorn:
no links found

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

A PROGG BLOG SPECIAL: AN INTERVIEW WITH ANNA KOKA FEM ÄGG JAG ÄR VÄRD I HUSET

 

Earlier this year, one of the most intriguing progg albums was graced with a much needed re-release:Anna Koka Fem Ägg Jag Är Värd I Huset's lone album, originally issued in 300 copies on their private label Flärrp-Skivor in 1975. (It was briefly available as a CD-r from the band, but that one had no wider distribution, and can hardly be considered a true reissue.) It's a most original work, vaguely reminiscent of Philemon Arthur & The Dung but darker in tone. The lyrics help setting the mood, being oddly twisted as if coming from a mirror reality where everything is familiar yet strangely skewed. Unfortunately for foreign listeners, they're in Swedish so that one dimension is lost on non-Swedes, but the general atmosphere is still so off-beat it's guaranteed to sneak into the mind of anyone not familiar with the Swedish language. Even the band name is one of the strangest in history, translating into ”Anna boil five eggs, I'm the host of the house”. At first it makes no sense to an outsider, but once you've heard their album, it somehow makes perfect sense in all its thought-provoking absurdity.

The reissue and the live performance that followed it brought national attention to the band when brothers and Anna Koka Fem Ägg core members Mats and Rolf Svensson were left alone on the stage to perform Philemon Arthur chestnut ”Om ni tycker jagundviker er”. Both Anna Koka Fem Ägg and Philemon Arthur hail from roughly the same region, in Skåne in the deep south of Sweden. The Svensson brothers indeed sounded like what an aged version of Philemon Arthur might sound like, which provoked speculations in national media: Are they really the original Philemon Arthur & The Dung? The Svensson brothers refuse to comment on the subject, and quite honestly, I couldn't care less. I'm intrigued by the Philemon mystery, and with too few mysteries in the world to tickle our imaginations, I'm more than happy to see Philemon Arthur & The Dung's true identity remain a secret for all times to come. Also, the brilliance of Anna Koka Fem Ägg is great enough to have them stand on their own. True originality and genuine brilliance need no excuses or references.

After decades in obscurity to all but the most seasones collectors, Anna Koka Fem Ägg Jag Är Värd I Huset have taken one step further into the limelight, which is a great opportunity to approach Rolf Svensson with a a little set of questions. With longtime progg and progg blog fan Lars Holmquist supplying some further questions, this interview was conducted over Facebook in May 2022.

How did the band come about?
At first we were only two people. Then from 1973 and on, several others teamed up with us, and even more members joined in time for the album sessions, so in the end we were eleven people in the band.

How did you come up with the name for the band?
The band's name is the end of a true story from the village where I grew up. Algot'sa John (i.e. John son of Algot) lived on a family farm with his sister Anna. Those who knew them both knew that Anna had a mind of her own and the one in command in the house. One day in his younger years, John came home with a bunch of buddies and wanted to show off to his friends, to appear a little cocky and bossy. As the guys stepped through the door, John yelled, ”Anna! Boil up five eggs, I'm the host of the house!” What happened to John after that, one could only imagine... Really, the story is only fun to those who knew the villagers.

Did you play live a lot? Any gigs outside of Skåne?
We did about ten shows between 1973 and 1975. Most of them were low-profile shows, but the one we did with Nationalteatern and Norrbottens Järn was a larger event. One of the shows were in Växjö while the others were in the Lund-Lomma-Malmö-Ängelholm region.

How and where was the album recorded?

In former big band leader Leif Uvemark's studio in Malmö during a weekend in May 1975.

Did you choose to put it out yourself to begin with, or did you approach any major labels first?
Yes, and nope.

Was the album ever reviewed in Musikens Makt [the music movement's own in-house journal]?It was, in Musikens Makt issue no. 7 in 1975.

Are there any unreleased recordings?
Only a few in my own private archive.

Were there any plans for a second album?
Nope.

Your lyrics are very special with a touch of the absurd, not without a dark edge. Can you tell me a little bit about how you wrote them? What were your inspirations?
Several of the songs were inspired by growing up in a little village in the northwest part of Skåne in the 1950s and '60s. It was me, my brother, my cousin and a friend of my brother's who wrote most of them.

To what extent were Anna Koka Fem Ägg an actual band, as opposed to a project of sorts? Did members come and go?
A few members came and went in the very beginning. It's fair to say we were a band, a pretty obscure one, who showed up every now and then at small scale concerts. Almost always at the request of various concert organizers.

Were there some kind of D.I.Y. scene that you were part of in Skåne at the time?
No.

Are there any other unknown gems from that area worth looking for?
No idea, but I wouldn't think so.

How did you get along with the rest of Skåne's progg scene, with bands such as Radiomöbel, Ferne from Risken Finns and even later bands like Kabbala Kitsch and Blago Bung?
We had no contact whatsoever with the rest of Skåne's progg scene.

What prompted you to reissue your album now?
We had no intention to re-release our album at all. It was a sheer coincidence that Jörgen Nilsson, a record dealer and a concert organizer in Kristiansand, happened to see our original album in a crate of albums he happened to come by. He thought it sounded very good and different. As the album is hard to find and several of his customers liked it when he played it in the shop, he asked us if we were interested in re-releasing it. Then he asked us if perhaps a few of us would even like to play a show. I thought it sounded like a fun idea, and I managed to get in touch with almost every one of our original members. I hadn't met several of them since we did the album 47 years ago!

Remaining copies of the reissue can be ordered from Kompakt Disk in Kristianstad,

info@kompaktdisk.se. But hurry up! Not many are left! It's also available for streaming on Spotify.

Thursday, September 6, 2018

NATIONALTEATERN - Complete albums 1972-1981

The origins of Nationalteatern can be traced back to Lilla Teatern in Lund that developed into Malmö based Gorillateatern. When they split in two in 1969, Dalateatern became one part and Nationalteatern the other. Nationalteatern relocated to Gothenburg in 1970, and the following year, songwriters Anders Melander and Ulf Dageby joined the troupe. Throughout the decade, Nationalteatern wrote plays and music that acknowledged the suburban youth that felt ignored by society and its politicians. Nationalteatern appeared at lots of youth centres in and around Gothenburg, slowly building an appreciative following with their straightforward music and socially aware lyrics. They also wrote several children's plays.

Ta det som ett löfte... ta det inte som ett hot (MNW, 1972)
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

Nationalteatern's first album was a product of its time, permeated by the idea that everybody should play an instrument to create a truly collective effort. Not everyone was keen on that, group member Med Reventberg admitted in an interviewfor Swedish pod radio show Snedtänkt in 2018. She had no interest in playing the guitar or whatever, and thought it would be much better if the musicianship was left to those who mastered better than she (and others) did. It's easy to get the impression that it was solely a concession to the era's fashionable collectivity ethos, and that impression grows even stronger upon hearing ”Ta det som ett löfte... ta det inte som ett hot”. ”Ut i kylan” is a decent track, and one of the few here not entirely lost to the communal/collective nonsense. This is easily the worst of Nationalteatern's 70's albums (”Kåldolmar och kalsipper” doesn't quite count).


Two cover variations exist, the original with a light green colour – a misprint – and a later version in a much darker green as seen above.

Livet är en fest (MNW, 1974)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

Nationalteatern's most classic album. ”Livet är en fest” is like a 'best of' album of sorts, collecting the musical highlights from several different stage plays. Many of the songs have an anti-drug message clad in irony that was easy to distinguish at the time. But irony's often lost over time, and today people unfamiliar with the songs original context misinterpret them as being pro drugs (which Anders Melander has commented on with a fair bit of unease). The songs have survived, but not so much the original meaning of them. In an awkward way, that proves that good songs have a greater longevity than the message.

And the songs are good, with plenty of memorable hooks. But that doesn't mean I want to hear them over and over again, not anymore. The title track was originally performed as a country song but transformed into a Rolling Stones inspired rock workout is overplayed, ”Lägg av” is simply embarassing today and ”Stena Olssons Compagnie” – a reworking of The Coasters' ”Riot in Cell Block No. 9” – is hard to listen to today, as is the irritating mock reggae of ”Speedy Gonzales” and the crypto calypso of ”Hanna från Arlöv”. But I still like Melander's ”Jack the Ripper” and ”Bängen trålar”, but two tracks are enough only for a single, not an album. A seriously overplayed album.

Beware of early CD editions, remixed with reverb added to the original recordings to make them sound more 'contemporary'. When confronted, Ulf Dageby replied ”who cares about mixings?” Well I, for one, do. And I, for one, don't like revisionism.

Kåldolmar och kalsipper (MNW, 1976)
Swedish vocals, spoken word
International relevance: *

Briefly mentioned in my children's progg post, this is a kids' record with a plot being a mish-mash of several different Nationalteatern plays. Heralded as a classic children's album, ex-members of Nationalteatern later said it didn't turn out quite as consistent as it should have. When they recorded it there were also fights over the overt political opinions expressed on the album. While Nationalteatern always had a left-wing bent, they rarerly stated it that openly, usually only describing social issues and problems, leaving the listener/spectator to draw their own conclusions.

Obviously, the songs on ”Kåldolmar och kalsipper” are aimed at kids and not very fun to listen to, but ”Agamemnons stora ballad om flykten från sitt hemland” and ”Jenny, havets skräck” are OK even to grown-up ears.

Vi kommer att leva igen (Nacksving, 1977)
as Nynningen & Nationalteatern
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

In early 1977, the Big 2 of Gothenburg progg, Nynningen and Nationalteatern. joined forces for a stage play about the oppression of the Native Americans, just in time for the 200th anniversary of the United States of America. Despite the collaboration, ”Vi kommer att leva igen” is more of a Nationalteatern album as Ulf Dageby wrote all the songs for it. Not very good songs though, too dependent on the stage context.

1977 was also the year of Tältprojektet, a large scale collaboration between several independent theatre groups and musicians, and often considered the peak of the 70's music and theatre movements.

Barn av vår tid (Nacksving, 1978)
International relevance: *
Swedish vocals

Few album covers have captured the feeling of late 70's grey hopelessness as well as ”Barn av vår tid”, and the music reflects it. Nationalteatern's best album, with songs like ”Kolla kolla”, ”Spisa” and the majestic, eerie title track crowning the album – one of the major songs of the progg era. And ”Men bara om min älskade väntar” is perhaps the best Swedish Dylan translation ever, of ”Tomorrow Is a Long Time”, heartfelt and sincerely sung by Totta Näslund, originally of Nynningen but from ”Kåldolmar och kalsipper” more and more involved in Nationalteatern.

Rockormen (Nacksving, 1979)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

Recorded while on tour with the ”Rockormen” 'rock opera' in late 1978. With Ulf Dageby taking a step back only providing two songs and lyrics for another, members Peter Wahlqvist and Bertil Goldberg wrote most of the remaining material. With none of them being as driven songwriters as Ulf Dageby and the then ex-member Anders Molander, the album is weak.

Rövarkungens ö (Nacksving, 1980)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

Ulf Dageby had grown increasingly unhappy with the theatre format. He wanted to write songs without having to consider a plot or stage functionality. ”Rövarkungens ö” clearly demonstrates in what direction Dageby wanted to go. The tracks are longer, most of them around 5-7 minutes long, and the title track even clocking in at 12 minutes. It's obvious Dageby enjoyed his new-found freedom and Totta Näslund's vocals, but the album is pretty dull in that Nacksving way.

Luffarrock – en lurkmusikal (Nacksving, 1981)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

A 'musical' originally written and performed in 1974-75, the songs weren't recorded and released on disc until 1981. An often overlooked entry in Nationalteatern's discography, or should I say ignored? It's best left that way, unless you want silly songs sometimes performed in a semi-reggae style that doesn't sit at all well with the band. A terribly stiff production too. 

All Nationalteatern albums have been reissued. 9CD box set "Lägg av! Historien om Nationalteatern" compiled the albums in their entirety, adding numerous bonus tracks. A live session from "Lägg av!" is also featured in "Progglådan".

The theatre division of Nationalteatern released one further album on Amalthea in 1987 ”Peter Pan”, a children's play with the spoken parts interspersed with horrible synth laden musical bits, before dissolving in 1993. Nationalteatern's the rock band has reunited several times, released a live album in 1991, and another one in 2006. They're still active performing their old hits to nostalgic audiences across Sweden.

Ulf Dageby has released several solo albums, and also composed the soundtrack to Stefan Jarl's movie ”Ett anständigt liv”. The versatile Anders Melander has contributed music to a number of movies and television series, as well forming the shortlived band Cue with actor Niklas Hjulström.

Ta det som ett löfte full album playlist with bonus tracks

Livet är en fest full album playlist
Kåldolmar och kalsipper full album playlist
Vi kommer att leva igen full album playlist
Barn av vår tid full album playlist
Rockormen full album playlist with bonus tracks
Rövarkungens ö full album playlist
Luffarrock full album playlist
Tonkraft 1975 full album playlist

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

VARIOUS ARTISTS – Alternativ festival (MNW, 1976)

Featured artists: Fungus (NL) / Amerindios (CHL) / Sume (GRL) / Nynningen / Viltstråk / Anton Swedbergs Swängjäng / Konvaljen / Slim Notini / Margareta Söderberg / Pojkarna Från Storholmen / Harpan Min / Turid / Balkan (DEN) / Arja Saijonmaa / Gregoris Tzistoudis (GR) / Gunnar Thordarsson (ISL) / Ville & Valle & Viktor / Adolf Fredriks flickkör / Silverdalskören / 3 På En Pall / Þokkabót(ISL) / Slim's Blues Band / Solvognen (DEN) / Södra Bergens Balalaikor / Peggy Seeger (UK/US) / Ewan MacColl (UK) / Amtmandens Døtre (NOR) / Risken Finns / Nationalteatern / Sillstryparn
Swedish vocals, instrumental, spoken word
International relevance: **

When ABBA won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974, Sweden was to host the show in 1975. The music movement responded with a festival of its own under the banner of ”fight against the commercialization of the culture”. Alternativfestivalen, ”the alternative festival”, took place in Stockholm during six days in March 1975. An array of performers from Sweden and abroad (including Greenland!) gathered for the occasion; Anton Swedbergs Swängjäng, Kebnekajse, Nationalteatern, Nynningen, Risken Finns, Solar Plexus, Solen Skiner, Södra Bergens Balalaikor, Hoola Bandoola Band, Konvaljen, Turid, Slim Notini, Margareta Söderberg, Francisco Roca, Fungus, Shit & Chanel, Kevin Coyne, Ewan MacColl & Peggy Seeger... A total of 950 musicians appeared before an audience totalling 12,000 people. The event was recorded for a future double LP on MNW, and filmed for what became the ”Vi har vår egen sång – musikfilmen” documentary, both in 1976. A staggering 5,000 people partook in the protest march against the contest held on Saturday 22 March, 1975, the very same day of the ESC broadcast, which led to the Swedish cancellation of contest the following year.

Alternativfestivalen culminated with Sillstryparn – a character invented by Nationalteatern's Ulf Dageby – performing the acidic satire ”Doin' the omoralisk schlagerfestival” (”doin' the immoral Eurovision Song Contest”) backed by members of Nationalteatern and Nynningen. The song was featured on the album and also released as a 7” and became not only a hit but a progg anthem plenty of people still know today. (The 45 also includes two non-album tracks by Risken Finns and Nationalteatern & Nynningen respectively.)

Featuring such disparate artists, the album itself is a stylistic roller coaster ride. Traditional folk music from several countries, choral music and spoken word performances mix with rock. blues and fusion. It doesn't hold up as an album – the symbolic value as a commemorative piece from the manifestation exceeds the listening pleasure. That said, it has a couple of OK selections. Dutch band Fungus offers up a nice albeit unashamedly derivative slice of Fairport Convention styled folk rock with ”Kap'ren varen”, Nynningen gives ”Skuldkomplexet” a spirited performance, and Danish trio Balkan (led by Bazaar's Peter Bastian) are great. ”Doin' the omoralisk schlagerfestival” is, well, not exactly great but very amusing. Oddly enough, neither Solar Plexus nor Kebnekajse are on the album but they do appear in the movie which is an overall better document than the album. An alternative festival was arranged in the spirit of the original event in 2007 with contemporary artists.

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

A VARIOUS ARTISTS SPECIAL – 3 Nacksving compilations 1975-1978

Established in 1975, the Nacksving label ran until 1981 when it went bankrupt. Label boss Tommy Rander bought it and became the sole owner after which he tranformed it to Transmission which kept going up until 1987. The Nacksving studio is still in use however; it was originally built because Rander didn't understand why the progg bands had to have inferior sound and lesser production values than the commercial music business. The label, always under ultimate direction from Rander, became the political epicentre of the progg movement at its tail end which led to its demise as creativity was choked by political dogma. When asked why the progg movement ended, Mikael Wiehe has said it ended because its time was over, and while true, the death of it was certainly hastened on by the narrowminded and unforgiving political bureaucrats at the Gothenburg headquarters.

NACKSVING – ETT SAMLAT GREPP FRÅN GÖTET (Nacksving, 1975)
Featured artists: Nationalteatern / Nynningen / Ariman / Soffgruppen / Motvind / Tintomara / Trio General Goof
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

First ever release on the Nacksving label, including both well-known acts and artists exclusive to this release. Tommy Rander worked at the Gothenburg department of Swedish Radio at the time, and the recordings on the album were made in session for the broadcasting company. With the budget of a fledgling record label, i.e. no money, Rander 'borrowed' the recordings from his employer. The Swedish Radio wasn't exactly happy with it when they discovered the caper, rebuked him, but let him stay on the job.

The album is a good cross section of what Gothenburg had to offer stylewise in the mid-70's, with jazz, rock and political folk pop. Most of it is rather unexceptional though, but the Nynningen and Nationalteatern collaboration ”Ta tillbaka Hagahuset” is powerful (in the same vein as Nynningen track ”För full hals”), and ”Parkeringshets” is the great Soffgruppen in a wonderfully violent mode.


FRISTIL (Nacksving, 1977)
Featured artists: Motvind / Ensamma Hjärtan / Dennis Huntington Band / Väsen / Björn Afzelius / Afzelius, Aldman, Hartelius, Löfdahl and Text & Musik
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

A showcase of various Nacksving artists, including the only record appearance of avant folk outfit Väsen (not to be confused with the 90's folk rock band of the same name) including later-to-be musicology professor Lars Lilliestam. Their two songs are OK, but the album is most noteworthy for the superior vocal version of Motvind's best track ”Lära för livet”. The Ensamma Hjärtan contribution is a disappointing 8 minute slow blues.

FRÅN FLYKT TILL KAMP (Nacksving, 1978)
as Lilla Nacksvingsligan
Featured artists: Björn Afzelius / Lars Aldman / Blues Annika / Sam Westerberg / Torsten "Totta" Näslund
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

Released as Lilla Nacksvingsligan, this album was a charity album for prescription drug abusers and consists of songs recorded specifically for the purpose, with backing musicians from Nationalteatern and Nynningen. Blues Annika's ”I förvaring” is OK but not on par with her solo album (and country music deniers should know that it's much more of a country song than blues). Still the best track of the album, followed by Sam Westerberg's ”Opiets väg”. The rest of it is forgettable, and three Lars Aldman tracks are four too many.

from Nacksving - Ett samlat grepp från Götet Nationalteatern & Nynningen - Ta tillbaka Hagahuset
Soffgruppen - Parkeringshets
from Fristil

Friday, August 24, 2018

TÄLTPROJEKTET – Vi äro tusenden... (Nacksving, 1977)


Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

Tältprojektet is often seen as the peak of progg, but in a way, it also became its downfall. Or at least, it marked the beginning of the end. The whole project was a grand tour de force, with several independent theatre groups (Nationalteatern, Musikteatergruppen Oktober, Tidningsteatern, Narren) and numerous musicians coming together for something that some people said would be impossible to see through.

”Vi äro tusenden” was a four hour stage play telling the story of the Swedish labour movement from 1879 and on, with approximately 100 people touring for four and half months in the summer of 1977, visiting 31 cities all over the country (and some in Denmark), performing 82 shows to 100,000 people. Nothing of that scope had been done before, and nothing of that scope has been done since. ”Vi äro tusenden” was the ultimate proof of what power there was in the music movement and the related independent theatre groups, and an example of what you can do if you unite and strive for the same thing. The progg movement proved its own point by demonstrating it.

A documentary was made, ”Tältet – vem tillhör världen?”, and a record was rushed out by Nacksving so that it could be sold at the shows. People should be able to take home some of the music they had just heard played live. The original idea was also to record the album live in performance, but that proved impossible for practical reasons, why songs from show instead were recorded with Nacksving's mobile studio. Some tracks were composed by jazz legend and member of Musikteatergruppe Oktober Christer Boustedt, but most of the music was written by Nationalteatern's Ulf Dageby and Nynningen's Bernt Andersson and Bertil Goldberg. Both Gothenburg bands had collaborated before, so much in fact that it was getting more and more impossible to tell the two bands apart. Tracks like the powerful ”Aldrig mera krig” (sung by Nynningen's Totta Näslund) and Tältprojektet's anthem ”Vi äro tusenden” are heralded as classics. They're also the two best songs on the album.

Actually, the only two good songs on the album, and the only two distinct enough to work outside their original stage context. The remainder of the tracks have too many theatrical characteristics, with narrative lyrics, sometimes with large choirs, sometimes sounding like run-of-the-mill political songs, sometimes cabaret-like. It's just not very fun to listen to, and the album's true value is mainly historical and academic.

Nationalteatern's Med Reventberg has later admitted that it was hard to get on with their work after Taltprojektet. Nationalteatern tried to set up another massive theatre tour soon after but it didn't work out as well as they had hoped for. And that probably goes for everyone involved. The fatigue set in, and while many (most) of them continued their artistic work (after all, it was their profession), many of them in the spirit of progg, progg was never to be the same again. And new sounds and attitudes were coming around the corner. Punk was ready to take over.

Full album playlist

Friday, August 17, 2018

NYNNINGEN – Complete albums 1972-1976

The major Gothenburg band along with Nationalteatern who they often collaborated with. Both were part of the grandiose Tältprojektet, and at times the two bands were almost like siamese twins. Nynningen was founded in 1970 by Bertil Goldberg and Tomas Forssell, and included several noted members such as bass player Nikke Ström, keyboard player Bernt Andersson, guitarist Bengt 'Bengan' Blomgren, and singer Torsten 'Totta' Näslund.

Man mognar med åren (MNW, 1972)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

”Man mognar med åren” is to Nynningen what ”Ta det som ett löfte... ta det inte som ett hot” is to Nationalteatern, i.e. an album very different to the sound the band's best known for. ”Man mognar med åren” is largely acoustic and in a style akin to Fria Proteatern and other political independent music theatre groups. It's an inferior album with unmemorable songs and rather poor performances.

För full hals (MNW, 1973)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

”För full hals” is a collection of poems by Vladimir Mayakovsky set to music by Nynningen and remains their best known album. It's considered a progg classic with the heavy and soul inspired title track topping it off. That track's pretty amazing, and although it's the best track in this lot by far, this remains their best album.

1974 (MNW, 1974)
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: **

Similar to ”För full hals” but with a few more progressive touches as on the instrumental ”Marschen till Caobans rike” and on Tomas Forssell's ”När så tingen börjar klarna”. A couple of songs were written with Nationalteatern's Anders Melander. Still nothing here to explain why Nynningen is held in such high regard by so many. "Ingenting händer mekaniskt" is a track written by Leif Nylén and was originally intended for Blå Tåget who turned it down for being too politically questionable. Instead, Nynningen took it on without further questions.

Äntligen en ny dag! (Nacksving, 1975)
Swedish vocals 
International relevance: **
 
Last chance for Nynningen to demonstrate their alleged excellence. Unfortunately they fail to do so. The vocals were now mostly handled by Sam Westerberg, with Totta Näslund a member of Nationalteatern at this point in time. Regardless, this is bad blues, blues in name only, stiffly performed and forced into political sloganeering. For this album, Nynningen changed label from MNW to Nacksving, and the dull lifeless sound typical to the label's releases certainly doesn't help Nynningen to a more inspiring achievement.

In 1977 Nynningen released an album together with Nationalteatern, music from the stage play ”Vi skall leva igen”. A 1973 Swedish Radio session is included in ”Progglådan”. Nynningen has since reunited whithout Totta Näslund who died in 2005.

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1974 full album playlist
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Tonkraft 1973 full album playlist (tracks 1-7)