Showing posts with label RKOB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RKOB. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2018

ROBERT BROBERG – The 'Zero' years 1979-1981

Motsättningar (RKOB, 1979)
as Circle O Zero on Uma N.E
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

After fighting mental issues, Robert Broberg invented a new persona. Perhaps to escape himself, or perhaps to become himself. He chose Zero as his new moniker, but the full unwieldy artist name on ”Motsättningar” is "Robert Broberg presenterar (= ”presents”) Circle O Zero on Uma N.E", and the album contains songs written between 1974 and 1979, including one translation of a track from ”Tolv sånger på amerikanska”. ”Would You Like to Be My Object for Tonite?”, here entitled ”Vill du vara mitt sexualobjekt ikväll?”

Possibly due to the timespan of the songs and maybe because some of them are recorded live, the album is all over the map. There's funk in ”Sprucken i tusen bitar” and ”Farbror Anders funk”, blues in ”Du har Pinochet i garderoben!”, a bit of Little Feat in ”Doktor Jekyll och Mister Hyde”, circus music in ”Cirkuslåten/Två knappar längst ner!”, an a capella waltz named ”Jag tar ofta på mig min kofta” etc. The best track however is the very beautiful and melancholy ”Jag ska inte ligga lik” – actually one of his best ever songs.

The diversity of the music is most likely a reflection – conscious or not – of Broberg's fragmented mind at the time. The album title is certainly telling enough: a possible translation of ”Motsättningar” would be 'conflicts'. So, not a consistent album but a revealing one.

Kvinna eller man (Silence, 1981)
as Zero
Swedish vocals, English vocals
International relevance: *

After a decade of self-released albums, Robert Broberg/Zero joined the Silence roster in 1980. Perhaps the proper record deal helped him get a hit with ”Vatten – sta'n är full av vatten”, for a while overplayed by Swedish Radio. The track is relatively representative of the album as whole; ”Kvinna eller man” is Broberg's most accessible album since the 60's. The most interesting tracks are the final two, the English language ”Don't Lean Out of Your Head”, like many of the album's tracks dealing with self-image and identity, and ”Tom Top” which is by far the weirdest song here, pointing towards Broberg's next effort ”Am I Your New Toy”. ”Tom Top” became a novelty hit when released as the album's pilot single in 1980. 1980 also saw the release of the fine Paul McCartney inspired non-album single ”Nothing's Gonna Stop Me Now”.

Am I Your New Toy (Silence, 1982)
as Zero
English vocals
International relevance: ***
 
One of Broberg's quirkiest albums, and given his earlier ones that says a lot. Broberg plays all instruments himself, using a drum machine for rhythm keeping. A certain Devo influence can be traced on tracks like ”You Make It Happen” and ”Your Clothes Talk”, but don't forget to add Brian Wilson's most bizarre Beach Boys moments and sprinkle a bit of Paul McCartney's 1980 album ”McCartney II” on top.

But the crucial element is of course Broberg himself. This album doesn't sound like anything else, at least nothing made by a well-known artist. It's as if he took pieces of familiar music, put them in a telepod from the 50's horror movie ”The Fly”, teleported everything to the other telepod. looked at the curious product of his experiment and then released it on record. Of course the album soon entered obscurity, and few casual listeners probably know it even exists.

After this album, Robert Broberg propelled back into full-scale stardom with sell-out shows and the love of the people. But once he did, he lost a fair bit of the peculiar grandeur of his extended 'forgotten' decade.

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

ROBERT BROBERG – Tolv sånger på amerikanska (RKOB, 1978)

English vocals
International relevance: ***

Ranked #17 on the blog's Top 25 list

Robert Broberg left Sweden for the States after ”Vem är det som bromsar & vem är det som skjuter på”. He began planning for ”The Rise amd the Fall of the Plastic Messiah”, an ambitious stage show meant to include movies, stills, theatre, masks and music. As far as I can discern, only the music was finished, and released on Broberg's private RKOB label. Recorded with noted session musicians Stefan Brolund (bass), Jan Tolf (guitar) and Claes Wang (drums) in the legendary Studio Decibel, the album still has a 'homemade' aura to it, as if it was recorded in a small living room.

The lyrics emphasize the music's claustrophobic feel (that always reminds me of John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band's 'tree' album). All of them deal with the superficial modern society where humans are first reduced to consumers and then a disposable commodity with no second hand value. In the end, ”Tolv sånger på amerikanska” (”twelve songs in American”), is a deeply existential record, taking Broberg's self-doubt to a higher universal level (or a deeper one, depending how you look at it). It's an album of generalized anxiety; an unease that has become an integrated part of an uncertain being. I'm convinced that Broberg's bipolar disorder is the foundation of this album (he spent some time in a psychiatric hospital during his U.S. years), and that the American socety's fixation with the glamourous surface further provoked the self-detachment that was evident already on Broberg's previous albums. The album cover captures this perfectly: A naked human being against an empty but over-saturated background.

There's something scary about the album; once you actually hear it and not just listen to it. It's like staring into the darkness knowing it stares back at you from a constantly elusive, dissolving place you didn't even know existed in the first place.

So maybe it's not that surprising that ”Tolv sånger på amerikanska” was one of Broberg's most neglected albums for such a long time. The album doesn't fit in with the simplified image the casual listener has of him as a funny chap delivering word plays to hummable tunes. This album doesn't really fit in anywhere and that's one of it's true strengths. It's a one of a kind album that doesn't blind you with flashes to your face, but creeps up on you until it has you all wrapped up in its emotionally and mentally tangled web.

And ”Song to a Plastic Messiah” is one of the greatest songs ever released on a Swedish 70's album. Actually on any Swedish album ever.

Full album playlist

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

ROBERT BROBERG – Complete albums 1970-1974

A truly singular artist who made his debut as a skiffle singer in the late 1950's. He made several albums over the next decade and became famous for his hummable and humourous troubadour styled pop songs, many of them became mainstream classics.

The Pling & Plong Show (EMI, 1970)
as Robert Karl Oskar Broberg
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *

In 1970, Broberg made a TV series for children, ”The Pling & Plong Show”. It was crazy, corny, imaginative, bizarre but also popular. The songs from the series were released on an album the same year it was televised, and just by hearing the soundtrack you'll get an idea what the show was like. The album jerks back and forth between genres and while it doesn't hold up nearly as well as Jojje Wadenius' ”Goda' goda'”, it has a couple of memorable songs, especially the contagiously swinging title track.

En typiskt rund LP med hål i mitten (Pling & Plong, 1971)
as Robban
Swedish vocals, English vocals
International relevance: *

Robert Broberg's first proper album of the 70's was released on his own label named after the children's TV series. There are good songs on the album but a lot of them appear wasted on a overzealous humour. You can trace a John Lennon influence on the album's finest tracks ”Redan när vi sätter oss till bords” and ”Insidan av ditt lår”.

Jag letar efter mig själv (Pling & Plong, 1972)
as Robert Karl Oskar Broberg
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

The album title – ”I'm looking for myself” – suggests Broberg was harbouring existential doubts. And he did. He later spoke a lot about his bipolar disorder, something that came to affect his career in different ways. ”Jag letar efter mig själv” is a rather dark album even when the music sounds cheerful. The contradiction between what's said and how it's said creates a sometimes unnerving tension. At times it's as if Broberg thinks aloud and talks to himself (especially on the very explicit ”Snabbköpsbutiken”) which gives the entire album a certain rough and candid feel.

Vem är det som bromsar & vem är det som skjuter på? (RKOB, 1974)
as Robert Karl Oskar Broberg
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **

This is the closest Robert Broberg ever got a political album – as it happens, members of Hoola Bandoola Band appear on it. But it's not the typically trendy political album of the time. Broberg asks questions Kjell Höglund could have asked, and some of them are probably blasphemous to the converted smartaleck legions: 'If you want to change the world, should you start with the world or yourself?' Broberg recognizes the real person, the individual of flesh and blood, beyond the rigid political structures. And as should be clear to anyone who's read this blog before, I'd much rather listen to people allowing themselves to ask questions and inhibit doubts. Or, as Broberg says: ”It's got to be fun making a revolution”. But contrary what some people used to think in those days, an album isn't the lyrics alone – the songs here are very good with an introspective feel to go along with the words. 

One of Broberg's finest.

The Pling & Plong Show full album playlist
En typisk rund LP med hål i mitten full album playlist
Jag letar efter mig själv full album playlist

Vem är det som bromsar & vem är det som skjuter på? full album playlist