Swedish vocals, English vocals
International relevance: ***
Sogmusobil were one of the first generation progg bands along with
Träd, Gräs & Stenar, Fläsket Brinner and Samla Mammas Manna,
starting out as a six-piece curiously known as Telefon Paisa. Einar
Heckscher, wild man poet and founding member told the Arkivet podcast/website
that they got the name Telefon
Paisa ”from the idea that if every person in the world had a
telephone and some pocket money for the call there would be peace on
Earth (paisa is a subdivision of the Indian rupee where a paisa
equals 1/64 of a rupee)”. When three of the original members
left the band shortly before recording ”Telefon”, they changed
the name to the even more curious Sogmusobil (the origins of the name
in question is well documented; it's an abbreviation of ”Stark och
god musik utföres snabbt och billigt", roughly meaning ”strong
and good music performed fast and cheap” in English).
Sogmusobil's live shows were famed –
or infamous – for being shambolic happenings, as confirmed by a
surviving live recording from Moderna Museet (the Museum of Modern
Art) in Stockholm in August 1970. Noodling and rambling, they
sometimes happen to make the music gel, but a lot of the time, they appear so
out of it with Heckscher apparently freeforming lyrics over a
untogether mess of group noise. Judging by that, it's pretty amazing
that they even managed to get an album done.
Vastly overrated, ”Telefon” had an
eagerly anticipated limited re-release a couple of years back, not
affecting the value of original copies on the Gump imprint –
prepare yourself for an asking price of at least €500 for a
decent copy. Unless you're lucky enough to stumble across a copy
priced based on musical value...
Two years after the release of
Sogmusobil's sole album, Heckscher and Norweigan keyboard player
Johnny Mowinckel (formerly of Atlantic Ocean and Fläsket Brinner) reformed Telefon Paisa,
using yet a new name, Levande Livet. As such they recorded one album,
the largely under-appreciated ”Strömmens pärla”.
Mowinckel
kept playing music after the demise of Levande Livet but made only a
few appearances in public, according to Wikipedia Sweden ”due to a
rough life”. Unexpectedly, he released an album of electro-acoustic
music in the mid 90's, ”Skisser från Flen”. Mowinckel passed
away in 2015 after a period of illness. Colourful character Heckscher
on the other hand established himself as a comparably successful
author and translator of the works of Charles Bukowski, Jack Keuroac, Thomas
Pynchon, Louis-Ferdinand Céline and the
likes. In the early 00's, Swedish National Television produced a 47
minute documentary on Heckscher.
Full album playlist
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