This post is different to other posts
here as it contains no album reviews. Many – most – progg albums
made for children have no international relevance because
they often feature too many spoken word bits, and the music usually
isn't very fun to listen to as an adult. Therefore there's really no
point in posting links to the albums. (A brilliant exception would of
course Jojje Wadenius' ”Goda' goda'” be, basically a Made In
Sweden album with fine lyrics by children's author Barbro Lindgren,
but that album deserves a post of its own.)
Still this is a very important Swedish
Progg Blog feature, as children's culture was taken very seriously in
those days and it's necessary to consider it in order to understand
the progg movement from a wider perspective. Many artists were
involved in kid's television, theatre, music, literature etc, always
with an intent just as serious as when they were creating for
grown-ups. Children were taken as seriously as anyone else.
One reason was of course
political – it was considered important to teach kids what the
society is like and present to them a socialist solution to economic
problems and eradicate the inequality of social classes. It's a
popular opinion today that children's television in the 70's was
politically indoctrinating, and upon looking back at, for instance,
Nationalteatern's highly successful double album ”Kåldolmar och
kalsipper” (”cabbage rolls and underpants” – no, I don't know
what that's supposed to mean, and neither did Nationalteatern), and
TV series such as ”Huset Silfvercronas gåta”, (”the mystery of
the house of Silfvercrona), ”Ville & Valle & Viktor” and
”Kapten Zoom” (”Captain Zoom”) (both with Anders Linder as lead actor), you have to agree it has a
definite left-wing bent.
However, I've never met one single
person who took damage from watching those or any other 70's children
TV series... with the possible exception of Staffan Westerberg's very
disturbing ”Vilse i pannkakan” (”lost in the pancake”),
already mentioned in my Thomas Wiehe runthrough. I dare say that
everyone I know that grew up during the progg era has become caring
people with a keen sense of justice and solidarity. So maybe the
socialist aspect wasn't that hurtful after all...
Sometimes an album corresponding to a
certain TV series was released, some of these albums are now
moderately sought-after in good condition. (Children aren't known for
taking care of records too well, so most copies that turn up are
pretty mangled.)
Regardless of what one thinks of the
political views expressed and transfered to the young generation of
the day, the socialist stance was that education is an all important
thing. Insufficient education is disastrous to society in the long
run (which is indeed true – the world as we know it today should
explain why). The Social Democratic Party of Sweden invested a lot of
money in ABF, the Workers' Educational Association, but basic
knowledge had to start with the children.
There were several 70's TV shows without an obvious political agenda making great use of the pedagogical possibilites of television. The most notable example is mid-70's ”Fem myror är fler än fyra elefanter” (”five ants are more than four elephants”), with music by jazz illuminary Bengt Ernryd and featuring actors Magnus Härenstam, Brasse Brännström and Eva Rameaus, the latter also active in Musikteatergruppen Oktober (an independent theatre group performing several plays for children) and Tältprojektet. ”Fem myror är fler än fyra elefanter” is acknowledged as one of the best shows ever made for children, and rightly so. In a fashion similar to the famed U.S. show ”Sesame Street”, it taught young kids to read and write in a very entertaining way and showing young and old alike that learning things doesn't have to come from just dull books with boring black and white photographs.
Eva Ramaeus was far from the only progg
personality to get involved with children's television. Carl Johan de
Geer of Blå Tåget co-wrote ”Tårtan” (”the cake”) with
Håkan Alexandersson, and featuring Blå Tåget's Mats G. Bengtsson
as actor. ”Tårtan” was an incredibly funny and anarchic fourteen
part 1972 series about three unemployed sailors opening a bakery shop
where absolutely everything goes wrong. Still a splendid watch today!
The following year, the Swedish broadcasting company aired ”Mumlan”
(hard to translate, but something like ”the mumbler” will do), a
very entertaining show hosted by much loved actor Gösta Ekman and
actress Lena Söderblom in which musicians such as Kjell Westling and
Bengt Berger appeared.
There was a large number of children's
books published during this period too. Some of them aren't very
different to 'ordinary' kids literature, while others took the
pedagogical approach maybe a little too far, with sterile documentary
photos of mum's giving birth and the gynecologist having a look, and titles like ”Chairman Mao Is Your Uncle”, ”A Fun Day at the
Kolkhoz”, ”Say Hello to the Soviet Farmer Building a Factory All by Himself”. OK, so maybe I made up those
titles myself, but they could have been for real. (Swedish readers who want to
investigate children's progg books further are advised to check out
Kalle Lind's ”Proggiga barnböcker”. He's got a somewhat
condescending narrative style but the book is informative and
sometimes very amusing amd clearsighted. Swedes who'd like to delve deeper into children's television may also want to check out Göran Everdahl's
”Kom nu'rå! Barnprogrammen vi minns – eller helst vill glömma”.)
I realize that most of what's been
mentioned here is of little interest to non-Swedish readers, but like
I said initially, all of this (and a lot more) was a very
important progg element and influential to kids growing up in during
the era. Bringing it up in a post of its own will hopefully shed some
further light on how multifaceted progg in fact was.
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