Hawkey Franzén was a member of Lea Riders Group who made a couple of 45's in the 60's,
including the rousing ”Dom kallar oss mods” which became an
international garage psych classic when included on the third volume
of the groundbreaking compilation series ”Pebbles”. He performed
in the Swedish version of ”Hair” at Scalateatern in Stockholm in
1968, and joined Jason's Fleece for their one-off album in 1970. He
released several singles with various line-ups and appeared on albums
by Björn J:son Lindh, Lena Granhagen and Fred Åkerström;
translated lyrics and wrote songs for Monica Törnell, Tommy Körberg,
Anita Lindblom, Sylvia Vrethammar... The list of domestic stars he's
worked with is virtually endless. His solo album discography is far
more comprehensible. Between 1969 and 1981 he released a mere four
regular LP's, plus two children's albums.
Swedish vocals
International relevance: ***
Hawkey Franzén spent a month in jail
for draft dodging and there he met Björn J:son Lindh who was behind
bars for the same reason. Together they began working on songs
dealing with life in prison. The collaboration spawned Franzén's
first solo album ”Visa från Djupvik”, with Djupvik being the
name of correctional institution where they were interned. Tracks such
as ”Tillbaka från skogen” and ”Vakuum” bear a slight Pugh Rogefeldt
resemblance, and there's a disctint jazz influence on ”Somnar”
and ”En dag”, but the best tracks are ”Tack ska ni ha!”,
”Fångvård” and the brass laced ”Tyst”. Fans of Lea Riders
Group might find ”Visa från Djupvik” disappointing but it's a
very fine album in its own right.
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: ***
”Visa från gungor och sand” –
subtitled ”Visa från världens
största park” – is a children's album of sorts, a
bit like Jojje Wadenius' ”Goda' goda'”, but it's as much an album
about children as it's for children. ”Varför då”
is a good song, ”Gungor och sand” shows a minor David Crosby
influence, and the instrumental jam based ”Två pappor” that ends the
album is OK too, but the children singing back up vocals on several
of the tracks are a bit distracting. And the lyrics just don't have
the urgency of those on ”Visa från Djupvik”.
Swedish vocals, instrumental
International relevance: ***
A move back to major label Mercury
after the short stint with MNW for ”Visa från gungor och sand”.
”Visa från och till” has a somewhat more detailed production
including moog and strings, but it falls a bit short songwise.
Franzén occasionally comes off like a Cornelis Vreeswijk (very
famous Dutch born Swedish singer/songwriter) wannabe on a couple of
tracks and a sleepy eyed Mikael Ramel on others. But it has a couple
of interesting moments. ”Jag ger mig” has a driving groove; the
short Bela Bartók composition ”Ungersk polsterdans” wouldn't
have been out of place on a Samla Mammas Manna album, and the two
versions of ”Sorgmarsch” are odd and intriguing exercises in
unusual rhythms. The best track of them all is however ”Sorgekranser”
that further explores 'chopped off' time signatures. To sum it up:
”Visa från och till” is uneven but with worthwhile highlights.
Visa av och med (Viking, 1972)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: **
Hawkey Franzén's last proper album for
33 years, and a good one at that. It's largely a contemporary band
singer/songwriter album (very atypical to the Viking label) but the performances are solid and Franzén
sounds more inspired on this album than he did on ”Visa från och
till”. The most progressive track ”Visst kan man bli fast” is
splendid with Björn J:son Lindh in excellent (semi-free jazz) flute
shape.
”Visa från Djupvik” often gets
most of the praise but it might actually be that ”Visa av och med”
is my personal favourite Hawkey Franzén album.
Swedish vocals, spoken word
International relevance: *
This children's album isn't really a
Hawkey Franzén album but it features him as the story's main
character Bubblan's two daddies. The musical parts are performed by
Jan Bandel, Jan Schaffer and Stefan Brolund (Hörselmat, Pop Workshop) with jazz musicians Bengt Hallberg, Egil Johansen, Staffan
Sjöholm and Rune Gustafsson completing the line-up. The music was
written by Leif Strand and is mellow but quirky – sometimes even
spaced out. Hardly an everyday spin but peculiarly appealing
even during the spoken bits (although they admittedly won't do much
to non-Swedes). The plot's written by actor, author and translator
Catherine Berg.
Smulvisor & bitlåtar (Sonet,
1981)
with Ulla Wiklund
Swedish vocals
International relevance: *
An album made with Ulla Wiklund who
voice acted Bubblan on the previous album. Franzén produced the
album, sang on half of the tracks, and provided guitars and sound
effects. Other performers include Jan Bandel, Greg FitzPatrick, Ale
Möller and Göran Lagerberg. The Oriental sounding ”Gamla trappan”
features tablas, bouzouki and flute and is the only interesting track
on an uninteresting album.
Visa från Djupvik full album playlist
Visa från gungor och sand full album playlist
Visa från och till full album playlist
Sagan om bubblan som fick nya föräldrar full album
Smulvisor & bitlåtar full album playlist
Visa från Djupvik full album playlist
Visa från gungor och sand full album playlist
Visa från och till full album playlist
Sagan om bubblan som fick nya föräldrar full album
Smulvisor & bitlåtar full album playlist
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