Swedish vocals, spoken word
International relevance: **
Surprisingly sought after (i.e.
expensive) album by Malmö duo Änglabarn consisting of Sven Ingmar
Ohlsson and Dan Tillberg. Tillberg later founded the Bellatrix label,
recorded two cover albums of The Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan
translations, and appeared in the Swedish Eurovision Song Contest in
1985 and 1986.
At first I thought this album was
rather good, but the more I've heard it, the more irritating it's
become. The pompous vocals have an incredibly annoying Xian vibe even
if the album isn't religious. But the lyrics are bad enough, hippy
clichés dressed up as haughty 'poetry', some of them written by
Tillberg's grandmother. The spoken ”Dikt och vers” certainly
doesn't help either, and the large choir and the string section used
on several tracks give the album a crypto-symphonic character, as if
it wanted to be a symph album but doesn't have the guts to see
it through. Last track ”Ur drömmen” explains everything: It's a
cover of The Moody Blues' ”Nights in White Satin”, but most of
the album sounds just like that, a Moody Blues warmed over in a
microwave oven for the fourth time.
Änglabarn also released a single in
1973, with two less overblown non-album tracks and while one thinks
the toned down arrangements would help the duo's cause, they're even
worse than anything on the album, with the dreadful hippy dippy
schmippy drivel even more to the fore.
No comments:
Post a Comment