Wildmarken (EMI, 1976)
Swedish vocals
Swedish vocals
International relevance: ***
I'll never understand what makes one
album a sought-after rarity when a better album hardly attracts any
interest at all. For example, why do people fork out tons of cash for
crap like Epizootic, Shaggy and Asoka when they ignore
albums like ”Wildmarken” that has just about all the features
that make collectors go bonkers?
While not 24 carat knock-out stuff, Wildmarken's heavy rock is well made with decent vocals and plenty of biting
guitars, sometimes even with growling wah-wah. Only two ballads
interrupt the heavy flow (”Guld” and ”En längtans dag”, the
latter with a dash of Blue Öyster Cult) but it's tracks like ”Gitarr
och dragharmonika”, ”Långt bort från stan” and ”Som en
extra dag” that define the album. An LP ripe for discovery for those into the heavier side of progg.
Och nu på sjuttiotalet (EMI, 1977)
Swedish vocals
International relevance: ***
Wildmarken's second album suggests they
tried to move forward while adding even more power to their music.
You can hear sax on the first track ”Han som var rädd för
giftgasen”, and there's some discofied clavinet on ”Vinet är
slut”. And sometimes they just take the easy boogie way out, as on
”Ida Petronella Lundström”.
While I appreciate Wildmarken's
attempts not to make their debut album over again, it doesn't
necessarily mean I think their attempts pay off that well (and
whoever came up with the idea of having a flock of cavemen grunting
background vocals certainly should have kept it to himself.) (And I hope the cover designer got fired). There
is, however, one great track here, ”Vad vill dom”, that rounds
off the album in a better way than it perhaps deserves.
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