I have something of a default appreciation for albums straddling the line of progg and punk. The ambiguity doesn't necessessarily equals great music, but the dual mindset of the combination sometimes makes it more interesting than just straight-up progg or plain punk. I have featured several bands in that ilk here before, most recently Hela Huset Skakar and prior to that Fiendens Musik, Ruff & Fukt & Suck and Kräldjursanstalten to mention some of the better ones, and there will surely be more in the future.
International relevance: ***
If Kräldjursanstalten are the
prime example of Swedish Captain Beefheart-influenced angularity,
then Boojwah (= bourgeois)
Kids were the second tiers. Nowhere near as good and certainly not as
heavy and tight as their competitors, they score high on the
intention scale. ”Med beat”, released on Ulf Beijerstrand's
Grisbäck label, is a 12” with six short tracks, the shortest
clocking in on just 40 seconds. The arrangements are credible for
what is basically non-professionals, but what holds it back is the
vocals. Drummer Bertil Lundblad too often adapts a deliberately silly
style. At the time, it might have seemed anarchic and tauntingly
disrespectful to conventions, but forty years on, they sound stupid
more than anything. The lyrics are often too contrived too, trying to
hard to be ”different” and ”Beefheartish”. Foreign listeners
won't notice however, but they don't ring very convincing or clever
in the ears of a Swede. The best track is by far ”Med Oasen mot
asen” a tribute to the punk joint Oasen in Stockholm suburb Rågsved
from which also spawned Sweden's best known punk act Ebba Grön.
International relevance: ***
Boojwah Kids followed their mini-LP
debut with a full-length album in 1981, also on Grisbäck. In the
meantime, they'd got a tighter grip of the convoluted arrangements,
but they unfortunately also recruited an additional singer named
Marianne Stenstedt. With a true nerve-grater of a voice, thin and
peculiarly timbre-less, she makes the album just about unlistenable.
Her tuneless chanting sounds like an asylum intern which might have
been the point anyway. Good for Lundblad though, whose tracks are far
more digestable with Stenstedt's unmusical vocal spurts obscuring
most of the other tracks here. Needless to say, the instrumentals –
too few in numbers and including a remake of "Boojwah Bas-tu" originally in a shorter version on their debut – are the most appealing efforts in this
could-have-been-a-lot-better selection.
Boojwah Kids returned in 1983 with one
further 7” EP entitled ”Fake Golden Palmtrees” on the Slick
label. Fittingly enough, as their music had gotten a bit more
straight-ahead and polished by then, and also sung in English.
Thankfully they had lost synapse sniper Stenstedt – but also a fair
bit of their relative relevance. A live tape from the Tonkraft radio
session also exists but remains officially unreleased.
"Hatten av" + "Med Oasen mot asen"
"Trång tågkorridor"
"Boojwah Bas-tu"
"Spansk sluttning"
"Telepati"
"Med en duns slutar alla att hoppas"
As a person who happens to be married to a certain Marianne Stenstedt, I would like to thank you for this accurate and fair review.
ReplyDeleteHaha! Thank you! :-D
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