After an early career with trad jazz
band Sveriges Jazzband (best known for their 1970 song ”Brittas
restaurang”), Gösta Linderholm made his solo debut with an album
taking its title from a Philemon Arthur & The Dung song. He
immediately established himself as a happy-go-lucky troubadour with a
warbly voice. But, hang on – is that tablas in opening track, the
droning ”Herr Fantasi”? It is indeed, played by Jan Bandel. And
there's Björn J:son Lindh in his best ”Ramadan” mode.
”Påtalåten”? Yes, an Ola Magnell cover recorded the same year
as Magnell's own 45 version. And that bassist Stefan Brolund, wasn't
he in Pop Workshop and later EGBA and Oriental Wind? He was.
”In
kommer Gösta” isn't a great album and rather typical
Metronome label singer/songwriter fare along the lines of the
aforementioned Ola Magnell and, for better or for worse, Marie Bergman.
But it nevertheless shows that there was a wee bit more to
Gösta Linderholm than he gets cred for.
Not surprisingly, both Magnell and Bergman pop up on Linderholm's second album along with Thommie Fransson and, again, Björn J:son Lindh. The style is similar to the debut but with a few better songs and slightly darker shades, as on ”I natten” and the Magnell/Linderholm co-composition ”Kom liv”. I remember "Herr Fantasi” from my radio listening childhood days, so I have a certain nostalgic relation to that particular track. But the best track here is the album's most unexpected inclusion.
Guitarist Finn Sjöberg appears
prominently on the album and that might explain Kvartetten Som Sprängde cover ”Gånglåt från Valhallavägen”. Originally an
instrumental track but here with added Linderholm lyrics, and I can
promise there's nothing else in his ouvre to prepare you for this.
It's a bleak, actually apocalyptic depiction of a winter's
day in Stockholm, soaked in alienation, internal turmoil and
impending chaos. Junkies are dying in the streets and a hysterical
Lady Luck screams out in agony. This track is truly a lost progg gem
hidden in plain sight.
Linderholm made many albums after these
two, some of them with credible musicians helping him out such as
Kebnekajse's Mats Glenngård on ”Blå ballader & gröna
demoner” from 1977. Some of them even have a half OK track or two,
but there's really no point in getting into them in detail. A thumb
rule is that the later it gets, the more Linderholm lived up to his
own caricature.
In kommer Gösta full album playlist
Göstas skiva full album playlist
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