A Gothenburg band that's not widely known today although they commissioned music for Ungdomsradion (=”the youth radio”) for the Swedish national broadcasting company in the late 70s. The songs commented on current topics with blatant political lyrics.
The members were only around 15 years old when Kattegatt began in 1976/77, all self-taught and making up their songs collectively during endless rehearsal sessions in the Gårda part of Gothenburg. Their 'modest' ambition was to make a kind of music no-one had ever heard before... but being inspired by the likes of Genesis, Frank Zappa and Samla Mammas Manna, it was clear they ended up with something well adjusted to progressive rock. But teenagers sometimes grow apart as the years go by, and once it was time for their lone, self-released album, they had all developed divergent interests. So the curiously titled ”Alla barnen går en sväng!” (=”all children go for a stroll!”) was really the beginning of the end and not the start of a continious recording career..
The many hours spent in their rehearsal room must have payed off quite well because the LP is a pretty accomplished work roughly in a fusion style. You can clearly tell the influence from 70s era Zappa from the sudden time shifts here and there, and there are indeed dashes of skewed Samla Mammas Manna humour.
Not everything here is successful. I could have done without the Caribbean moves on the first two selections, and the vocal tracks on side 2 drag a bit. But Kattegatt's joy of playing shines through on most tracks which makes this curious LP one of the more entertaining examples of Swedish fusion. They're certainly not choking on their own self-importance simply because they don't take themselves too seriously. There, an anachronistic lesson to be learnt here by many other fusionists so full of themselves that they forgot how to smile the very second they picked up their instruments.
Not a brilliant album, but one fun enough to pull out every fourth year or
so.
Drummer and percussionist Mårten Tisselius actually
joined Samla Mammas Manna's Von Zamla incarnation later on before
joining Lars Hollmer in his Looping Home Orchestra together with
Kattegatt keyboardist Sven Jansson. Singer/guitarist Staffan Ahlbom
had a couple of solo singles out in the mid 80s on Transmission (the
reformed version of Nacksving) before turning to studio production
along with Sven Jansson recording some rather well-known Swedish
bands in the 90s and 00s. They also had the Helikopter label
connected to the studio and released quite a few albums in the
early/mid 90s.
All previous members have stayed in
touch and they still meet for some unpretentious jamming at their old
rehearsal space. A full-time Kattegatt reunion is ruled out according
to themselves, but a compilation of thirteen tracks called ”The
Gårda Tapes” was released digitally in 2023. Still quirky, but
nowhere near as charming as their original LP.
Full album playlist
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