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Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Topic: In Lingua Mortua Posted: December 29 2010 at 12:52
In Lingua Mortua is a progressive black metal project started in 1999 by keyboardist Lars Fredrik Frøislie of White Willow and Wobbler. Frøislie was inspired by and mixed influences from a wide range of music, taking things from 70's prog rock,Norwegian black metal,folk,jazz,classical music,electronica and film music (particularly film noir and horror) and fusing them together to come up with In Lingua Mortua's unique sound.
I got in touch with Lars Fredrik Frøislie for the In Lingua Mortua story.
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You
are already an active member of Wobbler and White Willow. Then you
also started up In Lingua Mortua. Please tell us why and when you set
up In Lingua Mortua.
I started In Lingua Mortua a few months after Wobbler was formed (in
1999), and almost two years before I joined White Willow. At the time
I just wanted a totally different project where I was in charge of
everything. Wobbler is democratic and very strict when it comes to
what’s allowed and not. Wobbler was not supposed to be
groundbreaking and progressive in the true sense of the word. I say
“was” because we’ve progressed since 1999 (which is when the
material from the first two albums was made). It was supposed to
sound like a prog rock band from 1973, using only instruments from
that period. It’s like we pretended the last 30 years never
happened – which is of course very cool on its own. In Lingua
Mortua however has a different approach. Here everything’s allowed.
Still I only follow what I think sounds good or right, so it’s not
at all about “making something strange, just because it’s
something new or progressive” or whatever… It’s only music I
felt like making.
I
can understand the connection between Wobbler and White Willow. In
Lingua Mortua is another ballgame again, music wise..... or is it ?
My thesis is; how do you manage to spread yourself over thick music
wise big chasm between for example Wobbler and In Lingua Mortua?
I definitely see a relationship between Wobbler, White Willow and In
Lingua Mortua. We’re all heavily influenced by early 70s prog rock,
are very, very fond of vintage instruments and have a total disregard
of trends and what anyone thinks about the music. But in In Lingua
Mortua is much darker and introverted. I have to admit, I get a
little shocked when I meet people who only listen to one style or
music-genre. For me it’s all just “music” of which there are
two types: good and bad. I don’t care if it’s called rap, pop,
blues, country (or even western), electro, metal, funk, soul, folk,
punk, rock, classical, prog, and so on, as long as I find it
appealing in one way or another. But then on the other side, I do
have fun doing/imitating various genres: “let’s mix jazz and
black metal, or electronica and folk and see what happens” and so
on.
You
signed on your local label Termo Records (which also includes The
Opium Cartel and Wobbler).
Please
tell us more about your first album Bellowing Sea-Racked by Tempest
from 2007 where you also faced a lot of challenges during the
recording.
Oh yes. It was supposed to be released no later than 2000, and I’m
sure if it would have stood out from most of the music back then.
Most black metal bands used crappy 90s digital keyboards with a-choir
and “orchestra-hits”, and here someone came along using not only
vintage keyboards like Mellotron, Hammond c3, Minimoog and so on, but
also real orchestra, mixed with some jazz and electronica and so on.
But
all sorts of things went wrong so it wasn’t released until 2007. It
was almost like a curse. Every time I (finally) managed to get the
musicians to the studio (which was perhaps one or two days every
second year), something either broke or went wrong. I specially
remember when we had set up the drums, all ready to finally record,
when all of a sudden the worst storm of the decade hit Hønefoss. So
the lines got blown up, and the electricity was down for the rest of
the day. Stuff like that haunted the whole thing.
But
I was constantly making music back then, so I’ve got enough
material for several new albums. What I learned from that process was
patience, always take two back-ups, and if you want something done,
do it yourself. I also learned a lot production wise, so it wasn’t
a total waste of time.
You
released a new album a few months ago named Salon des Refuses. Please
tell us more about this album.
Lars:
Most of this album was written when I was in my early 20s, and it was
a huge step forward in every way compared to previous music and
productions I’d been a part of. This is one of the few albums I can
still listen to today; it has aged very well. And it should, as
nothing is left to chance – down to the strings of the Rickenbacker
bass, the skins and dimensions on the Ludwig drumkit, the types of
cymbals, the amps, the microphones and so on. The keyboards are of
course a chapter on its own. I mainly used Mellotron m400, Chamberlin
m-1, Hammond c3, lots and lots of Hohner Clavinet D6 (which many
think is the guitar on this album), Rhodes, minimoog, arp, prophet-5
and other goodies. I took no shortcuts in any way. It was even
mastered three times before I was satisfied.
This
album features lots of incredible guest-musicians. I was lucky enough
to get Jørgen Munkeby from the Norwegian “Shining” to play sax
and bass clarinet and Niklas Kvarforth from the Swedish “Shining”
to sing on the album. They do a perfect job in my view, and I
couldn’t think of any others to do it any better. Ketil from Jaga
Jazzist even does a wonderful flute-solo in there. Hallvard from the
legendary “Kvist” and “Xploding plastix” does some guitar, as
well as Jacob from White Willow.
I
understand from your website that the lyrics on both albums are
special and not the petrol cans and churches types of lyrics. Please
tell us more about your concepts and the lyrics on both albums.
Lars:
The first album “Bellowing Sea – Racked by Tempest” is
lyrically a mix of Van der Graaf Generator’s “A Plague of
Lighthouse keepers”, Dante’s “Inferno” and Homer’s
“Odyssey”. Quite pompous and over the top really…
The
second album, “Salon des Refusés”, is not a concept album like
the first one, but the influence of art history, which I study at the
university in Oslo, is obvious in many tracks. You’ll find anything
from Munch to Pollock, Rubens and more. Also the 1880s naturalistic
period, which I’m concentrating on in my master-assignment, is also
apparent. It’s definitely not very optimistic and/or light music.
It’s all done when I’m in “that” mood, just like I have to be
in a special mood to make Wobbler-songs and so on. I even got
nauseous many times when I made and recorded this album, and I have
witnessed some people finding the whole thing so disturbing they
actually threw up while listening to it and another guy literary
crapped his pants, which is of course very cool and says more than a
1000 words.
King
Crimson meets Emperor is the label I have seen put on In Lingua
Mortua. Personally; I would also add Van Der Graaf Generator too on
this label, but nevermind my views; how would you describe your
music?
Lars:
Yeah, I like that “King Crimson goes black metal” label which
some have put on the second album. Some of the idea behind Salon des
Refusés was “I wonder how black metal (or extreme metal or
whatever you want to call it) would have sounded like in 1973…”
But
it’s a mixture of many things: jazz (Miles Davis, John Coltrane,
Buddy Rich), horror film music (Goblin, Fabio Frizzi), “classical”
(Mussorgsky, Messiaen, Ligeti, Santiago de Murcia, Bach, Beethoven,
Grieg) and of course lots and lots of prog, mainly from the old days:
Yes, King Crimson, Änglagård, Univers Zero, Magma, Museo Rosenbach,
Banco, PFM, Gentle Giant and much, much more. Add a bit of
Darkthrone, Burzum, Voivod, Celtic Frost, Thorns, Led Zeppelin and
Amon Tobin and you could perhaps get an idea.
Norway
has a big black metal scene and a pretty big prog rock scene too. Is
In Lingua Mortua a crossover act and how has the two scenes reacted
to In Lingua Mortua?
Lars:
The reactions to specially the last album have been overwhelming.
It’s not exactly commercial music, so I was taken by surprise that
anyone would even like it. I’ve been part of about 30 releases with
various bands, but nothing has come close to this which is very cool
since I worked so hard with it for almost 10 years.
Are
there any plans to take In Lingua Mortua on the road and/or what are
your plans for this project?
Lars:
Not at the moment. I guess I should, since playing live is a must if
you want people to be aware of your band’s existence. But it’s so
difficult to play this music, so I’d need a wonder-guitarist to
handle some of the parts. But also I’ve got so many other projects
that need to be realized first. I’ve got’em lining up good and
I’m kind of behind schedule all the time (which again can be linked
to the disasters with the recordings of the first In Lingua Mortua
album). The releases I did last year were music written in 2001 (the
Wobbler-material was even from 1999), so you get the idea. It’s
sometimes a bit annoying, since I’ve developed so much since then,
but I’m not the type that gives up on a project – I need to see
them all realized even if it takes 10 years.
To
wrap up this interview, is there anything you want to add to this
interview?
Lars:
To the proggers I’d recommend “Salon des Refusés” because
there’s a great prog-rock album hidden beneath all the fuzz-guitars
and noise (I’ve been thinking about releasing a prog-version
without the noisy stuff, so you can really hear everything that’s
going on underneath, but we’ll see). Approach this music with an
open mind and in the right mood. Don’t be hasty; perhaps you should
listen to only certain parts of the album at the time to let things
sink in (even I still discover stuff I’d forgotten about along the
way). Give it at least 15 spins before you make up your mind.
Have
a happy new year!
Thank you to Lars Fredrik Frøislie for this interview
Joined: September 18 2005
Status: Offline
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Posted: December 29 2010 at 13:35
Great interview, Lars is one musician I was curious to know more about, having briefly interacted with him over at Prog Ears with regards to the new In Lingua Mortua; I think highly of his keyboards work and how he creates dense and layered music. I highly anticipate the next Wobbler album.
Joined: March 12 2005
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Points: 166183
Posted: December 29 2010 at 16:24
Excellent interview. Sounds like there is plenty of ILM music to come, which I'm quite excited about.
And I just have to highlight this bit:
"I even got nauseous many times when I made and recorded this album, and I have witnessed some people finding the whole thing so disturbing they actually threw up while listening to it and another guy literary crapped his pants, which is of course very cool and says more than a 1000 words."
Damn. Really what can you say in response to that?!
Dig me...But don't...Bury me I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
Joined: October 09 2005
Location: Entropia
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Posted: December 30 2010 at 19:20
Man With Hat wrote:
Excellent interview. Sounds like there is plenty of ILM music to come, which I'm quite excited about.
And I just have to highlight this bit:
"I even got nauseous many times when I made and recorded this album, and I have witnessed some people finding the whole thing so disturbing they actually threw up while listening to it and another guy literary crapped his pants, which is of course very cool and says more than a 1000 words."
Damn. Really what can you say in response to that?!
Considering its Black Metal thats probably praise of the highest calliber! Wobbler, White Willow and ILM are three of my favourite bands so its good to hear from the men behind the music, thanks Torodd, Lars.
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