From the band's webiste:
The new Dungen album ”Tio Bitar” to be released in May 2007.
Dungen
Tio Bitar
Over the past two years, the profile of Swedish psychedelic rockers Dungen has grown at an
alarming rate, from a cult studio project into a worldwide musical phenomenon. And on
Tio
Bitar
, we’re hearing the end results of an outpouring of success and support – one which has, for
once, inspired the creative processes at hand to make something wholly new and original, yet
remaining within the same sphere of emotions that fostered Dungen’s three previous albums.
Gustav Ejstes, Dungen’s founder and principal member, made
Tio Bitar (translated, “Ten
Pieces”) – a bracing display of psychedelic rock, presented with a bright, avid confidence –
largely by himself, with the assistance of guitarist Reine Fiske. Gustav wrote the songs, and
played all of the instruments on his own, with Reine on many lead guitar and bass parts; his
style of play puts him well within the top ranks of modern guitar heroes past and present. Says
Gustav of Reine’s tone language and instrumental expressiveness, “He has a way of wielding
the guitar that not many people have.” An understatement, indeed, and one important piece of
the puzzle that allows Gustav to achieve, in his own words, “the best possible result.”
“It’s similar to how they often do it in hip-hop,” Gustav states in his description his recording
process. “One producer is behind it all, and in this case, I am that producer.” Feel free to draw
your own conclusions as to how this all bears out – reasoning crumbles when you hear just what
Gustav, Reine, and company have made happen through this process. Dungen is a project that
distinctly, effortlessly aligns its soundscapes and influences with an authority that will make you
believe these sounds were always meant to go together.
Tracks like “Familj,” “Sa Blev Det Bestamt” and “Gor Det Nu” suggest a new, unburdened
direction for the belabored concept of “jamming.” Here, it hems in the melodies, borrowing some
of their phrasings but spinning off into lucid counterpart, all anchored by the bass, drums, and
organ. When vocals – as on past efforts, sung entirely in Swedish – or a flute appear, they’re
diverging out to a third melody, still safely within the frame, in tune with each part. Complex
arrangements find the songs boiling over with dozens of ideas, stitched together with studio
flash, yet played so soulfully that there’s no evidence of the kind of smug, cynical hamminess
that’s been hurting rock music since the early ‘70s. Nor is it the other extreme; no wide-eyed
innocence and eagerness to please.
Tio Bitar
follows world tours and enthusiastic responses from the press and public, and answers
the praise with yet another set of cohesive, adventurous rock songs that can’t sit still, yet
possess the vision and focus to distance itself from distraction and obvious influences.
According to Gustav, it all comes down to one thing. “When I was eight years old,” Gustav
remembers, “my mother gave me her copy of
Are You Experienced? by Jimi Hendrix. That’s
where I first discovered and understood what a ‘groove’ was. Since then, whenever I heard that
groove, I recognized it, and I liked it.” He’s not looking to emulate the past, though, at least on
the past’s unfailingly outdated terms. “Dungen is not retro,” he states. “Dungen is contemporary.
Contemporary because it consists of elements from both then and now.”
Edited by avestin - March 12 2007 at 00:45