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Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Topic: Wolverine Posted: February 23 2011 at 10:48
Swedish band Wolverine was formed in 1995 by Marcus Losbjer (drums) and Stefan Zell (vocals,bass) ,who were soon joined by Stefan's younger brother Mikael (guitar) .They started out as a melodic death metal band.Andreas "Bagge" Baglien (keyboards,organ) and Carl-Henrik Landegren (guitar) also joined the band and their sound evolved into melodic progressive metal with growling vocals mixed in.After recording 3 demos they recorded and released their fourth demo,titled "Fervent Dream",which was very well received by the media.
In 2000 Landegren was replaced by guitarist Per Broddesson and in 2001 WOLVERINE recorded and released their full length debut "The Window Purpose".That same year bassist Thomas Jansson joined the band so Stefan Zell could concentrate on vocals.2004 saw the release of their sophomore effort "Cold Light of Monday"
2006 saw the departure of keyboardist Andreas Baglien after 8 years as a member of the band,and he was replaced Per Henriksson.That same year WOLVERINE released their third album "Still" to critical acclaim.
Wolverine has just released their new album Communication Lost and I got in touch with the band for the story.
Your biography
has been covered in your ProgArchives profile so let's bypass the
biography details. But which bands were you influenced by and why did
you choose that name ?
Marcus:
I grew up with Kiss, and I guess the awareness that a good melody
makes a good song comes from them. When we started the band we were
heavily influenced by bands such as Amorphis and Morbid Angel as well
as softer stuff. The reason we chose that name was simply that we
thought it sounded cool at the time, be aware that we were 16-17
years old at the time and had the ambition to be some sort of
Death-metal band. I guess in that context it’s alright but today
it’s just a name we have to live with. You come to a point when you
have built something up and you lose more than gain to change a name
and build it up again. It’s just a name anyway. My
name is Marcus, maybe that name isn’t the perfect fit for every
situation, I don’t know, but I have to live with it. That’s how
people recognize me. :-)
Stefan:
I
hardly had any interest in music at all until the day I heard Kiss
and that was actually thanks to Marcus. He knew I liked softer music
so he carefully picked out a few tracks by Kiss that he thought I'd
like and from that day on I was hooked. Kiss is definitely the reason
we started a band in the first place. Wolverine was formed a few
years later and by then the bands Marcus mentioned were in the mix as
well plus bands such as Queensr˙che, Dream Theater and Fates
Warning.
Let's go straight
to the first album. Please tell us more about The Window Purpose from
2001.
Marcus:
We went to Germany for five weeks to record the album there. It was
one of the hottest summers I’ve experienced I think. As soon as you
took a shower you were sweating again after 10 minutes. It was our
first full-length album and we had great ambitions and expectations
of course. It was a quite intense time, we all lived in a tiny flat
with the shower in the kitchen, so when some of us were eating
breakfast someone else was showering! Musically I think that, as with
every musician, we were in an experimenting phase when everything was
more focused on the technical side of it instead of the musical side.
Some stuff on that album are great and some stuff maybe not so great!
Stefan can tell you more about the concept behind it.
Stefan:
Let's
not forget that the water for the shower didn't work quite as planned
so we had to fill up pots and pans with water and pour it on top of
ourselves. And of course there was no hot water...
The album is
about someone who, right after his death, enters a room filled with
paintings. These paintings are key-moments from his past life. He's
offered a chance to study these paintings in hope of bringing
new-found wisdom to whatever comes next. I guess it's an album about
second chances while at the same time the songs deal with topics I
found important then and, to some extent, still do today. The album
is a milestone in our career, for sure. I think it was a huge step
forward for us on all levels if you compare it to our debut EP
“Fervent Dream”.
Please tell us
more about your second album Cold Light of Monday from 2004
Marcus:
The recording of that album was a
real pain, the whole album was some kind of rescue-project really.
Technical faults, missing wave-files, incompetence. The end-result is
though a lot better than it could have been. Musically it was all
focus on the concept, not so much the technical virtuosity. Listening
to it now I feel that we were still trying to find our identity. Some
songs on that album are still, in my opinion, among the best we’ve
done and some are not!
Stefan:
Writing
that album was an amazing experience and, as for the songwriting
itself, I think it offers some of our best material. However, the
recording of the album actually made it hard for me to fully embrace
the final product. It's thanks to Oliver Philipps and Christian
“Moschus” Moos at the Spacelab studio that the album doesn't
sound like a demo. We recorded the entire album in Sweden but
noticed, far too late, that we weren't at all going in the direction
we wanted to go. When we had the final mix it sounded horrible. We
contacted Oliver and Moschus and shortly thereafter we flew down to
Germany, re-recorded what needed to be re-recorded (which was pretty
much everything), saved whatever could be saved (drums and some
backing vocals) and mixed it all together. The album sounds great, no
doubt about it, but it took a few years before I could fully embrace
the album. Today I'm really proud to be a part of it.
Please tell us
more about your third album Still from 2006
Marcus:
Here I think we landed, we took the
best parts of our two previous albums and just focused on doing great
songs. The recording was a breeze compared to “Cold light…”.
Then of course we got other label-oriented problems instead. You
can’t get it all I guess!
Stefan:
I love this album, simple as that. We wanted to get away from
conceptual albums and focus on just writing good stand-alone songs
which is something I think we succeeded in. Just like Marcs says, the
recording was a walk in the park compared to “Cold light of
Monday”.
And your brand
new album Communication Lost.
Marcus:
Four years of painful, personal,
energy-consuming but also joyful struggle. It’s the first album
since our first EP which is entirely produced by the band, so maybe
that makes it even more personal.
Stefan:
This
one didn't come easy, that's for sure. We had pretty high hopes after
the release of “Still” to kind of take off as a band. The album
got amazing reviews and booking agents started to show interest in
the band. It did however end in one big disappointment. Once we had
played a few gigs here and there everything was back to normal.
Shortly thereafter a lot of stuff happened on personal levels within
the band. The biggest thing for me was that my daughter was born with
a heart condition that would require surgery. The year that followed
was nothing but a nightmare and it kind of made me look at things
from a whole other view. What's nice this time around is that I don't
have any expectations on the bands commercial success whatsoever and
I don't really care about it either. I love the band and it's like
oxygen to me but I no longer feel the need to make my living from it.
This makes it all so much easier and more honest. The only reason I'm
in Wolverine is because I love the band and the music we create. From
where I'm standing that's a darn good reason to be in a band.
How would you
compare your four albums, music and lyrics wise ?
Marcus:
“The Window Purpose” would be the technical metal album I guess.
“Cold Light…” is the experimental outsider. “Still” is a
combination of the two but with more focus on songwriting.
“Communication Lost” is some sort of continuation to “Still”
but with darker and more personal undertones.
Stefan:
As for lyrics, the first two albums were conceptual albums, “Cold
light of “Monday” more so than “The window purpose”. As for
“Still” and “Communication lost” I was totally free to write
about whatever felt close to the heart. In that sense they are much
more personal than the first two albums.
What inspires you
to create new music and what is your recording technics ?
Marcus:
My main inspiration is the life
around me, there’s so much information to gather around you! The
recording techniques has changed a lot during the 16 years we’ve
been around. We started out doing demos on a four-track cassette
recorder, our two first demos was recorded on that. After that it has
slowly become more and more digital. Today you can do a lot of
professional recordings at home. Much of the stuff on “Communication
Lost” is recorded on our home equipment.
Stefan:
The majority of our songs deal with stuff we've experienced
ourselves. There are a handful that are “fictional” songs, like
for example “His cold touch”. I agree with Marcus, there is so
much going on around us that we don't need to make up stuff to write
about. It's all around us.
Just to give
those of us who are unknown with your music a bit of a reference
point or two: How would you describe your music ?
Marcus:
I don’t know! All I know is that we write the music that comes out
and we want to hear. I think you can find elements of many kinds of
music in our songs. In short I guess you can say that we play some
kind of Rock music!
Stefan:
The music fits in the category “progressive metal” although I
think we're less about technical brilliance than many other bands in
that genre. We focus more on melody and mood. I guess you could say
we're more epic than progressive...
Regarding gigs
and other activities, is it an advantage or an disadvantage living in
Sweden ? How is your gigs situation at the moment. Do you find it
difficult to get gigs these days ?
Marcus:
Sweden is probably a good country to live in when writing music but
finding gigs are difficult in a country plagued by all sorts of cheap
entertainment. People here are either too drunk or too impatient to
listen to other kinds of music than they are used to. I feel that
people here are either afraid of new things or they just don’t have
the time for it.
Stefan:
It's always been easier for us to get good gigs outside of Sweden
than within our borders.
What is your
plans for the rest of this year and beyond ?
Marcus:
We will try to get out and do some gigs supporting the album after
that we’ll maybe start working on new music again. But we take one
day at a time!
Stefan:
I think, during the past four years, we've learned to take one step
at a time. We were not far from calling it quits just a couple of
years ago but fortunately we came to our senses. There are still a
few issues to solve for us but I'm at least hopeful we will get back
into writing mode pretty soon. Wise from past experience I hardly
expect us to do any lengthy tours. We will however do as many gigs we
possibly can to promote the album.
To wrap up this
interview, is there anything you want to add to this interview ?
Marcus:
We hope that our fans will like “Communication Lost” as much as
we do and that we’ll see you on tour!
Stefan:
Yes, we certainly love “Communication lost” and I think it's the
perfect follow-up to “Still”. We hope to see as many people as
possible on any gigs we do to promote the album.
Thank you to Wolverine for this interview
Their PA profile is here and their homepage's here
Joined: August 27 2006
Location: The Beach
Status: Offline
Points: 13586
Posted: February 23 2011 at 21:48
I've enjoyed their previous three albums very much,in fact it would be hard to pick a favourite as i gave all three 4 stars. Really looking forward to the new one.Excellent interview as usual Torodd and it was really cool to hear from the band.
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