When I was a kid, growing up in a house with Cat Stevens,
Neil Diamond, and Simon and Garfunkel, the first time I ever heard Kiss's
"Detroit Rock City,"
it was a moment of musical epiphany. It was just so vicious, aggressive and
mean. It changed the way I listened to music. I've had a few minor epiphany's
since then, when you come across a band that just brings something new and
revolutionary to your ears.
What have been your musical epiphany moments?
Well… I’ve had so many but one that I think about all the
time is when I was about 10 years old my older sisters (twins) who where deeply
into heavy metal told me to come over by the cassette player… they told me the
intro was supposed to illustrate the adrenaline pumped heartbeat of a warrior
in battle, this was in the dark ages mind you, pre-internet that is… anyways…
so they pressed play and left me alone in the room… the song was “refuse/resist”
by Sepultura and my mind was blown into about a million pieces. Another one was
hearing “Blackwater Park” by Opeth; “Orion” & “Call of Ktulu” by Metallica
(and a buuuunch more of their songs), “Floods” by “Pantera”(the solo… that
GODDAMNED SOLO!!!) I could go on for days & days…
Talk to us about the song-writing process for you. What
comes first, the idea? A riff? The lyrics? How does it all fall into place?
Well I’ve done the bulk of the writing to date… Everything
starts with a riff for me. I at any given moment have like 10 riffs floating
around in my head, usually there is a off-beat, odd-timey or weird (to me at
least) quality to them, something that grips me, then I’ll play them every now
and again and something gets added to them, an idea appears. If it flows together it stays and so the songs get pieced
together… usually a few of the riffs floating around fit together in a song all
of a sudden when something comes to me. When the music is ready I find the
vocal melody and a syllable count that fits the beat… then lastly I write the
lyrics within the constraints of the chosen melody and syllable count… but
usually by then I’ve kind of happened upon what the song is about… the feeling
of the melody usually brings a theme to light.
Who has influenced you the most?
I’d say I’m influenced by many people, mostly those who’ve
overcome great difficulty by the strength of their character and resolve, my
mother is one of those people, incredibly strong, incredibly kind. But also I’m
influenced everyday by the less admirable qualities of people… how brazenly
some people treat others by how they look or dress or even what they do for a
living instead of their personal qualities or what they say or how they think…
their intent.
Everything pretty much just happens automatically… I don’t
really look for ideas… I just give them a bit of space and they come to me… I
regularly fear that my latest idea will be my last though haha.
We're all a product of our environment. Tell us about the
band's hometown and how that reflects in the music?
It’s cold and dark a good chunk of the year here in the
north… I’ve moved around a bunch I guess between Iceland,
Norway and Sweden growing
up, but Reykjavík is what I’d most consider home and the other guys in the band
would too. Pétur our drummer lived in Denmark
for a few years as a kid and Benedikt our rhythm guitar player lived in Norway for a
few years. The terrible weather here in Iceland pretty much breeds artists
because… well we spend a lot of time in doors.
Where'd the band name come from?
It took me a while to come up with the name because almost
everything is taken…We needed something that has a cool literal and metaphorical
meaning, it had to be one word, it had to sound cool and not be used by anyone
else and preferably be completely distinct so that people can google it and not
be drowned in unrelated things with a similar name for pages and pages… Keelrider… the visual it conjures up in my mind is someone
with ropes on his hands and feet… riding the keel of a ship with pure spite in
his eyes. The literal meaning is someone riding the keel of a ship. The
metaphorical meaning is to never give up, even in your darkest hour… and let’s
face it.. when you’re riding the keel of a ship things are looking fairly
bleak.
You have one chance, what movie are you going to write the
soundtrack for?
I feel like we could write the score for a bunch of
different movies, but let’s start off with a dystopian sci-fi movie… easy(not
really) money!
You now write for a music publication (The Ripple
Effect?). You're going to write a 1,000
word essay on one song. Which would it be and why?
Nice try! Let me counter with a question of my own… If you
were to write a song… what chord progressions would you use and what would the
lyrics be about… roughly speaking(asking for a friend)?
I was fiddling with the mic cable once and unplugged my mic…
got it plugged in by the skin of my teeth the exact second I was supposed to
start singing. I may or may not have accidentally chipped a front tooth with a
microphone also….Benni our guitar player has fallen off at least a couple of
things that to him seemed perfectly reasonable for a 250 pound man to jump
onto(few things are) in the heat of the moment. Pétur once broke 3 drumsticks
during a 45 minute set and the last one fell on the floor… so he played the
drums with his feet and one hand while scrounging around for the stick… which
he did find but things definitely sounded weird for a bit. One show after
jumping into the crowd while screaming my lungs out, it was the last song in
the set, I passed out really briefly but I came to before I hit the ground,
then screamed, lights out again started falling came to again, don’t think
anyone noticed.
Tell us about playing live and the live experience for you
and for your fans?
We aim for destruction, when the sound is halfway decent in
our ears or from the monitors… we do.
What makes a great song?
Honesty. Both writing everything with intent and not having
having a part in the song wasn’t written with emotion. I change things I write
if they don’t make me feel something, I don’t use filler riffs or lyrics. I
think if you mean what you write, it comes through and resonates with others.
Tell us about the first song you ever wrote?
Not much to tell I was probably 10 or 11 years old…It was an
instrumental song Em – partial G (G, B) – F# (single note, second fret, heavy E
string) let all the strings ring out as you play. I think pretty much everyone
who owns a guitar has written that song at some point.
What piece of your music are particularly proud of?
The song “Stay” off our first album, it’s the first song I
completed, recording and the works. Finishing that song is what started this
band.
Who today, writes great songs? Who just kicks your ass? Why?
Mikael Åkerfeldt is pretty ridiculous… how he manages to
sing or even stand up while playing what he plays is beyond me… and it sounds
absolutely faaantastic as well. But probably now more people than ever are writing great
songs… and they have an opportunity to broadcast them as well!
Digital just due to convenience… but vinyl is… come on… it’s
just the best. Vinyl looks and feels right, sounds right… Putting a vinyl
record on is a ceremonious act almost and a commitment. I never forget seeing
my sisters “Ride the Lightning” and “Master of Puppets” vinyls as a child… I
thought those records were the coolest things in the world and they were
absolutely not to be played with!
Whiskey or beer? And
defend your choice
Yes! Love both very much. But if I can only choose one… I’ll
go for beer because I can actively drink it for a whole evening without
blacking out… but this is a painful question to answer and I want to add like a
million caveats.
We, at the Ripple Effect, are constantly looking for new
music. What's your home town, and when we get there, what's the best record
store to lose ourselves in?
Reykjavík! Lucky records, Reykjavík Record shop, Smekkleysa
and 12 tónar will get you going at least!
What's next for the band?
We have 2 singles left to release before the LP comes out
hopefully next summer, we’re playing all the shows we can, trying to stay
active on socials and doing videos etc. Just expect more and expect the distant
sound of Keelrider to get closer to you all… wherever you are!
Any final comments or thoughts you'd like to share with our
readers, the waveriders?
Just thanks to everyone who checks us out, for those who
like us don’t hesitate to like our FB page and follow us on the social media,
it enables us(and others) to track our progress and makes us feel warm and
fuzzy inside! Thanks Ripple Effect &
thanks to all the Waveriders and readers!
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