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?
I have had several of these over the years, a bit fewer and
far between nowadays but still. The first one I can remember must have been are
run of the Elvis 68 comeback special. It must have been in the late 70 ́s or very
early 80 ́s. And know at this point we had only ONE tv channel in Norway, that
show was amazing to me and I think it still is. Another major epiphany was when
I went to the library and checked out Van Halen and “Eruption”. This was not
when it first came out, it must have been late 80 ́s but I had not heard it
before and it totally blew me away and made me want to play guitar and that
summer I worked real hard painting houses and spent all my money on a Kramer.
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?
The “Shun the sun” process was probably a bit out of the
ordinary for me since I came in after all the music was recorded. I had to then
learn the songs and write all lyrics and melodies and then finally track all my
parts. But now we are busy writing the next album and the process is more
organic in that we all bring ideas to the rehearsal room and we jam them out,
looking for the groove and smiles on everyone's faces. BK, Geir, Morten and I
constantly make riffs by ourselves that we share and select for jamming. I keep
filling my lyrics book with poems, ideas and observations for use when we put
everything together. We also like to let the songs mature in rehearsal and then
we make small changes until we are all happy.
Who has influenced you the most?
Here I could mention a lot of people and the truth is that
there is not any one person that has influenced me more than anyone else so
far. So, the correct answer would be BK, Geir and Morten, the guys I am in a
band with. I think we influence each other, that’s why being in the band is
such great fun.
Where do you look for continuing inspiration? New ideas, new
motivation?
Motivation I get from listening to all the great music that
can be found in the stoner / doom community, there is some cool stuff out
there. Going to gigs and checking out other bands also gives me a lot of
motivation. Inspiration is a little different and while some of it comes from
listening to music and other bands, I think it is vital to seek inspiration
from as many and diverse sources as possible. This can be from conversations
and solving world problems late at night, films, literature, paintings and
sculptures, anything really.
We're all a product of our environment. Tell us about the
band's hometown and how that reflects in the music?
All the bandmembers except me live in Egersund on the south
west coast of Norway,
this is also where our WW2 German rehearsal bunker is. I am from a city about
one hour north of Egersund called Stavanger, main industries are mostly oil and
offshore related and farming. Common for both cities is the weather and the
relentless grey skies and rain. We don’t tan here, we rust. Have not really
thought about how it affects the music, but the rain and wind keep us indoors
and work on our minds maybe that melancholy seeps into the riffs and lyrics
somehow.
Where'd the band name come from?
As ZZ-Top would say, “we tell three stories about that and
none of them are true”. So basically the name Captain Caravan, it is from this
old sailor who used to spend a lot of time in his caravan painting and
drinking, he was quite an ok guy but a mean drunk, he used to yell at people
and most people were afraid because he also used to be a fighter. He painted
some amazing pictures though, mostly landscapes and the sea or boats in big
waves. I am not sure if he was an actual Captain but that’s what we called him
so, therefore. Captain Caravan mean old man with a tormented beautiful soul
that he was able to put on canvas.
You have one chance, what movie are you going to write the
soundtrack for?
That would have to be Tarantino 10 or some ultra-widescreen windswept
epic Mad Max type Western where an unlikely bunch of no goods pull off a
massive heist and beat the odds by working together and with coordination
unmatched from honing their skills after countless hours facing the grind.
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?
I would choose “Me and Bobby Mc Gee” it has one of the most
beautiful lyric lines ever in my opinion; “I’d trade all my tomorrows for a
single yesterday” I really understand what that means. I would seek to ask what
they were doing there in Baton Rouge
and where they were going and why? What happened? What is the story of them
before and after that put them there in that moment in time?
Come on, share with us a couple of your great, Spinal Tap,
rock and roll moments?
Must have been that one time when BK got one sugar in his
tea instead of two backstage after the gig... Shocking.
We love playing live and we really don’t do enough of it. We
are trying our best to put on a show and play the songs right. The first show
we ever did with the current lineup, we had five people in the room and three were
family so two “real” people. We said to ourselves before we went on “Right so,
there will be almost no one to see us but let's go out there and do our very
best for the people that ARE there.” and that’s what we did, and those two
people are fans today. So, our goal is to gain a few more fans each time we
play.
What makes a great song?
In one word: Layers, first to be blown away with all the obvious
things, the riffs the groove and melodies you can enjoy them just like that,
and then on multiple listens discovers new things every time, the subtleties of
the riffs, drums, the musical skills and craftsmanship in putting it together,
the recording quality the lyrics, what do they mean?
Tell us about the first song you ever wrote?
The first song I wrote was a cheesy teenage song about a
girl and why she did not want me. The second song was a song called “Tomorrow
never knows” it's about living in the now.
What piece of your music are particularly proud of?
I like “Zombie Machine” because it is quite a different
song, different sounding and I am quite pleased with the lyrics other than that
my favorite is the album closer, the last song on the moon side “Book of
oblivion” or Boob as Geir likes to call it. I like the slow start and how it
all goes hellin the last part. I also like these lyrics, the duality of it who
is doing what to who and who gets the revenge?
Who today, writes great songs? Who just kicks your ass? Why?
For me today I have to say Mastodon, I am a big fan. I am
also a fan of Sasquatch, we played the Planet Desert Rock Weekend with them in
Vegas and they came to see our LA gig, they knew BK from the Pawnshop days, so
that was cool. But as I said in a previous question there is so much amazing
music being made right now by bands that are not really known
Vinyl, CD, or digital? What's your format of choice?
Digital for the access and Vinyl for the ritual. I think the
only CD player I have is in the car.
Whiskey or beer? And defend your choice
Both please. Haha, but yeah, mostly beer and the occasional
whiskey. With beer you can enjoy the evening longer and I get quite useless
after not too many whiskeys.
We, at the Ripple Effect, are constantly looking for new
music. What's your hometown, and when we get there, what's the best record
store to lose ourselves in?
I do not think we have any record stores here anymore,
except some second hand and collectors' fairs. There is a record plant pressing
vinyls started here in Egersund now, but we have not had the chance to check
them out yet. I think we would have to take you to a bar so we could sit and
talk about old times when there were record stores.
What's next for the band?
New songs and new album. It is in the works, but the
pandemic put a halt to it for the time being. We are off Corse working in our
homes with the material but since everyone is home it is not so easy to hide
away and work on slow riffs. We also want to play more live; we were set to
play the Esbjerg Fuzztival in Denmark,
but it got postponed due to the pandemic and the sadly new dates conflicted
with other previous arrangements. Hopefully we get a chance another time.
Any final comments or thoughts you'd like to share with our
readers, the waveriders?
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