| |
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Foot of the Mountain (2009)
"It was about time that we reached out a little more," says a-ha singer Morten Harket of the group's new album Foot Of The Mountain. The album marks a return to the classic pop sound that made a-ha one of the biggest acts in the world. As keyboard player Magne Furuholmen explains, "It's an album that incorporates the key elements that first defined the band: soaring vocals, synth hooks, yearning lyrics and melodic melancholia." Or as guitarist and principal songwriter Paul Waaktaar-Savoy puts it more simply: "I think we got a great collection of songs this time around." Written and recorded in various major cities – from Oslo, where the band formed in 1982, to New York, where Paul now lives – Foot Of The Mountain is, in Morten's words, "predominantly a synth-based album." The ten new songs carry echoes of the band's early signature hits: 'Take On Me', 'The Sun Always Shines On TV' and 'I’ve Been Losing You'. Paul wrote the majority of the new songs: five co-written with Magne, four written alone. He also experimented with some new techniques. 'Riding The Crest' – described by Paul as "an electro blues" – was inspired by Arcade Fire's use of the 12-bar form on their 2007 album Neon Bible. 'Real Meaning' was a happy accident: an idea that came spontaneously when Paul called home from Russia and was greeted by his answering machine. "As a joke I started singing away and this song fell out," he laughs. "I meant every word, though." And on 'Start The Simulator', Paul employed a novel lyrical style, drawing on the technical jargon of the Cold War era's Space Race. "The basic idea," he says, "was to make a song using only technical terms and phrases, and still make it very emotional and personal. There is such poetry in the old Apollo manuals: "switch to Omni Bravo" and "the bright ejector blanket". It was quite a hard song to record as it changes both time signatures and keys as it goes along. What sounded so simple on the piano got very quickly complicated when it was translated to a full arrangement. I think we got there in the end though!" There
are also three songs that reflect Paul's emotional connection to his
natural and adopted homelands. 'Shadowside', he says, "feels
quite Norwegian – in the melody, the chords and the mood". 'The
Bandstand' reminds him of his first trip to New York City in the early
'80s, before a-ha were famous. "Songs are like a photo-album
– they can really send you back. And this one reminds me of arriving
at Port Authority with $35 in my pocket, sporting really high, yellow,
almost see-through synthesizer-hair, wearing a tiger-shirt and a brown
suit, looking like an alien!" And the album's title track, 'Foot
Of The Mountain' – fashioned from two previously separate songs, one
written by Paul, the other by Magne – examines one of the fundamental
conflicts of modern life, the pull between nature and big-city civilization:
for Paul, the buzz of New York City versus the beauty and isolation
of Norway. "It's the dilemma of loving a city life, yet secretly
wondering if we'd be happier being surrounded by open fields and sweeping
mountains." Tracks 1
. The Bandstand Mixed by Steve Osborne at Real World Studios, UK Mastered by Tim Young at Metropolis/Kevin Metcalfe at The Soundmasters, UK Recorded at Water Music, Beat 360 & The Alabaster Room (NYC); Yoga Studio, Alabaster Cottage, Malabar Studio & Rainbow Studio (Noruega); Gaga Studios & Boogie Park Studios (Alemanha); Real World Studios (Reino Unido) Photos by Stian Andersen, Guy Berryman, iStockphoto e Helge Kvamme Cover Design by Martin Kvamme Programming
by Erik Ljunggren, Mark Saunders, Pete Davis, Roland Spremberg, Chris
Papendieck & Jochen Schmalbach
Source:
A-ha.com
|
|
|
This is an unofficial A-HA fansite, and has no affiliation with A-Ha. |