Hederos
& Hellberg
- Hederos & Hellberg
Artist:
Hederos & Hellberg
Title: Hederos & Hellberg
Catalog#: AHA!066
Price: $10.00  |
Tracks
on this CD: |
| Pale
Blue Eyes |
| Been
Smoking Too Long |
| Soldiers
Things |
| Guilty |
| Signed
D.C. |
| She |
| Heaven
Stood Still |
| You're
A Big Girl Now |
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Stripped
down piano-harmonica covers (like Velvet Underground's "Pale
Blue Eyes", Bob Dylan's "You're A Big Girl Now",
Tom Waits' "Soldiers Things", Love's "Signed
D.C.", Gram Parsons' "She", etc) by Martin
Hederos (The Soundtrack Of Our Lives) & Mattias Hellberg
(The Hellacopters/Diamond Dogs). Released overseas in 2000,
this self-titled debut now sees light stateside. When 60
Swedish newpapers combined their "Best Of" lists
for 2000, Hederos & Hellberg's album ranked as the #3
release of the year! A rekindling of the musical relationship
Martin and Mattias both shared previously as members of the
band the Nymphet Noodlers (they released a pretty cool record
named "Going Abroad" in 1993).
"They are one of my great favourites of all time, definitely
top 10 on my list, wow, they really move me! I could easily
play with them every night, they are so good." - Ryan
Adams

a piece run in LA Weekly May 1,2003 after the release of
the duo's second CD, "Together In The Darkness":
Tangled Up in Blue: The soundtrack of our sad lives by Sorina
Diaconescu The only song that made me cry this year was a
cover of the Stooges’ “No Fun.” There’s
something cruel about stripping the classic rock song of
its menace and symbolism — this was, remember, the
last tune the Sex Pistols mangled together onstage before
imploding in ’78 — and killing it softly, only
to resurrect it anew as a small and beautiful ballad. And
there’s something sweet in that this act of heresy
is accomplished with only a piano, a harmonica, and gravelly
vocals by two Swedish guys, Martin Hederos and Mattias Hellberg,
who during the past three years have put out two records
and an EP reworking the saddest songs Bob Dylan, Lou Reed
and the Rolling Stones ever wrote. In the U.S. the duo are
obscure but embraced by a small coterie of musicians like
Brendan Benson and Ryan Adams, the latter having handpicked
Hederos & Hellberg as the opening act for his 2002 Euro
tour. The pair have already known success with some of the
best outfits their native Sweden can claim: Hederos makes
the groovy organ noises that propel the guitar-driven psych-pop
of The Soundtrack of Our Lives; Hellberg is a one-time guitarist
with the hell-raisin’ Hellacopters and the equally
rockin’ Diamond Dogs. So the question is, why would
they take it upon themselves to turn Dylan’s “It
Ain’t Me, Babe,” the Velvet Underground’s “Pale
Blue Eyes” and Bob Marley’s “Concrete Jungle” into
exquisite orgies of Scandinavian melancholy? “People
really liked it, and we felt really good doing it,” says
Hederos, the piano-, glockenspiel- and organ-playing half
of the duo. “Life can be so stressful, and this was
our little private room where we ran and played. To allow
yourself to be sentimental and soft is quite brave. We’re
not the only ones who ever did it, but we really got addicted.” Despite
acclaim in Europe, and in Sweden, where their 2000 self-titled
debut was ranked third-best record of the year by a poll
of 60 local publications, Hederos & Hellberg won’t
play together for a while, or possibly ever again. That’s
because The Soundtrack of Our Lives was scooped up last year
by U.S. major Universal, with big plans to break America
well and proper. For the Soundtrack people, that has meant “dropping
everything except families” to embark upon an intense
touring blitz through the U.S. and Europe for the better
part of 2003, a move that pushed the Hederos & Hellberg
project onto the back burner. “We had regrets that
we had to quit, but you can’t deal with two international
careers at the same time,” Hederos says with a little
weariness. “I’ve been waiting for 10 years to
play outside Scandinavia, and then it happened — for
both bands!” What’s ironic for him and Hellberg
is also bad news for people who appreciate pop music that’s
moving on conceptual, musical and emotional levels. The duo
cover songs that common wisdom would leave uncovered, but
they pull it off in a fresh and meaningful way. There’s
the Dylan standard “You’re a Big Girl Now,” the
Stones’ kindhearted “Shine a Light,” Kris
Kristofferson’s bittersweet “Epitaph (Black & Blue),” all
the more guileless after the Hederos & Hellberg treatment,
the tempos slowed down, the despair rendered delicious. That
there’s nothing calculated about it owes to the outfit’s
having evolved from late-night sessions during which these
two longtime friends from western Sweden’s Karlstad
got together to share a bottle of wine and try the songs
they liked on the piano. “We started off with this
jazz-punk sensibility, and we aspired to do our parents’ favorites,” says
Hederos, explaining that the duo’s pared-down piano & vocals
approach was inspired by Jan Johansson, a musician who reworked
traditional Swedish folk songs into mellow jazz arrangements
in the ’60s. “The songs we pick are not obvious
choices,” he says. “And that’s not snobbery,
it’s because there has to be space in the audience’s
minds for new interpretations. It’d be really hard
to do something with ‘Blowin’ in the Wind,’ ‘Yesterday’ or ‘Stairway
to Heaven.’ People would think we’re being ironic.” The
irony isn’t missed. Hederos plays the piano without
flashy accents. He’s a classically trained musician
who banged out a lot of jazz in his youth, and his relationship
with the instrument is intimate but not suffocating; Hellberg’s
voice strains a bit, like an achy joint. The graceful understatement
of the enterprise is such that the songs — including
six original tracks — form the perfect backdrop to
a day you want to spend alone and moody, waiting for the
darkness to descend.

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