Monday, April 19, 2004

Tónlist

Here is the list of the various Icelandic and other Nordic/Arctic musical groups I’ve mentioned in FITK over the years:

Áki Ásgeirsson
Amiina
Andy Schauf
Apparat Organ Quartet
Árný
Árný Margrét
Atli
Ásthildur Ákadóttir
Ateria
Áuslaug Magnusdóttir
Æla

Baggalútur
Bára Gísladóttir
Bárujárn
Bedroom Community
Benni Hemm Hemm
Between Mountains
Biggi Hilmars
Björk
Björt
BKPM
Bláskjár
Borko
Bríet
Brimheim
Buff

Cosmic Call
Cyber
Daníel Bjarnarson
Ditka
DJ Margeir
Dr. Spock
Egill Sæbjörnsson
Eivør
Elin Hall
Elisapie
Evil Madness
Flesh Machine
Fókus
Frid Fufanu

Gabriel Ólafs
Geðbrigði
Ghostigital
GKR
GDRN
Greyskies
Gróa
Grúska Babúska
Guðmundur Óskar Guðmundsson
Guðni Thorlacius Jóhannesson
Guðrið Hansdóttir
GusGus
Gyða

Hafdís Huld
Halla Tómasdóttir
Halli Guðmundsson
Ham
Hekla
Hekla Magnúsdóttir
Hellvar/Heiða
Hildur Gunðadóttir
Hildur
Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson
Hjaltalín
Hjörvar
Högni
Hraun
Hudson Wayne
Hugar
Iðunn Einars

Jakobínarína
Jana
JFDR
Jófríður Ákadóttir
Jóhann Jóhannsson
Jóhanna Elísa
Jóhanna Rakel
Jonathan
Jonfri
Joshua Wilkinson
Júniús Meyvant
K.Óla
Kaktus Einarsson
Kalli
Kevin Cole
Kimono
Kira Kira
Kiriyama Family
Kitchen Motors
Kjallarakabarett Kónguló
Kristín Sessala
Kvikindi

Langi Seli Og Skuggarnir
Larus Halldór Grimsson
Liva Mo
Ljáðu Okkur Eyra
Lupina
Mag og Tómas
Magnús Jóhann
Marius DC
Markús & The Diversion Sessions
Marta Ákadóttir
Mikado
Mezzoforté
Mr. Silla
Mugison
Múgsefjun
Mukka
Múm
My Summer as a Salvation Soldier
Mysterious Marta
Neonme
Nini Julia Bang
Nóra

Oculus
Ojba Rasta
Ólafur Arnalds
Ólöf Arnalds
Orphix Oxtra
Osmé
Óttarr Proppé
Pale Moon
Páll Óskar
Pellegrina
Pascal Pinon
Pellegrina
Peter Evans
Petúr Ben
Rakel
Red Barnett
Retro Stefson
Reykjavíkurdætur
Róshildur
Rokkurró

Salka Valsdóttir
Samaris
Screaming Masterpiece
Shadow Parade
Shahzad Ismaily
Sigrún
Sigrún Stella
Sin Fang Bous
Sindrí
Siggi Ármann
Sigur Rós
Ske
Skúli Severrisson
Sóley
Sólstafir
Sprengjuhöllin
Stórsveit Nix Noltes
Sunna Margrét
Svavar Knútur
Sycamore Tree
Systur

Tappi Tíkarrass
Team Dreams
Tilbury
Toggi
Úlfur Eldjárn
Ultra Mega Technobandið Stefán
Una Torfa
Uni
Unun
Útidúr
Valgeir Sigurðsson
Vicky
Wim Van Hooste

† = Fellow Travelers

By Professor Batty


Monday, November 17, 2025

Airwaves Portraits - IV

Moina Moin, Mermaid Chunky:
Phone Ponderer, Fríkirkjan:
Pub Patrons, Austurvöllur:
Agnes Ósk Ægisdóttir, Geðbrigði:

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Thursday, November 06, 2025

Iceland 2025 — Day Eight

Ate breakfast with the faint sounds of a sound check coming from Firíkirkjan, one of the main venues for Iceland Airwaves. The church is only 100 feet away from where I’m staying so it really wasn’t that loud.

When I was at the pool when one of a group of six ‘mature’ women smiled at me when she saw me entering the hot pot: “We were just talking about you—you are the one who goes to see plays in Icelandic when you can’t speak the language!” Talk about being felt welcome! We talked a bit about Icelandic drama and culture, including Halldór Laxness, of course. One of the women was close friends with Halldór’s daughter Guðny who has an AirBnb near Gljúfrasteinn, Laxness’s estate. Later, I sat with a gang of six Danish festival-goers (you can tell by the wristbands) and we compared notes. They come almost every year for the last 12 or so years. We were going to see some of the same acts tonight. On the way back from the pool, outside of the coffee house, I made a new friend—Leo:
He was very talkative, although his vocabulary was limited to meowing in Icelandic. I think he has a scam of wheedling treats from the patrons as they leave the coffeehouse. I went back to the apartment and had lunch. I was ready for another day and night of music.

On the advice of one of my water-sharers at the pool I learned of a Symposium on Halldór Laxness on the 70th anniversary of his winning The Nobel Prize. An interesting mix of people attended:
It was hosted by Halldór Halldórsson, Laxness’ grandson:
More on that on another day.

Now that the Iceland Airwaves festival has started in earnest there is a lot of phone checking of the schedules. I just use an old-fashioned notebook and pen, having the whole schedule on a device is just overwhelming.

A few scenes from tonight:
Here are the acts I saw:

Geðbrigði — teen-aged feminist ‘pungarokkers’ ripped it up at Gaukurinn. Lots of rage, lots of heart and even some punk trombone:
Lúpína — Arty chanting(?) a very stylized show at The Art Museum, the sleek music matched her “look” perfectly:
Rakel — Mellow pop-folk, she is being promoted as the next big thing, winning awards and prizes (with monetary value!) I’m not knocking her, but I didn’t sense any greatness; the band was very bland:
Sigrún — Bird. Eerie wailing, verry, verry good at what she does:
Cyber — at The Art Museum. EDM sex-positive gyrations with twisted pop lyrics, gauzy lighting, the crowd loved it:
Ólóf Arnalds — Folk troubadour, Fríkirkjan. I saw her in 2006 in Iðno and 2011 in Seattle, she has maintained her musical chops:
The Vernon Spring (Sam Beste)—Multi-keyboardist extraordinaire, he backed Amy Winehouse for years, at Iðno:
GDRN — Fabulous singer, she sang yesterday morning at Grund. Tonight she was in her more usual mode, more poppy, even getting funky at times:

It’s midnight, that’s all for Thursday.

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Iceland 2025 Recap

Tourists waiting to board the Flybus, BSÍ station, Reykjavík

The last day of a vacation involving flights can be chaotic. This time I was early and the airport was nearly deserted, eerily quiet. They have a Pylsur stand in the airport now so I just had to get “eitt med öllu” before I left:
My sixth Iceland Airwaves was bittersweet.

Sweet, in that it is always fun to come to Iceland and, in particular, to stay in Reykjavík. The weather started off ridiculously (over a foot of snow had fallen in the days before I arrived) but it then turned wonderful with warm temps, sunshine, and little wind.
I had several days to acclimate and I made the most of my time before the festival began: meeting people in the pool, attending the theatre, crashing a symposium on Halldór Laxness, a night of Michelin-star dining and even catching a Halloween burlesque show! Iceland Airwaves started on the right foot with the President of Iceland addressing a group of pre-schoolers at a senior residence before speaking to the rest of the audience. When GDRN played and sang traditional Icelandic songs it was so poignant (one of the wheelchair-bound seniors played air-piano in time with the band) that I was on the verge of tears. Throughout the week there were some good off-venue performances with madcap musical ideas coming from Mag og Tómas at Reykjavík Records and esoteric singer/songwriter/bassist/dancer K.olá at Smekklysa. Marvaða, a female-oriented music collective, presented a solid line-up of interesting and accomplished acts at Iðno Wednesday night.

Thursday night found me attending a half-dozen shows, all female performers with the exception of keyboard virtuoso The Vernon Spring. All these acts were good, with artfully stylized presentations.

Friday I saw fourteen acts, but most were undistinguished. Sean Solomon won originality points for his retro-nerd VHS animation duets, as did Mermaid Chunky for their trippy genre-surfing compositions. Magnús Jóhann, another tremendous pianist/composer, went above and beyond the call of duty when he played a Ondes Martenot.

Saturday night I bounced around venues (and watched Ms Obama bounce around) until I settled in at Fríkirkjan to listen to Hania Derej. At the age of 20, she has already developed into a formidable artist—a musical virtuoso on piano, keys and composition. Hers is a name to watch for.

And, fittingly, the final act I saw was JFDR. She has had quite a career since I first saw her as a teenager with Pascal Pinon in 2009. Since then I’ve followed her musical development: three Pascal Pinon albums, three Samaris albums, a Gangly EP and dozens of collaborations in addition to her career as a solo artist and composer for film and TV. Jofriður has had no shortage of musical and lyrical ideas. In the last few years it seemed to me that she was going a bit sideways with her Ableton-enabled compositions so it was a special treat to see her get back to her roots, performing with an ensemble of friends playing mostly acoustic guitars and singing beautiful harmonies in an intimate setting.

One bitter aspect of Iceland Airwaves for me this year is the alarming drop in attendance, especially among younger people. Despite official claims to the contrary (and excepting the smallest clubs), most venues were half to two-thirds empty. While I was usually the oldest person in the room, my 56-year-old self who attended Airwaves in 2006 would be about average in age for the grey-haired crowd at the festival this year. With a few notable exceptions (Geðbrigði, Hania) the acts were trending older as well. The festival organizers are acutely aware of the fact and have taken steps to address the issue. Another down-trend is the dearth of real bands—a majority of the acts were solos or duos, techno and/or rap, using samples and pre-programmed beats. That was in an inverse ratio to the Airwaves of 20 years ago and even noticeably different than three years ago. The bands that I did see were mostly good. I had used the Iceland Airwaves video links to pre-screen the acts; it may be that the mostly lame videos put me off from seeing some really good shows. 

The big question: “Was it worth it?”

Again, bittersweet. The best shows were as good as the best of past Airwaves. The original concept artists were also very good. The genre-stylists were mostly forgettable. The main venues were good, but the smaller ones (Bird, Gaukurrin) were awkward, although you could get a better view (and sound) at Bird by standing outside and listening to the PA feed and looking through the plate glass windows! With the exception of hideous modern architecture in the old harbour area, Reykjavík itself remains an interesting and vibrant place, especially so for such a small city.

The almost-as-big question: “Will I do it again?”

Probably not next year.

As I get older, traveling becomes more of a challenge. The whole music scene in general is also rapidly undergoing changes with the stranglehold of corporate interests dominating streaming and exposure with AI music the wildcard in the mix. If IAW can successfully re-invent itself (and the world doesn’t blow up), it might be worth a trip in 2027. I was sitting in a hot-pot talking with Anna Róshildur in Vesturbæjarlaug and she mentioned the very restrictive audition process for a local act to get into Airwaves off-venue schedule, to say nothing about the regular venues. Evidently there is an underground scene in Reykjavík for young performers but it is hard for an outsider to crack, and it is certainly not aimed at foreign septuagenarians. I’ve written about these issues before, and no progress has been made since. Any changes in the IAW format are, of course, dependent on the economy, local talent pool, and numerous other variables. Still, it would be nice for more smaller non-bar, presentation options. Sorely missed were the laid-back venues Hitt Husið, Norræna húsið and the bonkers breakfast shows at Prikið. Other main venues absent this year were Gamla Bíó and the National Theatre, both of which had other scheduling. Nasa was back, however, and Harpa did have some big, separately ticketed, shows but there were no smaller shows in Kaldalón or Norðurljós as in past years.

Looking back over its 26-year history, its amazing that Iceland Airwaves even still exists, so I really can’t complain. As long as there are the dreamers who create music, and those who find inspiration and solace in it, there is still hope for humanity.
Troy, Tina and Barry are entranced by Hania Derej, Frikirkjan, 8 November, 2025

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 




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