Per Schelander
ASTRAKHAN
•
July 25, 2021
Influences are a special thing and everyone in the band brings their own background and influences. I know we all listen to a lot of different stuff, and have different backgrounds. Alex comes from the Grunge era and then continued to work as a musical artist and the gap between those genres is quite big. There's a big difference between what has influenced me and what I listen too. When it comes to influences there are the classics like THIN LIZZY, ZEPPELIN and some bands from the NWOBHM scene. But influences are more complicated than what you choose to listen to as a kid because you'll get exposed to more music than that. In my case I'll guess that hymns and folk music had influenced me lot because that was the kind of music I was exposed to during my first 5 years. My mom played organ and piano in church, so I am probably marinated in hymns and similar kind of music. Then there's two albums that had a huge impact on me during my late teens and that is "Operation Mindcrime"(QUEENSRYCHE) and "Passion and Warfare"(Steve Vai). Those two records were eye opening for me - they weren't pretentious, the songs had bigger stories to tell than your average love song and they were complex - I still love them both! What I listen to is also a different thing. The last years I tend to listen to more singer/songwriters and I love Alison Krauss' voice. I also just discovered that I like almost everything that Elvis Costello has done, there's something with his voice too.
You mean from the prog scene? The only band I have found interest in, in a long time, is OPETH - love their latest album in Swedish. I also like Von Hertzen Brothers from Finland. I took a quick listen to Seraina and that sounded pretty interesting - good vocals! I am a vocal guy and that's what I look for the most in music - good vocals eat riffs for breakfast.
In many ways, this is my album because I pushed it to the limit and was leading the project. With that said, many songs are written as a unit, and it's one of the first times that the world gets to hear music and riffs from Johan Hallgren. It used to be me and my brother Jörgen writing the majority of the songs; but things have changed. We are so much into the creative part of writing music. I find that fascinating that you can create things together, I love that process. For this album we met one weekend and no one had a single idea when we got there. We just started to play together and left two day's later with four solid, pretty much complete songs. The first one we wrote for this album was "Lonesome Cry". It went through a few lyrical changes but most of the songs were there from the start.
I find it hard to talk about the lyrics because I write lyrics in a stream of consciousness style. That means that at first I only write down the words I am singing to the song spontaneously. After that, maybe I see some kind of pattern and start to adjust and change to make some kind of meaning. I tend to write about loss, relations and maybe desperation. For this album, I wrote a lot about my relation to music and the thought of losing that relation or ability to play music.
PS - Thank you!
I guess so - but I wasn't in the studio when they recorded the vocals. Alex works very well with Marcus Jidell (producer)and I totally trust them. On top of that Alex is such professional singer. You can push him in different directions and he can deliver exactly what you ask for. So I know from previous recordings that you could ask for stuff like - have a more Bowie or Cohen vibe here or make it sound like a young Ian Gillan or whatever. The tracks are different and every song needs a different approach or attitude, that goes for every instrument – you have got to give the song what it needs.
This album is recorded during summer 2019 so Covid was not in our way during the recording. But when I approached labels in early 2020 Covid was sure in the way because everyone was scared… Anyway. When it comes to recording we like to record together. This time me and Martin were in the same room and we had set the sound from the beginning. The bass sound is only one mixed signal so there was not much to do in the mix. Same thing with the drums, the sound was pretty much set before we pushed record. We aimed for that with every instrument. Our goal was that it should sound so good from the start so the mixing process was more or less just using the faders to adjust the balances between the instruments.
Probably not this year because Alex is fully booked as a musical artist. He will do leading roles in big productions in Finland as well as in Stockholm during 2021. We are starting to look into the possibilities to actually bring this band to Europe during spring 2022 and are right now in contact with clubs in Germany and Belgium who are showing big interest.
I would love to bring the show to the U.S! It was a great experience doing the shows and we worked so hard for them and the live album that it almost killed the band. We are a band that are guided by our visions and not by the obstacles that may be in the way. These shows did not come to us by accident, but rather out of the good experience we had playing "Gethsemane" as an encore. We never considered us being a band that works in the regular "album, tour and then start all over again" scheme. So after "Adrenaline Kiss" (2016) was released, we did some shows during a year and we started to think where do we go now and what do we want to do. On our way home from a short tour in Finland in 2017 we started to talk about the possibilities of doing more songs from "JCS" in a live situation. We love the music from "JCS", and we also wanted to do something else other than just head back to the process of writing new songs - you need inspiration and breaks to make interesting music. The idea expanded and we pitched it to some theaters in Finland and they thought our ideas around the arrangement sounded very cool, so we started to work on it more seriously.
We couldn't afford to hire a professional team to film the show unfortunately. It would have been great. I just have very raw footage from the F.O.H. The trailer includes some live clips and we also had lots of projections going on in the background. We wanted the show to both sound and look good.
He was our first choice since we know him as a really good guy and a fantastic singer. I first met him when he stepped in for Mark Goals for three shows when I was in ROYAL HUNT in 2008. Then we have met from time to time. He's just a joy to work with - professional, funny and he puts a lot of energy into everything he's doing.
You may be more right than I want to admit here. I used to say that I didn't like musicals. Then Alex joined the band. I remember working with him in the studio and I constantly described the songs and emotion in some kind o story line. I think all of our songs are like a full play compressed down to 6-7 minutes. Usually it takes something like 1.5 hours to tell such a story . So I came to the conclusion that I am probably more inspired by drama than I thought I was. In general I am interested in art and for a matter of fact I have worked as operation manager/producer at a theatre here in Stockholm between 2012-2015.
I think we all tend to think that a concert/music is more than just the sounds. We want to make it bigger and maybe more arty - we are not exactly MOTLEY CRUE . Nothing wrong with them, they just have a different theatrical aspect to their music.
As i said it used to be me and my brother Jörgen's project, but things have unfortunately changed. Something changed after we did "Jesus Christ Superstar". We used to inspire each other and write really good stuff together. This time it was harder, and in my opinion I had to push everything so much harder than I was used to. In the end he didn't like the material, after everything was recorded, and left the band. ASTRAKHAN didn't start out as a band, but has become a band more and more, and I want to hear every member and enhance everyone's personality.
We are of course on speaking terms and I guess he is recording some kind of solo album. I just think it's a sad situation after all the work we have put down in this band. We are not 20 anymore and you can't just start a new band that have everything you always wanted to have in a band. We had that; but he chose to quit.
"M.E 2020" is based around a theme that Jörgen had lying around for almost twenty years. We have tried it for every album but every time, we got stuck. This time I was determined that we should work until it was done because the main theme is so good! Maybe I was a bit too determined because this song was one of the songs that Jörgen and I didn't meet each other and maybe he thinks that I ruined his song. I had a vision of a long and dramatic song which, definitely the last song on the album. That was my vision - the grand finale!
Thank you! I wasn't sure because of all the hassle I had with Jörgen, but everyone seems to really like that song, so I guess I did the right thing and trusted my gut feeling. "Youtopia" is a different thing. It started out that I fooled around with my bass and tried to play an old Swedish folk song out of memory, just the melody on bass. I couldn't quite remember it so of course I made mistakes and played the wrong notes and hey - the main melody for "Youtopia" was written. I played the guitar melody for Jörgen and his only response was – "that will be a good song". My intention was to write a moody dark ballad but once again, creativity wanted something else. I was looking for drum beats and by accident I started a drum loop with an indian vibe with lots of toms while I I was playing around with the melody. From that moment the song took a different direction. Lyrically, it deals with the feeling that you invested too much in a relationship? That the person you thought had it all has limitations? The idea that something is perfect always dazzles you and makes you blind. I elaborated a lot with bends on this one to capture the feeling and make the music go with the lyrics - Something isn't right, disharmony…
PS - It's one of my favorites too, and one of them where I have written every note and word.
Right now I can't imagine anything like that. I have worked so hard for Astrakhan since 2017 and it's just so hard to establish a new band today. I would love to make another album but right now I can't see how I can afford that. That's the bitter truth.
I am so glad that you wanted to do an interview with me without asking me to pay to advertise on your site. I get 5-10 mails every week from magazines all over the world that want to do an interview with us, but first we have to buy an ad in their magazine. That is so weird because after a record like this I am broke! My job is to produce music, their job is to write about interesting artists - whether they are paying or not! As a musician you are so fed up with the "pay to play", but nowadays you also have to pay to be interviewed so you can reach an audience who can see you pay to play at some club. It never ends and it is always the musicians who have to pay for it. If we don't produce new music, there won't be anything to write about and the magazines would die in a year. So, by doing this interview with me - you are the future!
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