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 Post subject: PAAHVOHARJU - Finnish Band
PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2005 10:47 am 
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Winona Ryder wears my t-shirt on TV
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Yhä Hämärää

Anyone else hear this? I love it. Imagine glitchy Mùm mixed with Kate Bush-ish vocals and a little acoustic zepplin. And yes, all lyrics in Finnish.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2005 10:48 am 
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frostingspoon
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Sounds quite intriguing, K.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2005 11:23 am 
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Winona Ryder wears my t-shirt on TV
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it's worth checking out. I can ysi you a track if you pm me your e mail address (I am so bad, lost everyone's!)


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2005 11:26 am 
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Natural Harvester
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very cool album. trippy and acoustic, with a lo-fi vibe.

cool that you posted about it!


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2005 11:48 am 
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one of, if not the, best of the finnish folk albums.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 29, 2005 12:16 pm 
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Winona Ryder wears my t-shirt on TV
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here's the pitchfork review, for whatever it's worth...



Paavoharju
Yhä hämärää
[Fonal; 2005]
Rating: 7.8





The back flap of Yhä hämärää captures a black interior squinting at green bushes. Framed by the room's torn sun-brightened curtains, small shapes spell out codes on the glass but it's hard to distinguish exactly what's leaving the dim traces. Paavoharju is just as enigmatic. The Finnish trio's yet to accrue much stateside press, and the lack of outside English-language material forces the reviewer to face the music like a blank slate, scratching nascent opinions onto what will hopefully become a larger dialogue.

Ragnar Rock, Olli Ainala, and Lauri Ainala hail from the island town of Savonlinna. The ascetic born-again Christians recorded Yhä hämärää between 2001 and 2005, setting their Emersonian lyrics (all sung in Finnish) to a fluctuating electro-acoustic background that threads short-wave, field recordings, reggae beats, pinball sounds, sunken sea shanties, Sublime Frequencies radio scrambles, the somber choir of a backwoods congregation, operas made of cheap electronics, spectral female voices (with the occasional male bird song), chamber muses, midnight ambiance, and omnipresent crackles. If forced to choose a kindred Finnish group, Es' grave soundtracks would be closest in dusty elegance, but Paavoharju presents a more curious mixture-- a Fursaxa/Cocteau Twins B-Movie soundtrack, Sigur Rós locked in an underground cavern with Slowdive, or perhaps Syd Barrett jamming with Incredible String Band beneath a waterfall.

The permutations are various: "Valo tihkuu kaiken läpi" ("Light trickles through everything") merges hippie guitars, dippy drum machines, keyboard fritz, avalanching distortion crests, and Bollywood vocals. The lyrics deal with wind, waves, and spiritual replenishment or manifestation: "The branch bows/ Skims the surface of the water/ Breaking my reflection/ Your image it reveals." Then there's "Kuu lohduttaa huolestuneita" ("The moon comforts the troubled"), the phantom interior shot of a symphonic drowning.

Like much of the album, "Syvyys" ("The deep") feels as though it was recorded with water pipes running through its structures-- leaky, rusted veins. The track accrues the flavor of Edenic Noh Drama backed with a loose cable and distorted pong. "Puhuri" ("The Gust") is a pile of pianos for Diamanda Galas to scat across with an electronic dragonfly. Its lyrics are beautifully puzzling: "The crows shattered the sky with their song/ Children tearing tree lichen-- forgetting what was told/ After the gale that screamed while dying-- silence/ That conjures a fire on its arrival."

Nothing clots long enough on Yhä hämärää to be considered a tendency. When something seems familiar or you come to expect a certain type of programing, Paavoharju pitch a mossy curve ball. A poppy (or poppy-seed) strummer, "Aamuauringon tuntuinen" ("Felt like the morning sun") has myriad guitars, faint percussion, and elegiac vocals working into translucent psychedelia. "Kuljin kauas" ("I travelled far") is a mournful vision quest sung by one of the males; the guitar and crunky low-bit percussion are joined by a Snoop Dogg pitch-shifter (seriously) as the drum gets louder for the chorus. Here and there, a female voice trills behind the male. More upbeat is "Musta katu" ("Black street"), which uses reggae drums, music box fuzz, and more male vocals along with something that sounds like harpsichord with a creakier underside. The song's protagonist has walked along a black street to an inn where he gathers all the words and "even picks up the ones fallen on the ground." An inspired closer, the song's a jubilant charm.

The band has stated that Yhä hämärää is an attempt to "reflect inner landscapes" and offers a list of "highly inspiring places" including "graveyard, sewers, disco, the beach at redpoint, rooftops at night, alcoholic's home, churches, Uukuniemi, foggy fields, sauna, my bed." This is a personal quest, and its hard to say if they succeeded, but Yhä hämärää possesses the magical giddiness of an unknown radio station tapped into momentarily while traveling unfamiliar back roads. When the signal bows out after the next hill, you're jolted back into the everyday, left only with the sounds of your own breathing, those other vehicles passing.

-Brandon Stosuy, September 15, 2005


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 12:50 am 
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frostingspoon
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cool, i'd like a YSI link.

I'm all into Finnish. My wife might like it too.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 8:03 am 
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Natural Harvester
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Mrs. Neuro, have you heard the Islaja "Palaa Aurinkoon" release on Fonal? I think you'll dig that as well. Here's the info for it. A bit more strange, and dare i say, cultish.

PRESSRELEASE

Islaja masters the elements of our universe one by one
or maybe the sea and the sun are embracing Islaja, it
must go both ways but there, where all this happens,
the listener is received with clattering sounds of
paradise and drowned by surprise in a swell that
stretches all the way to the dark rock bottom. What's
down there? Fight the rotten faith so it'll wither
until it hardly exists, believe it! Islaja shows the
way of rhythm, no it isn't a straight one, the way of
chant, it can't be foreseen. Textures evolve into new
ones. Scabby rhythms spin socks on feet, skin burns
into ashes in the attacking heat. Senile wine glasses
wail of happiness. Fallen off beard hair are woven
into a scarf that lets the wind blow fast right
through it. If only life would be like this more than
just an hour at a time! After everything the sun
blesses the way with Islaja's words, it spits out of
its system the wet and transformed listener, who longs
for the light again.

Islaja's second album was born in two different places
that have been sewed up one to another with the binds
of words and a rich sound world. Here and there,
Islaja's friends have lent their voices for this
world. Loose guitar paths, long strokes of wind
instruments, glasses and toys that clink, rattle and
tinkle, rhythms, keyboards and Islaja's wonderful,
many-faceted voice are cooing in a miraculous net. The
album is a spontaneous texture of muscle, cartilage
and liquid, everything organized in such a surprising
way that one can't believe right away that it's a
human being, but soon enough it becomes clear that
it's a most ingenious creature. It evolves by itself.
It tells us how everything metamorphoses, it relies on
itself and infuses belief into the listener that one
can change the world. The secret place where the
creature invites the listener is revealed to be our
real world, it lives here with us.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 10:56 am 
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Winona Ryder wears my t-shirt on TV
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thanks, Dalen. I am totally gonna check that out.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 11:04 am 
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frostingspoon
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great band name, sounds like passing a deadly fart

PAAHVOHARJU
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 11:38 am 
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Winona Ryder wears my t-shirt on TV
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the funny thing is, how the hell do you pronounce it. I have been referring to it as "the finnish cd"


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 11:56 am 
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Natural Harvester
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Mrs. Neuro Wrote:
the funny thing is, how the hell do you pronounce it. I have been referring to it as "the finnish cd"


i pronounce it like pov 'oar' ju


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 11:59 am 
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Winona Ryder wears my t-shirt on TV
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Dalen Wrote:
Mrs. Neuro Wrote:
the funny thing is, how the hell do you pronounce it. I have been referring to it as "the finnish cd"


i pronounce it like pov 'oar' ju


Dalen, where do you buy your cd's?
I usually go through here (my friend works there...)
http://www.forcedexposure.com/labels/fonal.finland.html


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 12:34 pm 
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Winona Ryder wears my t-shirt on TV
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Dalen Wrote:
Mrs. Neuro, have you heard the Islaja "Palaa Aurinkoon" release on Fonal? I think you'll dig that as well. Here's the info for it. A bit more strange, and dare i say, cultish.


just ordered it.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 2:05 pm 
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frostingspoon
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Dalen Wrote:
Mrs. Neuro Wrote:
the funny thing is, how the hell do you pronounce it. I have been referring to it as "the finnish cd"


i pronounce it like pov 'oar' ju


Maybe the Finns have a hard time pronouncing "Poor Old Jew"


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