| |
BIOGRAPHY
- THE BO HANSSON STORY
introduction
:: a
child is born :: hansson&karlsson
:: time
to move on
:: immediate
success
never
played live
:: inspires
future generations
Introduction
Perhaps it was when he stepped out into the dark to loosen up that he
realised just how everything was connected. A rustling sound from the woods,
a pair of glittering animal eyes, the sounds of an owl and distant memories
came back to him. Scents and sounds that had been encapsulated since childhood
came slowly oozing out. He turned his head up towards the clear night sky,
looked at The Big Bear constellation, and felt the landscape that surrounded
him slowly changing.
The harsh and sparse vegetation on the island suddenly seems thick and threatening.
The little summerhouse in front of him reminds him of the lineman's cottage
from his childhood or is it the house of Tom Bombadil? Reality and fiction
are suddenly hard to separate. He has had the music inside him since he
read the book for the first time. Now everything is revealed. All the pieces
are falling into place. It is no coincidence that this tale has come into
his hands. The meaning is obvious, someone has chosen him to make music
out of Tolkien's words. He is 26 years, in the beginning of his life, but
the journey has already been long. He does not know, while he stands there
happy under the stars, that he only has seven years of creating. After his
33rd birthday - which is old age for a Hobbit, Frodo celebrates his 33rd
birthday party in the beginning of Lord of the Rings - the music will be
silenced. But this autumn and winter his creative forces are strong. Once
again he looks up to the starry sky, shivers a little and goes back into
the house, sits down behind the organ to compose the music that is to become
a part of eternity.
A
child is born
Bo Hansson was born April 10th 1943 in Gothenburg, Sweden. His parents
were in the restaurant business and had to take jobs wherever offered.
From Gothenburg they moved to Jämtland in the northern parts of Sweden,
but in the early fifties his parents moved to Stockholm and Bo could for
some reasons not follow them there. He was taken care of by a family living
in a small lineman's cottage out in the woods.
When after some time, Bo could come to his parents in Stockholm, he was
sent on his way there with a note around his neck with his name and destination
written on it
that's all.
|
|
|
As
for most people in Bo's generation it was the guitar that really got
his music going. It was so easy to become an electric guitarist at
that time, plug in to an old radio, that became an amplifier, and
then just join a band! Bo toured one summer with Swedish rock bands
like Rock-Olga and others. When the tour started he knew how to play
three chords and at the end he knew four.
His first "real" band was Slims Blues gang, a blues band
in the traditional school. The piano player Slim Notini, was the Swedish
equivalent of John Mayall, that is to say, that Slim's band was a
stop on the way for up and coming talents. Bo was one of those up
and coming talents. |
The
Merrymen were a rough and tumble bluesrock band that existed for less
than a year. In that short time they managed to win a rock competition
in the national radio, play as support act for The Rolling Stones and
sign a record deal with Polydor. Just when they were about to make the
big jump, Bo jumped his own way and left the band. It was as if the future
success which was lying around the corner scared him. Or maybe he just
was following a path that no one else saw.
The path led him to Gyllene Cirkeln, a club in Stockholm one night in
1966. The American jazz organist Brother Jack McDuff was playing a concert
and the experience was a turning point for Bo. He was absolutely fascinated
by the sounds of the Hammond organ and the possibilities of an instrument,
that made it possible to play solos and rhythm with the hands, and bass
with the feet. At the same time!
The
next day he put his guitar aside and decided to start to playing the organ.
Hammond organs are pretty expensive so he had to use tricks and charming
friends to get opportunities s to practice. Bill Öhrström, an
old playmate from Merrymen and Slim's, became his partner in this game.
The plan was simple; they went into the music stores pretending to be
customers, Bo sat down and started to "test" the organs by playing
them and Bill started to talk to the staff. Suddenly he remembered that
he had forgotten something and had to rush away. Bo stayed and spent the
time waiting by playing the organs. After an hour or two Bill came back.
This trick was repeated in all music stores in Stockholm.
Bo finally felt that he had to buy an organ and stepped in to Jacobsson's
Music to purchase the instrument on the instalment plan. Bill, his girlfriend
and some other friends vouched for him, but they would later regret it
because Bo didn't pay the instalments on time and in the end they had
to pay for the organ.
This unfortunate organ was later taken by a bill collector straight after
a concert in Gothenburg.
Hansson
& Karlsson
Bill Öhrström had meanwhile been hired as talent scout and producer
at Polydor and he introduced Bo to several musicians that could become
possible partners. Some drummers, guitarists and even a violinist was
tested before the jazz drummer Janne Karlsson came along and became a
permanent partner.
The
group Hansson & Karlsson was born and the duo made three albums between
1967 and 1969. Their debut album Monument is one of the best instrumental
albums ever recorded in Sweden. Bo's unorthodox style of playing and his
genuine sense for beats together with Janne's explosive way of playing
the drums created something completely new- Hansson & Karlsson mixed
rock, jazz, classical music in a way never heard before. Monument has
still after 35 years no competitor.
Hansson & Karlsson toured Sweden several times, from large folk parks
to small clubs. They played a memorable gig as support for Cream in Stockholm
1967 and they had a one night long jam session with Jimi Hendrix at Klubb
Filpis. Hendrix was a big fan of Hansson & Karlsson and he recorded
their composition Tax Free. He also planned to record a version of their
Triplets, but unfortunately he died shortly before having the chance.
Bo grew tired of travelling, sometimes seven days a week, and playing
so often. On the last album, Man at Moon, it is obvious that Hansson &
Karlsson are not a happy and harmonic band but a dissolving group doing
its job the best they can. It was time for Bo Hansson to move on.
Time
to move on
The rock scene in Sweden was radically changing in the breaking of the
sixties and seventies. The Anglo American copycats that had been on the
charts the last decade were on their way out and groups with their own
compositions and Swedish lyrics were on the way in. The established record
companies didn't realize what was happening and new companies with idealistic
motives started.
Silence was such a company. One of the founders, the sound engineer Anders
Lind, had followed Hansson & Karlsson from the cradle to the grave.
He recorded the live album Rex and is still sitting on the tapes from
the jam session with Jimi Hendrix.
One
day Bo came knocking on his door to present the wild idea of making
music to a book. Bo had got the books from a girlfriend and as everybody
else he was captured by the story.
Bo borrowed an apartment from a friend who was abroad for some time
and when he came back after three months he found himself without
a home. He had been ejected by his landlord, the neighbours had complained
because Bo had used the apartment to compose the music and record
the demo tape he handed to Anders. |
|
Anders
immediately loved what he heard and he wanted this to be the first release
on the new Silence label.
They had no economical resources to occupy a studio for the time they
would need to record the music,.
so Anders and HIS homeless friend combined their resources and rented
a small summer house in the archipelago of Stockholm. Anders and Bo could
record and play as loud as they wanted without the neighbours complaining,
and his friend now had a place to stay. All through the fall and winter
they recorded and read the books. Bo in one room with his instruments,
Anders in another with his machines and one room for the drums that Rune
Carlsson came and played from time to time.
Lord of the Rings was recorded on a four track recorder and was finished
when spring broke. They continued the work in a small studio with one
of the first eight track recorders in Sweden and finally the record was
mixed in a studio at The National Swedish Radio The
story about how Anders Lind and Silence tried to get the record out in
USA is somewhat comic and far to intricate to tell here. In one of the
leading parts was an Englishman who claimed that had used to be manager
for Jane Mansfield, and, well
..
Immediate
success
Lord of the Rings was released late in the fall of 1970 and became an
immediate success. The album was given high rotation on the newly started
afternoon youth program on the national radio P3. At least one program
used Bo's music as signature melody.
Bo himself was in the midst of a very creative period, new melodies were
constantly popping up in his head, so when Lord of the Rings finally got
released in other countries there were already three more tracks added
compared to the first Swedish issue. To this new issue Anders Lind has
found another nine minutes of early sketches as an added bonus.
In
the encyclopaedia Guide to Progressive Rock, published by American Billboard,
Bo Hansson is mentioned with reverence and respect. He is the first to
play "space music", he is a precursor to the French prog-celebrities
Gong and English Henry Cow, and contemporary style-formers as Genesis
and Yes. Bo Hansson is an innovator in the most noble sense of the word.
As already said, it had been some exceptionally creative years in the
beginning of the seventies and Bo had lots of compositions left which
didn't fit on the original LP. Together with new material, partly composed
at the Silence collective's summer house, he put together a second album
called Magicians Hat. That was a straight follow up to Lord of the Rings,
with tracks as "Fylke" and "Playing downhill into the Downs".
He was also inspired by other fairy tales like Elidor by Alan Garner that
became a track with the same title as the book.
On this second album Bo is developing and deepening some of the musical
intentions he had on Lord of the Rings. He used half a dozen musicians
and made the music from a broader palette. If Lord of the Rings is the
minimalist sketch, the raw and unpolished, but therefore so irresistible
diamond, Magicians Hat is a more grandiose work from the same source.
In short, the albums belong together and those who fell in love with Lord
of the Rings had now with the second album the chance to develop their
love even further.
Never
played live
Bo Hansson was a musician who could be heard on records and on the radio.
But out in the live scene you could not find him. He never performed his
own music live with a few very rare exceptions when he for a short period
made some appearances in Fläsket Brinner (The Flesh is Burning).
On a few occasions the audience could hear live versions of "Bosses
låt" (Bo's Melody) and "Tom Bombadil". But just as
much as he sat behind the organ he could be scrambling a modest cow bell
or playing the guitar. The sudden initiatives with Fläsket Brinner
or the even more rare appearances with Kebnekajse, seemed more a social
thing rather than a musical urge. It seemed more important to meet old
friends from the recording sessions than to be on the stage.
The name Bo Hansson was spreading around the world and he was offered
to play a big festival in Germany. A band was actually gathered and rehearsals
took place in a garage outside Stockholm. The core was Fläsket Brinner
in addition to bass player Göran Lagerberg and guitarist Kenny Håkansson
from Kebnekajse.
A
dream team that never saw its way outside the garage. Bo himself could
not find the right motivation to get out on the road again and he has
also on several occasions said that he is not very good at making decisions
and organizing things. He just simply lacked the skills needed to be a
band leader. So the short re-union of Hansson & Karlsson 1999-2001,
was possibly the last time Bo played in a band, in this garage almost
30 years ago.
In
1975 Attic Thoughts was released, an album a little more experimental
than the others where musicians like guitarist Kenny Håkansson and
saxophone player Gunnar Bergsten are given more space to play. Bo himself
alternates between organs, synthesizers, mellotron and a number of special
effects. The music and the arrangements are as original and interesting
as before, but sometimes it can happen that Bo's strong melodies are getting
somewhat out of focus when the free and imaginative improvisations break
up the harmonies. Attic Thoughts is to be considered the third and last
part of Bo Hansson's musical fairy tale trilogy. Here are still some connections
to Lord of the Rings at the same time as parts of the music are pointing
forwards, Bo is evidently wanting to explore new instruments and worlds
of new sounds.
Inspires
future generations
After Attic Thoughts Bo and Silence took a break from each other. He released
Watership Down (mostly known as "the rabbit record") on another
Swedish label in 1977. Once again he leaned on Kenny Håkansson's
brilliant guitar playing. Bo himself says that the real spice from the
record comes from Kenny's musical input.
 |
|
After
Watership Down came a long silence. A musical drainage that not was
broken until 1985 by the surprising Mitt I Livet (In the middle if
life). Silence and Bo had once again gotten together for this release
but the critics did not like the beautiful little songs that were
sung in Swedish by different singers. Since then there has been silence.
Some ideas of making music from other books have been spinning in
Bo's head
, plans never realised. |
In
2003 Bo Hansson will be sixty years. He is happy for these new releases
of his music but he is also very happy that young hip-hopers are finding
his music. The magic and excitement he felt more than thirty years ago
when he stumbled over Tolkien's masterpiece, he wants future generations
also to experience when they read and listen.
A good way to do that is to read the books while you are listening to
the music. This is not film music.
This is the world's best soundtrack to a book - ever.
Håkan Lahger
Stockholm January 2002
The Biogaphy is based on intervievs
with Bo Hansson, Bill Öhrström, Anders Lind, Eva Wilke and Robert
Ekman. Stefan Dimle at"The Mellotronen" has also been a great
helper.
|