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Hushed life
From 'quiet' to
'riot' Kings of
Convenience's serene sound survives band turmoil
By Christopher
Muther, Globe Staff
| February 11,
2005
Kings of Convenience perform music that ideally
should be
heard on a
sunny Sunday morning and used as a soundtrack for deciphering crossword
puzzle clues while lazily dissecting a cranberry scone. It's also
well-suited for background music in an independently owned tea shop
that has a resident cat who makes a habit of sitting in customers'
laps. The Norwegian pair creates lulling acoustic melodies and sing
harmonies beautiful enough to make Simon & Garfunkel blush.
Given all this, it seems impossible to fathom that
the
whey-faced duo
of Erlend Oye and Eirik Glambek Boe could possibly bicker or yell over
the creation of music so serene and calm. But the recording process for
the Kings of Convenience's second album, ''Riot on an Empty Street,"
was nothing like the reflective music that resulted.
''The first day in the studio ended with Erlend
running out
and
slamming the door behind him," says Boe. ''I tried to explain to the
engineer that it wasn't going to be like this every day."
The studio drama stemmed from the fact that Oye
and Boe have
gone in
remarkably different paths since recording their first album, 2001's
''Quiet Is the New Loud." The title of that first album wasn't simply
chosen because of its clever play on words. ''Quiet Is the New Loud"
was the King's dogma, a guiding principal that heralded a return to
minimal acoustic music. It was a sharp reaction against overproduced
music cluttered with so many bits and bobs that the songs themselves
were becoming lost. The band performs at the Paradise tonight.
'Quiet"
went on to find acclaim and much
hype. It also spawned an
album of remixes. After a world tour in 2002, Oye moved to Berlin and
explored the electronic music universe. He released an album of techpop
collaborations in 2003 called ''Unrest," and last year released a DJ
album filled with further electronics. Boe temporarily dropped out of
the music scene, remaining in the Kings' hometown of Bergen, Norway,
working on his psychology degree.
When the two met again to record ''Riot on an
Empty Street"
last year,
Oye was ready to eschew all the electronics and return to the Kings of
Convenience sparse melodies. Boe, however, had other plans.
''I was more willing to expand on that style,"
says Boe on
the phone
from his home in Bergen, where he was lying in bed and watching the
snow fall outside his window. ''Erlend wanted to do everything
acoustically and not use any unnecessary rhythm or bass."
It appears that Boe won this round. ''Riot on an
Empty
Street" sounds
fuller than ''Quiet Is the New Loud." The building blocks of the album
are still finger-strummed guitar, piano, and voice, but there are more
adventurous touches, such as a plucked banjo and lusher vocal
harmonies. The lead track, ''Homesick," could very well have been
lifted from Simon & Garfunkel's ''Sounds of Silence" album. But
the
duo also enter into territories bordering on traditional pop and
rhythmic jazz.
''They
both seem to be into quite a range
of music," says Kieran
Hebden, the DJ and electronic musician who records under the name Four
Tet and who remixed a Kings track on the duo's ''Versus" album in 2001.
''So it makes sense that their sound covers a few areas. I went to
Bergen last year and people seem to be really into dance music and pop
music, so you can see where Kings of Convenience get it all from."
Bergen, the second largest city in Norway, has
experienced a
musical
renaissance in recent years, producing acts such as Sondre Lerche,
Magnet, and Röyksopp. Oye and Boe, who are both
29, met in
Bergen at
an interschool geography test, which Oye won by drawing a freehand map
of the world from memory. It was Boe who introduced Oye to electronic
music when the two were teenagers. In the ensuing years, Boe became
fascinated with everything from the Smiths to Run- DMC (''I don't know
where that came from. There weren't a lot of people listening to
hip-hop in Norway at that time.") to bossa nova.
As teenagers, they played in a rock band called
Skog (which
means tree
in Norwegian), which eventually evolved into Kings of Convenience.
Perhaps the most revolutionary aspect of the duo's quiet riot is the
creation of soft acoustic music that isn't melancholy or mopey. These
are observational songs that are built around snippets of seemingly
mundane moments, yet somehow they are presented as fascinating and
reflective snapshots in somewhat questionable but poetic English.
The basis of this careful observation is no doubt
rooted in
Boe's
psychology studies. While Oye has evolved into a globe-trotting DJ, Boe
has remained in Bergen, working on his degree. So far, he's studied for
six years, and has a year remaining until he receives his diploma.
''The reason why I chose psychology is because I
have this
naive
fascination with the truth, and finding the truth behind it all," says
Boe. ''I enjoy this idea of discovering what it's really all about. I'm
using the same curiosity when I'm writing music. Like psychology, music
is something that's intangible. Nothing is concrete. In a way, it's
like spending time in an imaginary forest. It's a place where I'm very
comfortable."
Christopher
Muther can be reached at muther@globe.com.
Kings
of Convenience at the Paradise Rock
Club, tonight at 9 p.m., $12, 18+, 617-931-2000. 
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