Christian Kjellvander - Wild Hxmans (2018)
Artist: Christian Kjellvander
Title: Wild Hxmans
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Tapete Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:00
Total Size: 104 / 244 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Wild Hxmans
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Tapete Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:00
Total Size: 104 / 244 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Strangers in Northeim 08:19
2. Curtain Maker 09:47
3. Stiegga 04:25
4. The Thing Is 07:39
5. Halle Lay Lu Jah 04:29
6. Love Xomes 05:36
7. Faux Guernica 04:45
In days like these, dominated by dark clouds of marginalisation and isolationism, an artist like Christian Kjellvander is absolutely critical to our spiritual salvation. The Swedish singer-songwriter embraces the foreign, the unknown and seeks out the most profound sense of humanity. Take the title of his ninth album “WILD HXMANS”: something is different, disconcertingly so. Christian Kjellvander slips us an X for a U. He forces us to think, sets our senses on edge. We cast our vote with an X, but we also use it to blot out a mistake. “Cross it out and forget about it – if this is how people treat each other, then we have a problem”, Christian Kjellvander suggests.
Through seven raw, compelling songs between folk, blues, Americana and free jazz, the 42-year- old speaks to us of farewells and departures, of escape and the sensation of arriving in a new world. In doing so, he crafts a sound which breathes peacefully, pulsating as he surges headlong from intimacy into incredibly dynamic, deep, oppressive darkness. At times it seems as if his music disappears, only to resurface with a flash moments later, shimmering transparently.
Christian Kjellvander is an emphatic vagabond, a daydreaming desperado. On “Strangers In Northeim” he ushers something new and untamed into a perfect little town. “Faux Guernica” is based on a road trip through the Basque country with his youngest son. And “Curtain Maker” is inspired by an encounter in Verona with a woman from Syria: it articulates the unbearable silence which follows a separation, the stillness which follows death. Could a musician face a more paradoxical challenge than creating sound to express this eternal silence? What a stroke of fortune when he actually succeeds ...
These multifaceted songs are carried by Christian Kjellvander‘s wondrous voice, with echoes of Leonard Cohen, Neil Young and David Sylvian, yet distinctively his own. A voice so brittle in the presence of pain shines even brighter in the coruscating conviction that emotions routinely concealed in everyday life will rise up to the surface.
“The Thing Is” transports the listener back to 1990s Texas. The deaths of his father and his youngest brother leave their mark on this intense piece: “We’re all born with a weight / We get lighter for every day / Come on now, spread the love / Until we finally drift away.” Ultimately, this represents a positive approach to life as the end draws closer. Christian Kjellvander faces up to the unknown and uses it in his art: “I often find myself in situations or places I haven’t got a clue about. So I learn and then I write.”
Through seven raw, compelling songs between folk, blues, Americana and free jazz, the 42-year- old speaks to us of farewells and departures, of escape and the sensation of arriving in a new world. In doing so, he crafts a sound which breathes peacefully, pulsating as he surges headlong from intimacy into incredibly dynamic, deep, oppressive darkness. At times it seems as if his music disappears, only to resurface with a flash moments later, shimmering transparently.
Christian Kjellvander is an emphatic vagabond, a daydreaming desperado. On “Strangers In Northeim” he ushers something new and untamed into a perfect little town. “Faux Guernica” is based on a road trip through the Basque country with his youngest son. And “Curtain Maker” is inspired by an encounter in Verona with a woman from Syria: it articulates the unbearable silence which follows a separation, the stillness which follows death. Could a musician face a more paradoxical challenge than creating sound to express this eternal silence? What a stroke of fortune when he actually succeeds ...
These multifaceted songs are carried by Christian Kjellvander‘s wondrous voice, with echoes of Leonard Cohen, Neil Young and David Sylvian, yet distinctively his own. A voice so brittle in the presence of pain shines even brighter in the coruscating conviction that emotions routinely concealed in everyday life will rise up to the surface.
“The Thing Is” transports the listener back to 1990s Texas. The deaths of his father and his youngest brother leave their mark on this intense piece: “We’re all born with a weight / We get lighter for every day / Come on now, spread the love / Until we finally drift away.” Ultimately, this represents a positive approach to life as the end draws closer. Christian Kjellvander faces up to the unknown and uses it in his art: “I often find myself in situations or places I haven’t got a clue about. So I learn and then I write.”