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What were you up to between the ages of 18 and 21? Perhaps
you were doing exactly what most of us did during those
carefree times -- wasting away the day in a dead-end job,
drinking cheap beer and living off ramen and cereal. Or,
if it happened to be Election Day, chances are you were
doing anything but voting.
Such sins of apathy and sloth could certainly be forgiven
if you somehow managed to squeeze in time to write some
of the world’s greatest 21st-century songs. Unfortunately
for most of us, our biggest accomplishments didn’t
extend beyond rising from bed before noon or leaving
the couch by sundown.
For 21-year-old Sondre Lerche (pronounced SAHN-DER
LAIR-KAY), life at 18 began with his Virgin Records’
debut Faces Down. Virtually
overnight, the album was vaunted as a genius work, drawing
comparisons to a host of well-known singer/songwriters.
Some have likened his style to Beck, Mason Jennings
and others with a modern appeal, while his similarities
to classics like Elvis Costello, Jeff Buckley and Burt
Bacharach are unmistakable.
With his latest offering, Two Way Monologue,
the Bergen, Norway native has proven he is no one-trick
pony. In fact, he has literally taken everything that
was beautiful and right with Faces Down and used these
ingredients to generate a more fluid, focused sound.
While many herald the Divine Comedy’s Neil Hannon
as the master of grand orchestrations of throwback folk-pop,
Lerche has truly struck a chord (so to speak) among
critics with his more-grounded, less-esoteric take on
the classic pop model.
In advance of his Colorado tour dates, Sondre spoke
with Kaffeine Buzz to discuss his ever-increasing success
and his place in today’s watered-down music landscape.
Kaffeine Buzz: How has the response to your
latest album been? It appears it has been overwhelmingly
positive.
Sondre Lerche: Yeah, it has been. It’s been even
better than it was with the first record. All of the
reviews and even the sales -- it’s just been an
improvement on all fronts, so I couldn’t be happier.
I really hadn’t expected that.
KB: From a local perspective, the college radio
stations like Radio 1190 have been giving you a lot
of airplay. So, it’s good to have a channel in
a city like ours where music like yours can be played.
SL: Absolutely, because that’s a difficult thing
for the kind of music I and a lot of other indie bands
do. It’s really hard to get airplay, so college
radio is so important to this kind of music.
KB: With Two Way Monologue, were you able to
do some things with it that you didn’t do with
Faces Down? Or, in looking back at Faces Down, did you
say, “Well, this time around, I want to accomplish
certain things”? Or were they just two separate
things as far as you were concerned?
SL: No, I really think that the second record comes
as a reaction to the first one. So, it definitely was
about exploring things that I didn’t do on the
first one. I wanted to get into one direction rather
than covering a lot of different directions that I felt
I was doing on the first one. I was just making each
song a different color. With this record, it was just
trying to go for one shade and explore that one. I like
to say it’s more of less.
KB: So would it be fair to say that Faces Down
was, to a certain extent, a compilation of all of your
work to date, or songs you had been writing for years?
SL: Yeah, it was essentially based on the creativity
you have when you discover stuff for the very first
time and the kind of energy that comes with that. It
was definitely a much more varied compilation of songs.
KB: As a musician, you obviously have the license
to do any style you want to do. What prompted you to
move your talent in this direction and explore this
style of music?
SL: I guess I just felt that I really didn’t
want to keep doing music in the structure that we know
as pop music. Obviously, I work in the field of popular
music, but I just wanted to do something where the structure
was different and more creative and awkward. There’s
something really conservative about a lot of pop songs
and how they are constructed. And at the time, I wanted
to rebel against that and do the opposite and make them
less predictable and less easy to be around.
KB: I’m completely ignorant when it comes
to the music scene in Norway. Do you find that the people
there are fairly receptive to what you do?
SL: I have a lot of friends in Norway who do really
great music. So I find a lot of great company there
in just meeting people who share an instinct or intention
or an interest in related sounds. There’s a great
scene for creative pop music in Norway. It’s nice
to see you’re not alone in your search for music.
KB: Do you find there’s less pressure
there for you to have some sort of measure of success
and that it’s more about music and doing music
for its own sake?
SL: Yeah, I actually do. I’ve never been really
ambitious in those terms. It has just happened, and
I think that’s a good thing because those kinds
of pop stardom ambitions never got in the way of the
music. Looking back now, that seems kind of rare, because
a lot of the time the competition between the local
bands is so hard. People just want to get ahead all
the time, especially at a young age. People lose their
musical ambitions to ambitions of proving their worth
and being successful or getting away from their hometown
and making it big. I never experienced that kind of
focus.
Sondre Lerche will play The Trilogy Lounge in Boulder
on Nov. 22 and 32 Bleu in Colorado Springs on Nov. 23.
-Dave Haucke, November 19, 2004
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