Showing posts with label Peter Scion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Scion. Show all posts
Tuesday, 12 May 2009
THE PECULIAR SOUNDS OF PETER SCION: A NEWCOMER'S INTRODUCTION (1989-2005)
With so many albums of mine available here, you might find it hard to decide what to download unless you're already familiar with my music. Therefore I have compiled an album of 2CD's length covering every album I've made, including group efforts from Modryn, Continental Soul Searchers, and Pangolin.
It's always hard to make compilations of your own work, and my opinion is that the artists themselves rarely are the best persons to decide what material is appropriate to include. Had someone else put together a Peter Scion "best of" or "introduction" styled album, it might have looked very different. I have however tried to shed light on as many different styles I thought necessary, why this introduction swings wildly from dark folk to country music to heavy rock to... Well, you get the point. However, this isn't meant to be a cohesive album, just the introduction the title suggests.
For quick download, it's available only in slightly lesser quality mp3's. If you have an irresistable urge to get this music in better quality after messing up your mind with these selections, I humbly advise you to choose the regular albums.
DOWNLOAD DISC 1
DOWNLOAD DISC 2
Labels:
Continental Soul Searchers,
Modryn,
Pangolin,
Peter Scion
Thursday, 7 May 2009
DEVACHAN (Peter Scion 1997)

After a few musical miscarriages, "Devachan" came to me as my firstborn album. As my debut, it will always have a special place in my heart. It also seems to me that this is the record of mine that people like the most.
I have to thank my dear friend Christer Bäckhage for setting this weird thing into motion. After hearing some of my earlier recordings, he suggested that I should go all the way and try to make something more psychedelic. That pulled the plug. Or rather, that broke the levee. As soon as I started recording, I couldn't tape enough songs. It took only a week to finish the entire album, but more songs were coming which eventually made up the two albums that followed it.
Whether "Devachan" is psychedelic or not is up to other people to decide, but it was definitely a trip into my own mind at the time. Listening to it is listening to someone slightly lost in and baffled by his own creativity, somewhere between a slightly uncomfortable past and an unknown future. And so "Devachan" is the perfect title for the album. The word is Sanskrit for the place where the soul dwells after death but before rebirth. That's where you found me as an artist in early 1997.
The name "Scion" came from a headline in a British music magazine (and not from the Ian Matthews song that some have believed). I liked the meaning of it although I was a bit uncomfortable with its sound to begin with. But the name stuck, and soon I was as much the Scion persona as I was the ordinary, everyday me. Actually, when I became Peter Scion I became more of my real self, because Peter Scion could say things I couldn't.
Before my friend Lars Holmquist founded the "kitchen table label" Domestica (simply because he thought the album was so good that he wanted it out in some way, even if he had to do it himself), I sent out a tape with a three track selection to various record labels in Europe. I got only one reply, a year or so later. I can't remember now who from, but he had suddenly found the tape behind a shelf, forgetting he had recieved it in the first place. Now he had listened to it, and was interested in releasing "Devachan" on his label. "Sure," I wrote to him. I never heard from him again.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD PART 1
DOWNLOAD PART 2
WAV:
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TREE MUSIC (Peter Scion 1997)

I can't remember really how "Tree Music" came about. From what I recall now, it just seemed to happen. After "Devachan", I kept recording, and I suddenly had enough material to fill a 90 minute tape. About half of that material was structured as "The Amethyst Dream". At one point, Lars at Domestica and I talked about releasing "The Amethyst Dream" together with "Devachan" as a box set of sorts including "Tree Music". The idea was scrapped, but suddenly we had another album ready for release. "Tree Music" and "The Amethyst Dream" were released simultaneously.
The odd thing about "Tree Music" is that it seems to have a theme of its own. All the songs deal, in one way or another, with nature. The unintentional concept album! It is also by far the strangest album of mine, with "Willow Moon" being the off-beat centrepiece. (And off tune too for that matter...) There's also a new version of "These Darkened Trees" which is the perfect example of how not to make a record. I had just bought myself a cheap sitar, and with fearlessness bordering on sheer stupidity, I decided to play a very long solo on said sitar. I also turned it up pretty loud in the mix, so that no-one would miss it... Those were the days! Anyway, this arrangement (bar the sitar!) became the foundation for subsequent takes on the song, including the one with Pangolin.
This is indeed one freak of an album, and perhaps that's an appeal of its own. At least one person I know has cited "Tree Music" as his favourite Peter Scion album... Another friend of mine had a good laugh when he heard "The Flower of My Secret Garden" for the first time. "What a freaky song!" he said, probably with equal parts of joy and fear... "Tree Music" seems to generate odd reactions.
The album cover was a shameless tribute to the ESP Disk' aesthetics. I love the homemade feel of their covers; that simple, stark black and white look that seemed to signal an urge to express oneself. I could easily relate to that, and although I no longer make music myself, I still can.
MP3:
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WAV:
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The odd thing about "Tree Music" is that it seems to have a theme of its own. All the songs deal, in one way or another, with nature. The unintentional concept album! It is also by far the strangest album of mine, with "Willow Moon" being the off-beat centrepiece. (And off tune too for that matter...) There's also a new version of "These Darkened Trees" which is the perfect example of how not to make a record. I had just bought myself a cheap sitar, and with fearlessness bordering on sheer stupidity, I decided to play a very long solo on said sitar. I also turned it up pretty loud in the mix, so that no-one would miss it... Those were the days! Anyway, this arrangement (bar the sitar!) became the foundation for subsequent takes on the song, including the one with Pangolin.
This is indeed one freak of an album, and perhaps that's an appeal of its own. At least one person I know has cited "Tree Music" as his favourite Peter Scion album... Another friend of mine had a good laugh when he heard "The Flower of My Secret Garden" for the first time. "What a freaky song!" he said, probably with equal parts of joy and fear... "Tree Music" seems to generate odd reactions.
The album cover was a shameless tribute to the ESP Disk' aesthetics. I love the homemade feel of their covers; that simple, stark black and white look that seemed to signal an urge to express oneself. I could easily relate to that, and although I no longer make music myself, I still can.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
Wednesday, 6 May 2009
THE AMETHYST DREAM (Peter Scion 1997)

My third album was my personal favourite for a while, and I still like how it works cyclical, like an eternity sign. The last track "The Garden" (featuring Carita Forslund on flute) spiritually connects with the opening track, the likewise instrumental "Spring Fair Tune". The title track, also instrumental, is placed in the middle: the point where everything meets. When choosing the songs for "The Amethyst Dream", I tried to make it an album that you could listen to at a low volume, almost like an ambient album. However, tracks such as "Death Comes From The Sky" is a far cry from your typical ambient styled music!
The cover shot was taken by my inspirational mentor and close friend Christer Bäckhage. There was a small deserted garden not far from where I lived, and I decided it would be a perfect place for some posing. Luckily, I'm not seen clearly on the cover, more like a shadow emerging from the dark. I actually hate pictures of myself, and it would take a good while until I decided to have a proper portrait of myself on an album cover.
They have now ruined the deserted garden by building an ugly house there. (Sometimes, reality is very harsh.) They left the small stone steps (on which I sit) leading up to the garden though, but the magic of the place is gone.
"The Amethyst Dream" is the final part of what works like a trilogy, preceeded by "Tree Music" and "Devachan". The intention was never to create a cycle of albums, but "The Amethyst Dream" somehow seems to finish what "Devachan" started.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD PART 1
DOWNLOAD PART 2
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
The cover shot was taken by my inspirational mentor and close friend Christer Bäckhage. There was a small deserted garden not far from where I lived, and I decided it would be a perfect place for some posing. Luckily, I'm not seen clearly on the cover, more like a shadow emerging from the dark. I actually hate pictures of myself, and it would take a good while until I decided to have a proper portrait of myself on an album cover.
They have now ruined the deserted garden by building an ugly house there. (Sometimes, reality is very harsh.) They left the small stone steps (on which I sit) leading up to the garden though, but the magic of the place is gone.
"The Amethyst Dream" is the final part of what works like a trilogy, preceeded by "Tree Music" and "Devachan". The intention was never to create a cycle of albums, but "The Amethyst Dream" somehow seems to finish what "Devachan" started.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD PART 1
DOWNLOAD PART 2
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
SWEET SORROW MAN (Peter Scion 1997)

"Sweet Sorrow Man" seemed to surprise many of my listeners. After three albums of folk psych, I suddenly turned to country music! However, it's not a fullblown country album, but the influence is definitely there. Mick Capewell, who interviewed me for UK mag Ptolemaic Terrascope, dubbed it "Country & Northern", and that is quite possibly the best description I've heard of it.
To me, however, the change wasn't that sudden at all. I had listened a fair bit to country music and traditional American songs for some while before I recorded "Sweet Sorrow Man". After all, American traditional music isn't that far removed from the folk songs of the British Isles, which only a slightly closer history examination reveals. And as I, as an artist, worked by the principle "what goes in must come out", it was simply impossible not to react creatively to what I was listening to. "Broken" was even a song that I had wanted to write for a long time, and I was very happy to eventually find myself in the right mind to do it. Oh, and I'm very proud of my rendition of "Kathleen", which I still think is among my Top 3 recordings.
The re-working of "Is It Raining In Seattle?" (originally on "Devachan") was great fun to do. I don't know what really instigated another version of it; perhaps did I sense some country feel in it that would slip in nicely with the rest of the album. It was all first takes to keep the "devil may care" attitude intact in the finished version, as if there were four people getting together for the first time busking a song they roughly knew from a long time ago.
Although there are a couple of tongue-in-cheek moments on "Sweet Sorrow Man", I never meant to poke fun at a musical style I still like very much. It was all very lovingly done, and when listening to the album today, I realize it's my emotionally most diverse album up to that date. Good times rub shoulders with utter desperation, and in that respect, "Sweet Sorrow Man" is a very human album.
As I wrote in my liner notes for the album, "Sweet Sorrow Man" was originally percieved as an EP. But I was still riding high on the creative wave, so soon I had an album's worth of material that seemed to go together pretty well.
Lars Holmquist did the cover for the album without much of my participation. One day when I went to see him, he showed the finished artwork. I immediately accepted it, saying "I'd love to buy an album looking like that!".
I still like this album very much.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
To me, however, the change wasn't that sudden at all. I had listened a fair bit to country music and traditional American songs for some while before I recorded "Sweet Sorrow Man". After all, American traditional music isn't that far removed from the folk songs of the British Isles, which only a slightly closer history examination reveals. And as I, as an artist, worked by the principle "what goes in must come out", it was simply impossible not to react creatively to what I was listening to. "Broken" was even a song that I had wanted to write for a long time, and I was very happy to eventually find myself in the right mind to do it. Oh, and I'm very proud of my rendition of "Kathleen", which I still think is among my Top 3 recordings.
The re-working of "Is It Raining In Seattle?" (originally on "Devachan") was great fun to do. I don't know what really instigated another version of it; perhaps did I sense some country feel in it that would slip in nicely with the rest of the album. It was all first takes to keep the "devil may care" attitude intact in the finished version, as if there were four people getting together for the first time busking a song they roughly knew from a long time ago.
Although there are a couple of tongue-in-cheek moments on "Sweet Sorrow Man", I never meant to poke fun at a musical style I still like very much. It was all very lovingly done, and when listening to the album today, I realize it's my emotionally most diverse album up to that date. Good times rub shoulders with utter desperation, and in that respect, "Sweet Sorrow Man" is a very human album.
As I wrote in my liner notes for the album, "Sweet Sorrow Man" was originally percieved as an EP. But I was still riding high on the creative wave, so soon I had an album's worth of material that seemed to go together pretty well.
Lars Holmquist did the cover for the album without much of my participation. One day when I went to see him, he showed the finished artwork. I immediately accepted it, saying "I'd love to buy an album looking like that!".
I still like this album very much.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
SHROUD SONG (Peter Scion 1998)

PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED (sort of)
This is a curiousity in every way.
First of all, it was recorded during a week of fasting - voluntary food depravation. The opinions on fasting differ vastly depending on who you ask, and I won't go into the pros and cons of it. I will say though that all your senses sharpen while fasting, and I assume it's a way for the body to say "hey, if I sharpen your hearing and better your sight, will you go out to hunt down some food for me, you lazy bugger!". Listening to music while fasting has often been a fascinating experince to me, but it wasn't until "Shroud Song" that I actually recorded music under the influence of the practice.
The result was "Shroud Song", which is an altogether completely different thing to anything I had ever done before. There are no songs on it; the entire album is instrumental (which should come as a relief to those of you who can't stand my vocals!) and owes a fair bit to the "kosmische musik" seeping from the German kraut rock scene in the 70's.
That might be a reason why I didn't pay much attention to it right after I finished it. It was all done in a couple of days, two, perhaps three. It was all improvised. Compared to my previous albums, even at their spaciest, it's an outsider. When finished, I put the tape among other tapes and didn't think of it a lot until I pulled it out and made a copy for Lars at Domestica. Lars loves German kraut rock, and "Shroud Song" had him firing on all cylinders. We were discussing a potential release, but in the end we dropped it. I can't remember why.
Around this time, a Peter Scion website was set up. The website is basically dead now, with no updates being made after I withdrew from playing. Anyway, through the website, two albums were released in the short-lived "Archive Series". One of them comprised outtakes and rehearsals, whereas the second volume was "Shroud Song". "The Archive Series" was made in an extremely limited edition of 30 copies and given away free to website visitors and members of various music forums on the internet.
The history of "Shroud Song" is indeed obscure, but I'm delighted to present it to you here.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
First of all, it was recorded during a week of fasting - voluntary food depravation. The opinions on fasting differ vastly depending on who you ask, and I won't go into the pros and cons of it. I will say though that all your senses sharpen while fasting, and I assume it's a way for the body to say "hey, if I sharpen your hearing and better your sight, will you go out to hunt down some food for me, you lazy bugger!". Listening to music while fasting has often been a fascinating experince to me, but it wasn't until "Shroud Song" that I actually recorded music under the influence of the practice.
The result was "Shroud Song", which is an altogether completely different thing to anything I had ever done before. There are no songs on it; the entire album is instrumental (which should come as a relief to those of you who can't stand my vocals!) and owes a fair bit to the "kosmische musik" seeping from the German kraut rock scene in the 70's.
That might be a reason why I didn't pay much attention to it right after I finished it. It was all done in a couple of days, two, perhaps three. It was all improvised. Compared to my previous albums, even at their spaciest, it's an outsider. When finished, I put the tape among other tapes and didn't think of it a lot until I pulled it out and made a copy for Lars at Domestica. Lars loves German kraut rock, and "Shroud Song" had him firing on all cylinders. We were discussing a potential release, but in the end we dropped it. I can't remember why.
Around this time, a Peter Scion website was set up. The website is basically dead now, with no updates being made after I withdrew from playing. Anyway, through the website, two albums were released in the short-lived "Archive Series". One of them comprised outtakes and rehearsals, whereas the second volume was "Shroud Song". "The Archive Series" was made in an extremely limited edition of 30 copies and given away free to website visitors and members of various music forums on the internet.
The history of "Shroud Song" is indeed obscure, but I'm delighted to present it to you here.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
STRANGE INCONVENIENCES (Peter Scion 1998)

PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
I suppose any artist with a back catalogue exceeding the number of three albums have some "Great Lost Album" lying around somewhere in the rubble. I guess this one would be mine, although it might be rather "lost" than "great"! But seriously, I do have a fondness for "Strange Inconveniences". I like the songs, I play around with the arrangements (using banjo for instance), and it's good to hear my long time friend Carita Forslund sing for the first time on one of my albums. Carita has, as far as I know, given up music just like me, but she used to be a very, very talented songwriter in her own right, although her recordings remain unreleased to this day. A great pity, but a good thing that she wanted to work with me as a flautist (on "Tree Music" and "Devachan") as well as a singer (on the track "Cold Ground" from this very album).
"Strange Inconveniences" was shelved because not long after the sessions, I formed rock band Pangolin, and since they immediately became my main focus, I didn't want any solo album to interfere with the band activities. I do think that the album was good enough to release though, why it is a relief of sorts to finally have it out, if "only" as a download.
I projected several versions of "Strange Inconveniences", changing a song here, adding another there. The version here drops an early, and not very thoroughly realized acoustic take of the Pangolin number "Poisoned River To Her Heart", in favour of "Sounds of the Space Age". I'd say that this is the most definitive version of the album.
"Sounds of the Space Age" was recorded at the end of the sessions, and was an all electronic experiment combining the sounds of an old, wonderfully cheesy organ with a built-in rhythm machine, with phrases primitively sampled from a National Geographic flexi disc celebrating the first steps on the moon. I had no idea whatsoever how the samples would work together with the backing track - I couldn't hear what I was doing due to the technical limitations of the 4 track machine I was using. So I had to trust luck and chance, and I must unashamedly say they were both on my side this time. I love this recording so much, and I don't care if no-one agrees with me! You might say it's totally off compared to the rest of the album, but I say it isn't. It reflects the playfulness that defined my approach to the whole recording session.
MP3:
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WAV:
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SOMBRE TRUST (Peter Scion 1999-2000)
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
When I searched through my closet, I found a box full of tapes with hours and hours of unreleased material. Among those tapes I found an entire unreleased album that I had more or less forgotten about. Truth is, it was just a pile of songs that I recorded some time in-between "Through My Ghost" and "Sister Songs". Chronologically, it makes perfect sense. My lyrics changed to the observer's, and I moved further away from the blatantly folk inspired.
A few of these songs were used as contributions to 'various artists' compilations, but the versions included herein are all different in one way or another. "Cynthia", for example, does not feature Carita Forslunds flute and voice, just me. A couple of tracks are in earlier and, as far as I go, better mixes. I wonder why I chose inferior versions? All songs have their proper place in this setting however, and most of the songs are previously unreleased in any form.
Despite a few crunchier tracks, this is a emotionally calmer album than what you might have come to expect from me. Perhaps so because I switched focus from the inside to the outside? In any case, I'm rather pleased with many of these songs, and they have moments I can listen to with satisfaction. Usually, I tend to hear the flaws rather than the advantages, but in the case of "Sombre Trust", I actually concentrate on the good things. For instance, the guitar solo in "She Must Be Very Lonely" which I remember growing in the soil of Roger McGuinn's solo in "She Don't Care About Time". But of course, McGuinn's solo is a bit more sophisticated than mine!
Speaking of solos, I must have been under some SRC and "Black Sheep" influence while recording "Paperbird"...
Another track I am especially pleased to see released is the reworking of "The Dole of the King's Daughter". That song had been with me since the days of the Continental Soul Searchers; Modryn used to do it and we even rehearsed with Pangolin although we soon dropped it. This reflects my unability to find the right approach to it. I think I found it here!
As with "Through My Ghost", this is a solo effort without any contributions from others. It seems natural since the songs were recorded over a longer period of time than I usually spent on making a record.
As you can tell, I have many a soft spot for the songs that make up "Sombre Trust". It's a pity I never got around to actually structure them as an album way back when. But as they say, better late than never!
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD Pt 1 / DOWNLOAD Pt 2 (Both parts needed!)
Artwork here (let me know if it doesn't work).
THROUGH MY GHOST (Peter Scion 2000)
After slamming the door between me and Pangolin, I was an a weird state of mind. I felt disappointed and relieved, lost and on the right track, all at the same time. Sessions for Pangolin's second album had broken down to the loud noises of personality clashes and, on my part, unhappiness with the direction Pangolin was heading.
I begun the sessions for "Through My Ghost" in the very same week I left Pangolin, using most of the songs projected for the abandoned band album. Being slightly out of touch with my muse, I decided to use some songs I had recorded or at least written earlier; in some cases dating back to 1997 and 1998. "The Farthermost Shore" for instance was originally intended for the then unreleased "Strange Inconveniences". In retrospect, I think this makes "Through My Ghost" my conceptually least cohesive album. Now, almost a decade later, it plays like a mess to my ears, almost like an ill-conceived compilation album. The songs are OK, but the album as a whole is not.
Also, the album stayed in the can for way, way, way too long. Finished in 2000, it was (for reasons I'm not sure of myself) put on hold until 2002 in some kind of constipated release schedule, making it feel passé the same day it was released. Instead of using old songs, which seemed like a good idea at the time, I should have used the time re-thinking and re-structuring the album. Instead, I was recording new material for a follow-up that never happened, trying to leave "Through My Ghost" behind me. Nevertheless, when the album got out, it was met with quite positive reviews.
The album title seems more appropriate today than ever before. I was unsure where to go musically after the traumatic last days of Pangolin. I was a bit like a ghost to myself, and the album is the sound of that ghost performing. I needed to get a grip on myself again, or as they say: get my shit back together again.
After a while I began writing new songs; a lot more sparse songs, without a lot of arrangements. Most of them was just me and my acoustic guitar. When making "Through My Ghost", I held firm to my decision not involving any other musicians. Working within the frames of a band, I experienced a social hangover. With the new, post-Ghost songs, I couldn't even stand overdubs.
Maybe "Through My Ghost" should have been scrapped altogether, and instead started working all from scratch, but it was necessary to exorcise the demons of Pangolin, to get these songs out of my system. Otherwise, this ghost would have haunted me forever.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
I begun the sessions for "Through My Ghost" in the very same week I left Pangolin, using most of the songs projected for the abandoned band album. Being slightly out of touch with my muse, I decided to use some songs I had recorded or at least written earlier; in some cases dating back to 1997 and 1998. "The Farthermost Shore" for instance was originally intended for the then unreleased "Strange Inconveniences". In retrospect, I think this makes "Through My Ghost" my conceptually least cohesive album. Now, almost a decade later, it plays like a mess to my ears, almost like an ill-conceived compilation album. The songs are OK, but the album as a whole is not.
Also, the album stayed in the can for way, way, way too long. Finished in 2000, it was (for reasons I'm not sure of myself) put on hold until 2002 in some kind of constipated release schedule, making it feel passé the same day it was released. Instead of using old songs, which seemed like a good idea at the time, I should have used the time re-thinking and re-structuring the album. Instead, I was recording new material for a follow-up that never happened, trying to leave "Through My Ghost" behind me. Nevertheless, when the album got out, it was met with quite positive reviews.
The album title seems more appropriate today than ever before. I was unsure where to go musically after the traumatic last days of Pangolin. I was a bit like a ghost to myself, and the album is the sound of that ghost performing. I needed to get a grip on myself again, or as they say: get my shit back together again.
After a while I began writing new songs; a lot more sparse songs, without a lot of arrangements. Most of them was just me and my acoustic guitar. When making "Through My Ghost", I held firm to my decision not involving any other musicians. Working within the frames of a band, I experienced a social hangover. With the new, post-Ghost songs, I couldn't even stand overdubs.
Maybe "Through My Ghost" should have been scrapped altogether, and instead started working all from scratch, but it was necessary to exorcise the demons of Pangolin, to get these songs out of my system. Otherwise, this ghost would have haunted me forever.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
SISTER SONGS (Peter Scion 2002)
So there I was, looking for... I don't know what. A new voice? A new approach to music? A new way of writing songs? Well, one thing was for sure: I had gotten very tired of hearing my own worn-out chords. I felt like I had become my own cliché. Creativity was getting the best of me; it demanded me, it was draining me. I felt low, and tired. What once was a liberation was now becoming a prison. I had become Peter Scion, and I had somehow lost myself again.
Something neeeded to be done. I met someone who changed my life in a way I still can't quite explain, and it wasn't even a love relationship although the songs on "Sister Songs" might lead people to believe that. It was so much greater, it was friendship of a kind one rarely experience in life. I suddenly had a sense of belonging, so it was obvious that the first track on "Sister Songs" should be entitled that: "Sense of Belonging".
However, I had still problems working on my music. Halfway through the album sessions, I gave up on it. The 13 minute opening track left me punch drunk from trying to get it together. I knew it was a song well worth finishing, but I just couldn't get it right. At one point I partially erased a channel by mistake and had to record the whole thing all over again.
I spoke to a friend of mine, a New Zealand musician, about this. He told me to give it up; to just drop music making altogether. That was the best advice I could get. Knowing that "Sister Songs" would be the last Peter Scion album reinforced me with energy to finish it. The album had a story to tell, and all I had to do was getting the missing pieces done. Suddenly I knew what the album needed, and wrote and recorded the last songs for the album. Knowing that this would be my swan song, I had to make it good. Even with the hiatus in the middle of the sessions excluded, "Sister Songs" demanded more time in the making than any previous album. At one point I described myself as "the Roger Corman of folk"; Corman was the film maker responsible for movies such as the original "Little Shop of Horrors" and the psychedelic visual anthem "The Trip", and he never spent more than a couple of weeks making a movie. "Sister Songs" on the other hand was like a high budget project without a budget at all.
Musically, I wanted "Sister Songs" to be like an overview of my entire career, albeit with entirely new songs. I think I succeeded. There are hints all the way back to "Devachan" and, with the last track "Changes Must Be", even further back in time, to my teenage years. I had rarely had a better time recording a song than "Changes Must Be" - I screamed and shouted and oddly enough, the sounds that leaped out of my mouth sounded pretty much like I did when I was the lead singer of a teenage garage band founded amidst the 80's garage revival.
Each track is different to the one preceeding it. Each track was mixed entirely from the standpoint of the song itself. I spent an incredible amount of time mixing the album, and when done I knew I had not only produced the best Peter Scion album of all, but the best album I was capable of making whatsoever.
Of course, "Sister Songs" sank more or less without a trace. It got like two reviews; the leading underground psych/folk/prog magazine obviously refused to write about it after the editor and I went on a full speed crash course in a newsgroup discussion. The original Peter Scion website went dead after I announced I was quitting music. The webmaster went out of touch and has remained so ever since.
And there I was with my magnum opus on my hands with no one to care. Crazy how things go, isn't it?
I'm still hands down, no excuses, say what you will very proud of "Sister Songs". It is the definitive Peter Scion album. It has several of my best songs ever. It has the best sound. It has sensitively worked-out overdubs from musical friends, from New Zealand to the U.S. It is the essence of Peter Scion, and even if the rest of the world tells me the album sucks, and calls me arrogant, I know it doesn't. So there.
With "Sister Songs", I knew I could retire from the music scene, knowing I had said what I wanted to say.
MP3:
CROSSING THE BLACK CAT'S PATH (P. Scion & The Poor Minstrels of Song 2000-2002)
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
(well, officially at least...)
Playing live has never been a favourite pastime of mine as I suffer from a pretty severe stage fright. Nevertheless, when I was asked to join two US acts and one from Norway for a tour in Northern Europe 2002, I had to say yes. It was after all a childhood dream coming true. Along with the Iditarod, Drekka, and Ring I squeezed myself into a tiny van going from from Oslo to Denmark, from Denmark to Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. And I realized it was so much easier performing in front of total strangers, than playing to a crowd of people consisting mostly of your friends. I know some tour participants can testify to some tour habits of mine, such as having beer before lunch and eating too much of the free food served at the venues, but oh well so it goes. (It was during this tour the appropriate expression "Feed the Swede" was coined.)
The Poor Minstrels tour provided me with the chance to realize a long-standing desire to perform with a string section. Thanks to the Iditarod's cello and viola player, my bare-bones solo sound was enhanced with a much richer sound palette. Unfortunately, there hardly seems to be any good recordings documenting the tour, even though almost every night was taped. The songs on this album, originally distributed as some kind of bootleg, were recorded in session for the Dutch radio. Included are a selection from the then not yet released "Sister Songs", a heavily reworked version "In The Forest" plus other songs rarely played live. All in all, this is by far the best live documentation of a Peter Scion live set.
Completing the album are two songs from a live performance in Gothenburg 2000, plus a stray recording from a friend's rehearsal space made in 2001.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD PART 1
DOWNLOAD PART 2
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
(well, officially at least...)
Playing live has never been a favourite pastime of mine as I suffer from a pretty severe stage fright. Nevertheless, when I was asked to join two US acts and one from Norway for a tour in Northern Europe 2002, I had to say yes. It was after all a childhood dream coming true. Along with the Iditarod, Drekka, and Ring I squeezed myself into a tiny van going from from Oslo to Denmark, from Denmark to Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. And I realized it was so much easier performing in front of total strangers, than playing to a crowd of people consisting mostly of your friends. I know some tour participants can testify to some tour habits of mine, such as having beer before lunch and eating too much of the free food served at the venues, but oh well so it goes. (It was during this tour the appropriate expression "Feed the Swede" was coined.)
The Poor Minstrels tour provided me with the chance to realize a long-standing desire to perform with a string section. Thanks to the Iditarod's cello and viola player, my bare-bones solo sound was enhanced with a much richer sound palette. Unfortunately, there hardly seems to be any good recordings documenting the tour, even though almost every night was taped. The songs on this album, originally distributed as some kind of bootleg, were recorded in session for the Dutch radio. Included are a selection from the then not yet released "Sister Songs", a heavily reworked version "In The Forest" plus other songs rarely played live. All in all, this is by far the best live documentation of a Peter Scion live set.
Completing the album are two songs from a live performance in Gothenburg 2000, plus a stray recording from a friend's rehearsal space made in 2001.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD PART 1
DOWNLOAD PART 2
WAV:
DOWNLOAD
TRAUMAS, MISHAPS & OTHER PLEASURES (Peter Scion 1997-2002)

PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
There are many more songs that never found their way onto any of the regular albums. Every album I made spawned several outtakes (except for "Sister Songs" which produced only one). Some of them were pure crap, while others were rejected simply because they didn't fit in with the rest of a certain album. A couple of songs were also released on various artists compilation, and many tracks were recorded for no particular reason at all.
I've had a compilation gathering such songs in one place in mind for a long, long time. Domestica mainman Lars and I discussed the tentatively named "Sciontology" every now and then, and we even got as far as to officially promise one. But the compilation never happened. The closest I got was the first volume of the website release "Archive Series" which was a haphazard dig into the archives.
A straight reissue of "The Archive Series" seemed pointless when I now have a proper chance to collect unreleased material in one, better place. "Traumas, Mishaps & Other Pleasures" is a double album sized compilation spanning my solo career, from "Devachan" up to the days of "Sister Songs". (Archival recordings by Pangolin, Continental Soul Searchers and Modryn are sampled elsewhere.)
This compilation is a blend of previously unreleased songs and alternate versions, as well as songs provided for the abovementioned various artists comps. All in all, "Traumas" is an alternate way to tell the Peter Scion story; a meal made from the juiciest bits from the garbage can.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD Disc 1 PART 1
DOWNLOAD Disc 1 PART 2
DOWNLOAD Disc 2 PART 1
DOWNLOAD Disc 2 PART 2
WAV:
DOWNLOAD Disc 1
DOWNLOAD Disc 2
I've had a compilation gathering such songs in one place in mind for a long, long time. Domestica mainman Lars and I discussed the tentatively named "Sciontology" every now and then, and we even got as far as to officially promise one. But the compilation never happened. The closest I got was the first volume of the website release "Archive Series" which was a haphazard dig into the archives.
A straight reissue of "The Archive Series" seemed pointless when I now have a proper chance to collect unreleased material in one, better place. "Traumas, Mishaps & Other Pleasures" is a double album sized compilation spanning my solo career, from "Devachan" up to the days of "Sister Songs". (Archival recordings by Pangolin, Continental Soul Searchers and Modryn are sampled elsewhere.)
This compilation is a blend of previously unreleased songs and alternate versions, as well as songs provided for the abovementioned various artists comps. All in all, "Traumas" is an alternate way to tell the Peter Scion story; a meal made from the juiciest bits from the garbage can.
MP3:
DOWNLOAD Disc 1 PART 1
DOWNLOAD Disc 1 PART 2
DOWNLOAD Disc 2 PART 1
DOWNLOAD Disc 2 PART 2
WAV:
DOWNLOAD Disc 1
DOWNLOAD Disc 2
HENS' TEETH
THE MAY TOOTH
Peter Scion: Numbers (2005)
The first monthly special is a song that actually was recorded after I officially quit music. In spring 2005, I did four songs with my friend Jan Risheden as an engineer and producer; two were songs I had taped earlier but never used, while two were the only two songs I had written since 2001. The reason why these songs were recorded at all was that Chris Eckman of the great, great band The Walkabouts had said that if I ever decided to make music again, he'd love to add some overdubs. As Chris Eckman is a true musical hero of mine, I'd been a fool to turn down the offer. So I lay down four songs, gave him a CD of them and some time later, he sent me his overdubs. But with a cruel twist of fate, I have to this day failed to merge my recordings with his overdubs. It bugs me an incredible lot, but so it goes. Anyway, this song, one of the then newly written, is one which works without overdubs, and as I'm rather satisfied with how it worked out, I hereby share it with you.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Continental Soul Searchers: Klockan tickar (1994)
It's time for the June rarity, and this time I give you a track recorded by Continental Soul Searchers, recorded in rehearsal for our first reunion show held in 1994. It's a 10 minute instrumental jam with S.T. Mikael and me swapping solos (Mikael takes the first, while I play the second one). Sound quality isn't the best as it was recorded on a tiny Walkman tape recorder, but I'm nevertheless quite fond of this track and its spooky ambience. The title comes from what Mikael says right at the beginning of the jam, and it means "the clock is ticking".
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
THE JULY, AUGUST & SEPTEMBER TEETH
Peter Scion & Carita Forslund: These Darkened Trees / Time / Somewhere At The End Of The Rainbow (1997)
Here you get three tracks in one go, all taken from a May 1997 rehearsal tape featuring me and Carita Forslund. Carita used to be one of my most trustworthy collaborators, playing with me live as well as contributing to recordings. Among her many fine efforts, she added flute to the Pangolin album and made her voice sound beautifully on tracks such as "Cynthia" and "Cold Ground".
These rehearsals were held prior to a show we played at Kulturdepartementet in Gothenburg the same month. Kulturdepartementet was like a second home to me during these days; a small place with the roof way up high above our heads. A peculiar place architecturally, but always one to warrant good shows. I loved that place, and it will always stay dear in my memory.
I had a persistent flu when we taped these songs, which is clearly audible on especially "Time" where my voice is lower than usual. Therefore, it was a relief when Carita took the lead on "Somewhere at the End of the Rainbow", a cover of the beautiful Carol of Harvest song. I think Carita's vocals here are simply stunning; fragile, sensual and eerily melancholic, all at once. These qualities come through strong and touching despite the primitive sound quality (which I at one point in time tried to "enhance" with a dash of reverb) (well, actually - more than just a dash...).
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD Pt 1 DOWNLOAD Pt 2
THE OCTOBER TOOTH
Peter Scion: The Dead Tree (1997)
This track is a real oddity, which explains why it was never included any of the albums. With its obvious ambient stylings, it's closest to the sound of "Shroud Song", but it would have been out of context even on that album. It's much darker than "Shroud Song", an album which some argue is a dark piece of work in itself. "The Dead Tree" is experimental in the sense that I had no idea where I was going; all I had was my idea of mood. The mood was the starting point, and I took it from there, curious to see where I would land.
I'm actually uncertain whether this is a 1997 recording, it might be from 1998.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
THE NOVEMBER & DECEMBER TEETH
Carita Forslund featuring Peter Scion: Happy (2000)
In March 2000, Carita Forslund and I went into Pangolin's rehearsal room to record some of Carita's songs. I can't remember who's idea it was but it was a good idea; I've often pointed out that Carita was a very fine songwriter and I really wanted to work with her on a batch of songs of her choice. Besides, I needed something else to think about. I was unhappy in Pangolin, and these sessions came as a huge relief and brought back some of the creativity I felt I had lost. Carita was kind enough to let me do the arrangements which was tremendously fun. I had never worked with other people's songs that way before, and I felt like a kid in a toy store. Arranging and producing is probably the parts of music making I like the best. So I also ended producing the sessions and I was happy with the results. Sadly, those sessions were left unreleased; only a handful of people have ever heard them. However, Carita has given me the permission to publish one of the songs we recorded almost ten years ago. "Happy" is one of the least worked-on songs and therefore perhaps the least representative to these sessions. When I listened closely to the song, I realized that I couldn't shatter the fragile mood with crazy ideas and loud guitars. I sat down with my guitar, pushed the 'rec' button and played the solo I'm most proud of of all I have played. I am very happy that it was for Carita's song. I tried to emulate both the style and sound in one of my own songs later on, but it never turned out right. The spur of the moment was kind to me that day.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Pangolin: The Sea (1999)
I believed so much in this song. I thought it had so much potential, and that Pangolin was the band to bring it out. But when we recorded it properly for a Ptolemaic Terrascope CD, it ended up an utter, shameful mess. I have released several recordings of the song, but none is anywhere as successful as this rehearsal version, recorded on a simple tape recorder in our rehearsal space. The sound quality is a hi-fi freak's nightmare, very crude and brutal, but the take is just about perfect. It has Sara Pang on drums, the original drummer for the band, and she really hammers it out. It's heavy (not jerky), dark and threatening - just the way it was supposed to be. I don't know what happened to the original tape; it might be in a box somewhere, but for the upload, I had to use a CD-R transfer of the recording. Unfortunately, the CD-R has begun to deteriorate, which is notable towards the end of the song (you can hear it as crackles and clicks). I'm sorry about that, but I really wanted to share this with you, despite the inferior technical quality. To me, this is Pangolin at our very best.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Peter Scion: The January You (1997 or 1998)
What could possibly be better for this month's post than a song entitled "The January You"? If you ask those who think my vocals suck, they would probably answer: "Anything except this one". The vocals are indeed a bit, erm, strange. I wanted to write a song in a key I had never used before, and with a fine sense of the appropriate, I chose one a little too high for my voice... Not many have heard this song before, but those who have have actually liked it for its strange melody and uneasy atmosphere. So here I go, giving it away to the whole world. By the way, the remains of my self criticism is now up on eBay!
I have no exact date for the recording, but I assume it was done around the same time as the "Dead Tree" track posted above, which ought to be some time late 1997 or early 1998. It was a time for experimentation; I tried to find new ways for writing songs, without any thoughts of releasing them officially. The most successful recording from this period is "Through My Ghost" which eventually came to be the title track for my 2000 album.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
CONTINENTAL SOUL SEARCHERS: In the Forest (1994)
This was recorded in rehearsal at home on June 2, 1994 for our second ever live appearance a couple of days later. It was recorded on a simple Walkman machine, so sound quality is exactlywhat you can expect it to be. I do like this particular version of "In the Forest" though; it has an eerie, otherworldy feel to it that no other recording of the song has. The previously posted jam "Klockan tickar" comes from the same rehearsal, but "In the Forest" has no reverb added it to it. This is what it sounded like, according to the flawed recording equipment!
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
THE MARCH-JULY 2010 TEETH
Continental Soul Searchers: Morning Of My Life (1989)
Peter Scion: Tre Harar (1989?)
Peter Scion: Strange Inconveniences (1998)
Peter Scion: City Of Dismay (1998)
Peter Scion: Mystery Train (1998)
Here are five songs in one go, to catch up with my monthly duties. First off is another track from the Continental Soul Searchers. It's one of our improvisations, and it's such a pity we never took the time to structure it. It could have been one of our best songs altogether. What we have here is an edited version of the original recording, to simulate a finished song. It's one of our dreamiest moments, and Mikael sings with great emotion and sincerity. It's a very special recording to me, and even though it's not a very worked on track, I'm really glad to share it with you.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
"Tre harar" ("Three Hares") is one of my earliest attempts at an instrumental guitar piece. As you can hear, I struggle a bit with the fingerings, but all in all it comes off OK given my lack of experience of fingerstyle guitar. I don't think I ever played it live, but it was quite popular among friends.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
"Strange Inconveniences" is another instrumental track, albeit a much later one. As you probably have guessed already, it was recording during the sessions for the album with the same name, although it wasn't really intended for the album. It's the main title from an imaginary movie. At the time I had some idea of making soundtracks for movies that don't exist, who can tell why, but that was what I was into at that particular time. This is by far the most successful attempt in that direction.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
The next track is something of a mystery to me. I know what it's about but I can't remember writing it, less so recording it. I'm uncertain of the recording date; it might have been done in 1999. At any rate, I abandoned the track before I bothered to overdub any solos or so, which is why it might strike you as a bit "naked" during the solo section. In spite of this, and the fact that the playing is a bit stiff, I like the song.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Which brings us to the July tooth. "Mystery Train" is a devil-may-care cover of the well-known classic. It was great fun recording it, as often is with the songs I've approached with this "so what?" attitude. I can't remember considering it for any album inclusion; it was more a spur of the moment thing.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Peter Scion: Numbers (2005)
The first monthly special is a song that actually was recorded after I officially quit music. In spring 2005, I did four songs with my friend Jan Risheden as an engineer and producer; two were songs I had taped earlier but never used, while two were the only two songs I had written since 2001. The reason why these songs were recorded at all was that Chris Eckman of the great, great band The Walkabouts had said that if I ever decided to make music again, he'd love to add some overdubs. As Chris Eckman is a true musical hero of mine, I'd been a fool to turn down the offer. So I lay down four songs, gave him a CD of them and some time later, he sent me his overdubs. But with a cruel twist of fate, I have to this day failed to merge my recordings with his overdubs. It bugs me an incredible lot, but so it goes. Anyway, this song, one of the then newly written, is one which works without overdubs, and as I'm rather satisfied with how it worked out, I hereby share it with you.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
* * * * *
THE JUNE TOOTHContinental Soul Searchers: Klockan tickar (1994)
It's time for the June rarity, and this time I give you a track recorded by Continental Soul Searchers, recorded in rehearsal for our first reunion show held in 1994. It's a 10 minute instrumental jam with S.T. Mikael and me swapping solos (Mikael takes the first, while I play the second one). Sound quality isn't the best as it was recorded on a tiny Walkman tape recorder, but I'm nevertheless quite fond of this track and its spooky ambience. The title comes from what Mikael says right at the beginning of the jam, and it means "the clock is ticking".
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
* * * * *
THE JULY, AUGUST & SEPTEMBER TEETH
Peter Scion & Carita Forslund: These Darkened Trees / Time / Somewhere At The End Of The Rainbow (1997)
Here you get three tracks in one go, all taken from a May 1997 rehearsal tape featuring me and Carita Forslund. Carita used to be one of my most trustworthy collaborators, playing with me live as well as contributing to recordings. Among her many fine efforts, she added flute to the Pangolin album and made her voice sound beautifully on tracks such as "Cynthia" and "Cold Ground".
These rehearsals were held prior to a show we played at Kulturdepartementet in Gothenburg the same month. Kulturdepartementet was like a second home to me during these days; a small place with the roof way up high above our heads. A peculiar place architecturally, but always one to warrant good shows. I loved that place, and it will always stay dear in my memory.
I had a persistent flu when we taped these songs, which is clearly audible on especially "Time" where my voice is lower than usual. Therefore, it was a relief when Carita took the lead on "Somewhere at the End of the Rainbow", a cover of the beautiful Carol of Harvest song. I think Carita's vocals here are simply stunning; fragile, sensual and eerily melancholic, all at once. These qualities come through strong and touching despite the primitive sound quality (which I at one point in time tried to "enhance" with a dash of reverb) (well, actually - more than just a dash...).
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD Pt 1 DOWNLOAD Pt 2
* * * * *
THE OCTOBER TOOTH
Peter Scion: The Dead Tree (1997)
This track is a real oddity, which explains why it was never included any of the albums. With its obvious ambient stylings, it's closest to the sound of "Shroud Song", but it would have been out of context even on that album. It's much darker than "Shroud Song", an album which some argue is a dark piece of work in itself. "The Dead Tree" is experimental in the sense that I had no idea where I was going; all I had was my idea of mood. The mood was the starting point, and I took it from there, curious to see where I would land.
I'm actually uncertain whether this is a 1997 recording, it might be from 1998.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
* * * * *
THE NOVEMBER & DECEMBER TEETH
Carita Forslund featuring Peter Scion: Happy (2000)
In March 2000, Carita Forslund and I went into Pangolin's rehearsal room to record some of Carita's songs. I can't remember who's idea it was but it was a good idea; I've often pointed out that Carita was a very fine songwriter and I really wanted to work with her on a batch of songs of her choice. Besides, I needed something else to think about. I was unhappy in Pangolin, and these sessions came as a huge relief and brought back some of the creativity I felt I had lost. Carita was kind enough to let me do the arrangements which was tremendously fun. I had never worked with other people's songs that way before, and I felt like a kid in a toy store. Arranging and producing is probably the parts of music making I like the best. So I also ended producing the sessions and I was happy with the results. Sadly, those sessions were left unreleased; only a handful of people have ever heard them. However, Carita has given me the permission to publish one of the songs we recorded almost ten years ago. "Happy" is one of the least worked-on songs and therefore perhaps the least representative to these sessions. When I listened closely to the song, I realized that I couldn't shatter the fragile mood with crazy ideas and loud guitars. I sat down with my guitar, pushed the 'rec' button and played the solo I'm most proud of of all I have played. I am very happy that it was for Carita's song. I tried to emulate both the style and sound in one of my own songs later on, but it never turned out right. The spur of the moment was kind to me that day.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Pangolin: The Sea (1999)
I believed so much in this song. I thought it had so much potential, and that Pangolin was the band to bring it out. But when we recorded it properly for a Ptolemaic Terrascope CD, it ended up an utter, shameful mess. I have released several recordings of the song, but none is anywhere as successful as this rehearsal version, recorded on a simple tape recorder in our rehearsal space. The sound quality is a hi-fi freak's nightmare, very crude and brutal, but the take is just about perfect. It has Sara Pang on drums, the original drummer for the band, and she really hammers it out. It's heavy (not jerky), dark and threatening - just the way it was supposed to be. I don't know what happened to the original tape; it might be in a box somewhere, but for the upload, I had to use a CD-R transfer of the recording. Unfortunately, the CD-R has begun to deteriorate, which is notable towards the end of the song (you can hear it as crackles and clicks). I'm sorry about that, but I really wanted to share this with you, despite the inferior technical quality. To me, this is Pangolin at our very best.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
* * * * *
THE JANUARY 2010 TOOTHPeter Scion: The January You (1997 or 1998)
What could possibly be better for this month's post than a song entitled "The January You"? If you ask those who think my vocals suck, they would probably answer: "Anything except this one". The vocals are indeed a bit, erm, strange. I wanted to write a song in a key I had never used before, and with a fine sense of the appropriate, I chose one a little too high for my voice... Not many have heard this song before, but those who have have actually liked it for its strange melody and uneasy atmosphere. So here I go, giving it away to the whole world. By the way, the remains of my self criticism is now up on eBay!
I have no exact date for the recording, but I assume it was done around the same time as the "Dead Tree" track posted above, which ought to be some time late 1997 or early 1998. It was a time for experimentation; I tried to find new ways for writing songs, without any thoughts of releasing them officially. The most successful recording from this period is "Through My Ghost" which eventually came to be the title track for my 2000 album.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
* * * * *
THE FEBRUARY 2010 TOOTHCONTINENTAL SOUL SEARCHERS: In the Forest (1994)
This was recorded in rehearsal at home on June 2, 1994 for our second ever live appearance a couple of days later. It was recorded on a simple Walkman machine, so sound quality is exactlywhat you can expect it to be. I do like this particular version of "In the Forest" though; it has an eerie, otherworldy feel to it that no other recording of the song has. The previously posted jam "Klockan tickar" comes from the same rehearsal, but "In the Forest" has no reverb added it to it. This is what it sounded like, according to the flawed recording equipment!
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
* * * * *
THE MARCH-JULY 2010 TEETH
Continental Soul Searchers: Morning Of My Life (1989)
Peter Scion: Tre Harar (1989?)
Peter Scion: Strange Inconveniences (1998)
Peter Scion: City Of Dismay (1998)
Peter Scion: Mystery Train (1998)
Here are five songs in one go, to catch up with my monthly duties. First off is another track from the Continental Soul Searchers. It's one of our improvisations, and it's such a pity we never took the time to structure it. It could have been one of our best songs altogether. What we have here is an edited version of the original recording, to simulate a finished song. It's one of our dreamiest moments, and Mikael sings with great emotion and sincerity. It's a very special recording to me, and even though it's not a very worked on track, I'm really glad to share it with you.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
"Tre harar" ("Three Hares") is one of my earliest attempts at an instrumental guitar piece. As you can hear, I struggle a bit with the fingerings, but all in all it comes off OK given my lack of experience of fingerstyle guitar. I don't think I ever played it live, but it was quite popular among friends.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
"Strange Inconveniences" is another instrumental track, albeit a much later one. As you probably have guessed already, it was recording during the sessions for the album with the same name, although it wasn't really intended for the album. It's the main title from an imaginary movie. At the time I had some idea of making soundtracks for movies that don't exist, who can tell why, but that was what I was into at that particular time. This is by far the most successful attempt in that direction.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
The next track is something of a mystery to me. I know what it's about but I can't remember writing it, less so recording it. I'm uncertain of the recording date; it might have been done in 1999. At any rate, I abandoned the track before I bothered to overdub any solos or so, which is why it might strike you as a bit "naked" during the solo section. In spite of this, and the fact that the playing is a bit stiff, I like the song.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Which brings us to the July tooth. "Mystery Train" is a devil-may-care cover of the well-known classic. It was great fun recording it, as often is with the songs I've approached with this "so what?" attitude. I can't remember considering it for any album inclusion; it was more a spur of the moment thing.
MP3: DOWNLOAD
WAV: DOWNLOAD
Labels:
Continental Soul Searchers,
Modryn,
Pangolin,
Peter Scion
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