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Stina Nordenstam: Artful Dodger
By Madeline Virbasius-Walsh
Published: Sentimentalist (Fall/Winter 2006 - Vol 5.Issue 19)
Stina Nordentstam's delicate songs are enigmas. How is music so
spare and fragile able to come across as it carries the
weightiest secrets of the world
in a whisper? The world is saved is on of those rare albums that gets under your
skin and evolves, and strikes certain chords within you. In some ways, these pensive
songs unfold like a great film, its images lingering long after you've experienced it
for the first time. Since Stina is known to isolate herself from the mainstream, opting
not to play live and rarely giving interviews, it wasn't
surprising that it took few
calls to Sweden before finally getting in touch with her. She graciously took time out
one evening from cooking a meal to give me some insight into her art.
Did you get away much this summer or take a vacation
from doing music? I stayed at home in Sweden for the summer except
for a trip to Wales. I don't go on tour and I'm not very fond of
traveling.
I can totally see the point in it, but I can't relax if I don't have something
to do. When I was in New York, I was riding around taking photographs. That was
great. But just going on vacation could be a nightmare, especially if it's to
exotic places... I went to Zanzibar once for three weeks and it was awful.
Was it just too exotic and too foreign?
Yeah, exactly. There was nothing I could relate to. It was just unreal. There
were a couple of moments in those three weeks when I felt I had some
strong experiences, but on the whole, I just felt that I was so far away from
home.
Did the songs on The world is saved
come quickly to you or was writing the record a slow process?
It's never a very slow process. It's actually more like an express process. I
have the recording equipment at home and every day, I sit there and do
something... But when I decide I'm going to do a record, I have the feeling
that, sub-consciously, I've been working with the left hand and not knowing
what I'm doing. Then when I sit down to write, I find that most of the
work is already done. It's more a matter of organizing it. It's really good when
a record company says, 'oh, you should do a new record.' Then I guess it's
sort of omniscient.[laughs] Then that sets off the intellectual process.
Did you set out with any specific ideas or
goals for this album before finishing it? Not really. The "normal me"
is more of a feeling person than a thinking person. I'm much more feeling-oriented.
I couldn't have this dictionary sort of viewport constantly, as if thinking
'what should I write about now?' I need to have a point where I force myself
to start thinking in those terms.
Do the words come first or do you write the
music or melodies first? It seems that earlier on, they always came
together, and sometimes, they still do. But to some extent, when you have
good lyrics, they always have a melody in them. They suggest a melody... the
natural way to do it is at the same time, but obviously, you will have
to work extra on the lyrics afterwards to fill in... It would be difficult
for me to write entire lyrics without any idea of the music.
Did this record seem like a turning point for you
since it seems to be more hopeful, in a way? Yeah but I didn't
consciously
think that. Saving my life is more positive now...has sort of influenced
my choices. But it's an ongoing process. I don't have the feeling that
there's one part of me that is unchanged. Instead, I have the feeling
that my entire being is changeable every day.
Do you try to keep your songs
separate from
your "real life" by maintaining a kind of distance in your lyrics? The
separation between the two is almost natural, because if I have some kind
of tragic experience in my life and I try to write about it, it's impossible.
It's too close to me. But if I can rewrite or punctuate in another way, it
can be possible. I think that's what art is in a way. It's not diary.
Do you discover new things every
time you finish
a new song since you may have caught a moment in time or feeling and
revisited it? Not every time. The whole thing deals with your
subconscious
in a way. You can't cancel it, or build anything on it... sometime the moment's
gone.
Do you see music as something that will be
important to you for a long time to come? I have difficulty seeing
the big picture. I'm really short-sighted. In some ways it's a gift, because
when I'm working on something, I can be extremely
focused on it. To me
everything is important.
Is photography something that is still very
important to you as well? No. For me, photography was something
creative for a period of time, but I've discovered it... I think there was
a point when I could have gone to something on another level or stopped, and
I stopped.
Do your fans in Sweden often recognize you
on the street? When I mention my name in some context when I'm paying
for something, people will recognize it and say 'oh,
this is not how you look
on your album.' But I don't care as much now... I used to be really
anxious about it.
I know that you don't like to tour, but do you
perform live around Sweden at all? No. This might sound strange but
in a way, I see myself as more of an artist than a music artist. Music is
something I just happen to be good at. I'm really obsessed with the
recording process. The way I see performing is that it's more that you have
to be an entertainer.
Or a character? Yes just playing the songs
on your record doesn't seem artful. I think it's weird that it's such a
widespread idea that as an artist, you should naturally go out and play
live. It's weird that the two are connected: making records and doing
tours, and that everything is done sort of on demand. Of course, there
are artists who are really good at it.
-Madeline Virbasius-Walsh
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