JAN SNEUM
cb
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Down In The Basement - Into The Garage
Interview with Jan Sneum
The Danish musical underground has always been the beloved center in Jan Sneum´s life. How to fortify and stimulate the Danish music scene in the best possible way? Danish National Radio (DR)´s enthusiastic column of fire is turning 60 this month and I met him for a chat about punkrock, lo-fi poetry, willpower and the true values in rock music.
By: Helle Hellcat
 The                      cold wind is howling and sprays of salty seawater whip the                      dark grey sky. At the roof of the fort by the sea stands a                      dignified gentleman with silvergrey hair swirling around his                      head and a big smile solidly plantet on his friendly face.                      From behind, you hear the pounding rock music from a hopeful                      band, who frenetically tries to split ears. The silverfox                      grabs his microphone tight. He is enthusiastically transmitting                      live from the garagerock festival to the listeners at DR.                      Wake up! Jan Sneum is out on his crooked mission!
The                      cold wind is howling and sprays of salty seawater whip the                      dark grey sky. At the roof of the fort by the sea stands a                      dignified gentleman with silvergrey hair swirling around his                      head and a big smile solidly plantet on his friendly face.                      From behind, you hear the pounding rock music from a hopeful                      band, who frenetically tries to split ears. The silverfox                      grabs his microphone tight. He is enthusiastically transmitting                      live from the garagerock festival to the listeners at DR.                      Wake up! Jan Sneum is out on his crooked mission!
Jan Sneum (JS) fills many posts. He is a producer at DR, photographer, music journalist, editor of musical dictionaries, leader of the P3 live programmes for many years and retired school teacher. For JS life has been all about medias ever since he grew up with a dad who was a painter and a mom who was educated in classic guitar from the Danish Academy Of Music. Sound and vision blended in very early and naturally created an inspiring platform for JS: " I think - in all connexions - music is the most important subject to be occupied with".
               In the beginning the photography was the most interesting                      thing
               ... and what was more interesting to shoot in the end of the                      60´s than objects such as rock musicians? In Brøndbyernes                      Pop Club JS was taking pictures like crazy, while listening                      to rock´n´roll music. Many things and friendships                      began here and soon JS was involved as photographer and journalist                      in Danish underground zines like Wheel, Rok and MM - often                      inspired by Rolling Stone magazine. In the 70´s the                      whole Punkrock movement and all it's bastards emerged for                      JS. Here came action!!
               JS started in 1980 as a freelance reporter at DR and in the                      beginning the young journalist eagerly tried to fill all posts:                      "At my first job I managed both notepad, camera and taperecorder                      and it all went totally wrong", JS remembers, "I                      couldn't take pictures and hold the microphone at the same                      time, but I thought I could do everything myself and thought                      that this was a great idea. This was long before someone came                      up with the word media convergense". JS had to stick                      to one thing and here the radio was new and interesting to                      him. "I no longer had to transform the musical experiences                      to other medias such as writing or pictures. At the radio                      I simply played all the records I loved so much. There was                      no doubt, I thougth: I was on a mission!".
               The willpower of the underground scene
               JS has always been known in the musical underground environment                      as "Our Man From Inside ". He has been the primous                      motor in many enterprises at DR to emphasize the strength                      of the increasing rockscene. Amongst many other things he                      has delivered a lecture on the subject How to (maybe) make                      a commercial breakthrough. "If I have to draw a red line                      through all my years at the radio, then I must say, that what                      always have been the most interesting thing to work with is                      the underground mass of talents. Sometimes bands have asked                      me, if I could go out and tell the hopeful youngsters what                      to do e.g. to get a life at DR. But the lectures are not something                      I have systemized. It was more like a natural follow-up to                      some of the other projects we had been dealing with at the                      radio. And actually I don't think I'm competent enough of                      saying "this and that you have to do to become millionaires"                      or " this and that you have to do, then your band can                      play the Gutter Island Festival until you retire - but it                      will go no further". If I could, I would, right? But                      I will gladly tell which values we're looking for at DR."
LC: Maybe a solid formular of success doesn't exist? I guess                      the bands have to kick in some doors themselves?
               JS takes a minute to think: "I think You're right. Many                      of the bands require a solid basis of true willpower. If You                      wanna make it in the musicbizz the willpower has to be there,                      because there is so much physical an psycological resistance:                      Your own lazyness, economics, family, studies, day jobs and                      so on. If You don't have the willpower there will be no results!                      Then maybe you drop out or find a state where it's just cosy                      to sing around the bonfire with your friends ... but that's                      all. That brings You to no record deal, no touring, no nothing."
               LC: So willpower is essential?
               "Sure, and this is where the punkrock and it's networking                      is really excellent showing you how to progress globally.                      What is going on in Odense? What is going on in Tokyo? ...                      and at the Phillipines? Many bands from Ungdomshuset (progressive                      ex-squatted punkvenue in Copenhagen. ed.) have been travelling                      around the world. The garagerock scene also has it's own network                      and this shows us, that - at least - for subgenres this determined,                      networking works! These genre networks often become a kind                      of a tribal culture, where the important subject isn't nationality,                      gender or age - it often has a reservation vibe to it - like                      i.e. at the Gutter Island Garagerock Festival."
               Gutter Island Garagerock Festival
               LC: You have been quite involved in the gutter Island                      Garagerock Festival yourself (www.gutter-island.dk).                      What is Your opinion on this event?
"For several reasons, this is a festival that I praise a lot. On the one hand: A genre I like a lot was miserably neglected and suddenly It came alive in Denmark. Earlier the whole Garagerock scene wasn't very visible and then - finally - the new rock´n´roll wave that had been going on for some years in Sweden, Finland and Norway rolled over Denmark. On the other hand, I think it was great that the garagerock community gathered together and created a festival along with local venues in an original way. I think Gutter Island has so many qualities. Also I think it's good that the festival is an every two-year event ´cause then there's time for some musically development and You have the time to get hungry and really be looking forward to the good times. If You do the festival every year in a genre that is so subcultural and narrow, well, then there's the risk that you'll meet exactly the same music as last year. As it is now, there's room for some new ideas, which I appreciate a lot. Also I'm very glad that The Burnouts, The Defectors and Baby Woodrose was into recording 12" live Ep´s from the festival - it has been really funny to be able to document the Gutter Island Garagerock festival".
LC: Documenting concerts with live albums was earlier a proud                      punktradition like with "Pærepunk", "Nosferatu"                      and so on.
               "yes, that's right and maybe, again, it's because the                      networks for these subgenres are so close, that it's easy                      to get an idea and then fulfil it and that's wonderful. In                      so many other ways it's terribly complicated e.g. to clear                      and use DR´s livetakes".
               Snotdum
               LC: How did the idea of making the split EP Snotdum (Bad Afro)                      in Danish with The Defectors and Powersolo come up?
               "The Idea emerged at the first Gutter Island Festival,                      where I heard Kim Kix and Powersolo as a duo with songs in                      Danish. I'm really proud of the Snotdum EP, but in many ways                      I would have loved to do it even more stripped down as Powersolo                      was in the beginning. It possessed a lo-fi poetry and beauty                      I have rarely seen or heard. The stripped down formula is                      interesting when the songs and the performance are good. The                      contrast is interesting: stripped down lo-fi and poetry. Powersolo                      has become so many other things later on and the EP is marked                      with all the traditional rock effects and fun you recognise                      in Powersolo, but the earliest fundament is gone. It's clear                      now that we should have done the EP in that moment and not                      have waited. But I'm really glad we realised the project.                      Then we can move on to other projects."
LC: ...and The Defectors?
               "I don't know if the EP and their two songs in Danish                      have had any influence on The Defectors? Maybe they wanna                      do more songs in Danish in the future? It sure was new to                      them, but the result is very good, I think. It's important                      to focus on the good song, both in English and in Danish.                      Without the good song nothing works. You can do a lot with                      sound, special stageshow and a spectacular image but without                      a good song there'll be no success. The song that survives                      at home on an acoustic guitar or the piano has a great strenght."
 "If I have to draw a red line through all my years                      at the
               radio, then I must say, that what always have been the
               most interesting thing to work with is the underground
               mass of talents".
 Networking                      with no limits
Networking                      with no limits
               LC: Which qualities do you enquire with Danish bands? "Again                      willpower is the keyword. Right now I feel there is so incredibly                      many artists who really wanna make it, not only regarding                      DR and the home market, but who has the big lust for global                      thinking. All these bands who, by own drift, set up tours                      in Germany or Finland or where the Hell they go ... that is                      just wonderful! That is where the true values of rockmusic                      exist: When you got the strong urge and the willpower to get                      a grip on your music and use your network. And especially                      rockmusic is such an lovely international thing. If you don't                      have immediately success on your hometurf the fight goes on.                      There are so many opportunities with all the new ways of communication                      that the limits are gone".
LC: So it has become easier to get visible as a band with                      the Internet and so on. It gives You the opportunity to expose                      your band in different ways than earlier. But at the same                      time this means, that even more bands are competing about                      the attention on the various platforms that exist. What do                      you think of the Danish music scene today?
               "The music scene has become so incredible wide. Once                      I thought I had a general view, but I indeed don't see the                      whole picture anymore. A neverending stream of new bands have                      emerged and even though I have been in the music business                      for years, I can not reach all corners now. Well, that is                      just wonderful, but it also means that, as a radio station,                      you have to make some choices, since there is only the same                      24 hours in a day".
Fuck Denmark!
               Punk, experiments and raw poetry is still a big part of JS´                      life. Even though he turns 60 in December - at his own big                      surprise - there still is anarchistic sides to the radiojurnalist's                      personality. In 1979 a young JS wrote the liner notes on the                      livealbum - and portrait of a generation - Pærepunk                      and here, 25 years later, he wrote liner notes on the two                      punkrecords Fåk Danmark! ´03, (= Fuck Denmark!,                      ed.), and Ungdomshuset ´04. On Fåk Danmark! a.o.                      he writes: "The new names at the Danish punkscene dare                      to work progressively with the Danish language. And it's new.                      And wonderful. And necessary. Expressionism, wildness and                      gigantic spirit is in focus. Et spark i bolledejen!"
LC: The "Fåk Danmark!" cover shows Pia Kjærsgaard and Anders Fogh Rasmussen (right-wing politicians) in some VERY pornographic situations. What did You think, when you saw the cover? " Ha ha ha ha ... yes, that was a surprise. I must say, that when I saw that cover I thought:" Yep! Ungdomshuset is alive!" It's still possible to make provocative covers, but I never thought it would look like this. Maybe it was a strategically smart move ´cause suddenly the record got a lot of attention and the cover made the music more visible. Sometimes you need a provocation and I do think it is done with a lot of humour ... ha ha ... but I didn't know it was going to look like this."
               From Ungdomshuset to The Opera
               LC: What if JS had never worked at DR and been standing on                      the top of the windy fort during the Gutter Island Garagerock                      Festival transmitting live? Do you think the programmes on                      the Danish National Radio would have been just as varied as                      now? "Eeh - I don't really know anyone else at DR with                      the same perception of music like me, so well - it's hard                      to say, " JS´ cheeks are getting slightly red,                      " I think it meant something back then that someone like                      me, who wasn't part of the scene, but then again wasn't too                      old, via punkrock found back to the amusing roots of rock´n´roll.                      I hadn't been here today if it wasn't for punkrock. It was                      so lively, it turned me so much on and there was a close contact                      with the audience that I like - the element of " the                      people right there at stage are doing the things I would like                      to do too".
NOW PLAYING: Dennis Diken & Bell Sound/"Late Music"
and...NEW TIN HUEY!

it's on Amazon right now!!
http://www.amazon.com/Before-Obscurity-The-Bushflow-Tapes/dp/B002QEIQFO/ref=sr_shvl_album_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1253889856&sr=301-2
NOW READING: sixth book by Carl Hiaasen - "Sick Puppy". he's so good, but he's also killing Florida for me.
PEEVE DE JOUR: the speed trap in New Paltz
JOIE DE JOUR: learning Dennis Diken's songs. can't believe i'll be playing drums for HIM!!!
cb...where are you?

DENMARK...in my thoughts, anyway.




5 Comments:
Hiaasen is so good that when I did go to Florida I thought I knew what it was going to be like. And it probably was. Or perhaps I just wanted it to be. I kept looking round and thinking, I know what's REALLY going on here...
i know! my bro lives in Sarasota, and i've really liked it when i visited. yet, now there's this knowledge - thanks, Carl for the TMI - of all ain't appearin' like it be appearin'. even the sun now looks corrupted!
we were camping in Denmark a few weeks ago - we ran over a plastic bottle of liquid butter and it exploded, the car parked next to us lacked only salt to be popcorn.
The Danish word for oil is "olie." It sounds angry when used repeatedly.
James
always been hard for me to decide as to which country i love better - Denmark or Holland? re: 'olie' - one reason why it's been hard to decide is that i've heard the same joke in both countries = "if we could just invent a car that would run on butter..."
cb
Chris,
I'm writing an article for MSN Real Estate about "stigmatized" houses. May I interview you about your Ohio house?
Regards,
Marilyn Lewis, freelancer
MSN Real Estate http://realestate.msn.com/
ml2778@hotmail.com
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