14 January 2018

C.V. Jørgensen "Sjælland" (1994)

Sjælland
release date: Sep. 26 1994
format: cd (PCCD 8074)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [4,22]
producer: Kasper Winding
label: Pladecompagniet - nationality: Denmark

Track highlights: 1. "Ude af sync" (4 / 5) - 2. "Blåt blod til alle" (4 / 5) - 3. "Fuld af forundring" - 4. "Florafobi" (5 / 5) (short live clip) - 5. "Spildte bedrifter" (4,5 / 5) (live) - 7. "Skygger af skønhed" (5 / 5) - 8. "Intet er mig helligt" - 9. "Hvad mere er der egentlig at sige" (4,5 / 5)

11th studio album by C.V. Jørgensen released a long full four years after his fine I det muntre hjørne (1990). In the meantime, Elap released the compilation 16 hits (1992) as a revised edition on cassette and CD of the previously released Det Ganske Lille Band's bedste from 1980. After having produced his two most recent studio releases on his own, C.V. returned the task to someone else taking care of the production sound. All his previous albums have been grounded in traditional rock but by engaging with the bolder 'pop' artist, vocalist and producer Kasper Winding, he ensures a distinctly different expression. C.V. had already worked with Winding in '78, when the two collaborated on the music for Morten Arnfred's film "Mig og Charly" and also the following year for the music to "Johnny Larsen". Since 1990, C.V. gradually turned down the concert activity and led a slightly more withdrawn existence, so the release of new material has been awaited with great excitement. The album's title is a play on the words 'soul' ['sjæl'] and 'country' ['land'] - put together in Danish also happens to be the name for the island of Sjælland [Zealand] - indicating a collection of tracks with a spiritual quality. In that way, it's also a highly personal album, which was also made completely without the usual close team of stable musicians. C.V. is credited on guitar in addition to his vocals, and Winding acts as multi-instrumentalist handling bass, keyboards, and drums, while the tracks are otherwise made with few other musicians, and where only trumpeter Flemming Agerskov is heard on several tracks.
Stylistically, C.V. always had a soft spot for jazz, and on his breakthrough album Storbyens små oaser from '77 you'll clearly notice a special jazz tone on several tracks - something you may also sense in small measure on his last two albums, but with Sjælland this is further emphasized with a style that combines previously unknown terrain - at least when it comes to the discography of C.V. Jørgensen. There is basically no focus on rock in a traditional sense, but only in a combo of trip hop and free jazz in a synthpop wrapping. It's a totally different expression than any other of his albums and in relation to his idiosyncrasy, which has given him status of a national rock icon. The inclusion of electronic instrumentation and a distinct synthpop style founded on keyboards, synths and rhythm programming fused with elements from free jazz is a most daring and remarkable change of style - something that e.g. shares traits with the '89 album Hats by Scottish band The Blue Nile.
Sjælland was released to mostly positive reviews, and although several critics were not exactly enthusiastic about Winding's production, the album ended up as one of Jørgensen's most praised albums. It's also my impression that the first critics of the album's sound nevertheless forgot their first judgment at a later stage.
It's C.V. in his most poetic corner, thus far. It must be remembered that at this point of his career he had been put on a pedestal as the outstanding national rock artist with an unusually sharp pen, which he directed against consumerism, double standards, social conflicts, as general ridicule of those in power and criticism of the political establishment without him taking a stand in relation to a clear left-right sympathy. He then advances here as a 'real' poet with songs full of lyrical features such as inner dialogue, sentiments and figurative language, which in places are the opposite to the characteristics of the epic narrative form and his image as a songwriter who was widely considered some kind of equivalent to that of the short story only adapted to a musical expression.
I attended one of his first live concerts with the album tour in '94, and the weirdest thing from the concert was my shock experiencing the aversion of the audience to his new songs. It was C.V.'s first live tour in four years with new material, and yet all a large group of fans clearly wanted was to hear him play his old stables, which meant that whenever the band started up with one of the new songs, people showed their contempt by hooting and booing. Apart from that 'detail', C.V., band and music were excellently executed, but I still left the concert with a bitter taste in my mouth after witnessing something that was so utter disrespectful. And with that in mind, I can't help thinking that experiences like that on that particular tour may be linked to C.V.'s later renunciation to live performance and also to his otherwise somewhat general withdrawal from the spotlight.
However, Sjælland was both an artistic triumph and a sales success, but it's also clear that fans were immensely divided about the his new musical direction. Some of long-running fans simply couldn't come to terms with C.V.'s progress as an artist, and he would at times be referred to as someone who had 'sold out'.
Imho, this album is no less than the best Danish album of the 1990s. It's C.V's best and most coherent album, and it's simply among the best Danish albums ever. It's nearly right up there fighting for the title as Best Danish Album Of All Time fighting side by side with Hip by Steppeulvene and the album Supertanker by Kliché.
The front cover is routinely credited C.V.'s girlfriend since 1970, Annemarie Albrectsen.
Highly recommended - a must.

1994 Favourite releases: 1. The Prodigy Music for the Jilted Generation - 2. Everything but the Girl Amplified Heart - 3. C.V. Jørgensen Sjælland