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Home / Lifestyle

The Cardigans: After the cold war

18 Jun, 2003 02:42 AM4 mins to read

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By FINOA STURGES

Three years ago, The Cardigans were coming apart at the seams. The Swedish five-piece had come to the end of a gruelling tour in support of Gran Turismo, the album that sent them into the commercial stratosphere, and they were not speaking to one another.

"There was no actual
fighting, but there was no talking, either," recalls Nina Persson, the blonde-bombshell-turned-raven-haired singer. "Nobody could stand the sight of anyone else, yet no one was prepared to have it out. We were just too tired. It was less an all-out battle than a cold war."

Magnus Sveningsson, the band's infeasibly tall bass-player, had returned home months before because of exhaustion; he was later diagnosed as having suffered a nervous breakdown. In 1999, after a year away, the remaining members, plus Sveningsson's tempo

rary replacement, Lars Ljungberg, returned home and went their separate ways — Persson to New York, the others split between Malmo and Stockholm. It seemed as though the band had reached the end of the road.

Now, as they sit over a lunch of coffee and sandwiches in a London hotel, they wonder how they ever reached such chilly levels of non-communication. They're here to talk about the band's ubiquitous fifth album,

Long Gone Before Daylight, though the conversation keeps returning to the post-Gran Turismo

years, a period that has since been dubbed the Big Freeze.

Along with Persson, Sveningsson is the most talkative of the group. Guitarist Peter Svensson, who looks like a cross between a young Jerry Garcia and a woolly mammoth, drifts in and out of the discussion, while the drummer, Bengt Lagerberg, and Lasse Johansson, the guitarist/keyboard-player, say practically nothing.

For two years, each of them pursued their own projects. Persson formed the band A Camp and released a critically acclaimed self-titled album with the help of Mark Linkous of Sparklehorse; Svensson wrote and produced some tracks for the Swedish soul sing

er Titiyo Cherry, daughter of Don; and Sveningsson made a solo album, I Sing Because of You, under the moniker Righteous Boy. Lagerberg dispensed with drumming completely and went back to college.


It wasn't until 2001 that Lagerberg and Johansson contacted the rest of the band and suggested they get together. After a couple of initial meetings, the five of them decided to go on holiday instead. They rented a house in Santa Monica, Los Angeles, an

d spent a week "messing about on the beach, having barbecues and drinking like only Swedes can drink".

"It was very important for us to do something together that didn't involve music," Svensson explains. "We used to be really good friends, and it wasn't all that difficult to discover that we still were. Spending that time together restored our relation

ships."

"We started really young and have done this for a big part of our lives," adds Persson. "Having a break from the band gave us a chance to check out what other options we had. We weren't angry with each other but it was important for everyone to do their own thing. It's a bit like teenagers leaving the parental home — they have to overstate their independence before they can get on with their lives."

When you look at them now, it's hard to remember The Cardigans as they used to be — cuddly indie popsters.

"I think an element of reinvention is necessary for a band," says Persson, "Not just to keep the fans guessing but to prevent us from getting stuck in a rut."

The news that Persson has dyed her hair black and got married may come as a blow to the band's male constituency. When The Cardigans first appeared on the scene, in 1994, the singer set the hearts and loins of myriad music-lovers alight with her candy-c

oated vocals, blue eyes and white-blonde hair.

"As the singer, you're always going to get more attention," she says modestly. "I used to really hate it. It seemed strange to me that Peter did all the work with the music and Magnus wrote the lyrics yet people were always interested in what I was doing. Now I write the lyrics, I feel like I've finally filled that role."

With their new LP, The Cardigans have done anotherstylistic about-turn.

Long Gone Before Daylight is a considerably quieter, more downbeat affair than Gran Turismo musically. It's a work that brims with beautifully observed and bittersweet sentiments about love and relationships.

"We never made a conscious decision to make a quieter album," says Svensson. "But we had no preconceptions about how it would sound this time around and allowed every song to evolve naturally. It just ended up being more mellow."

- INDEPENDENT

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