Tag Archives: röyksopp

#1365: Röyksopp – This Must Be It

By the Autumn of 2009, Röyksopp’s third album, Junior, had been released and available to purchase for a few months. I was on a Beatles trip during that part of the year and can’t remember checking anything out that was new and current at the time. But I was aware of the goings-on of Röyksopp. Earlier in the year, ‘Happy Up Here’ had been released as the first single from Junior. I remember enjoying that one massively, think I played it on repeat a fair few times once I pirated it of a website. ‘The Girl and the Robot’ followed as the second single. Got a feeling its video played on MTV2 a few times. Being an avid FIFA series follower like I was back then, I got the most recent game – which would have been FIFA 10 – and lo and behold, Röyksopp was on the game’s soundtrack, with album closer ‘It’s What I Want’ chosen by the people at EA Sports to include. The duo just seemed to be within my peripheral vision in 2009, and I wasn’t complaining ’cause the songs were good.

Now, ‘This Must Be It’ was released as Junior‘s third and final single in that Autumn of 2009. I want to say I saw its music video actually on TV maybe once or twice around the time it was due to come out. But after that, until maybe 2018 or 2019, I had honestly forgotten the song existed. And not because it was bad or anything. I was too busy listening to the Beatles and probably working on the YouTube channel I had at the time. Why I revisited the track in either 2018 or 2019, I’m really not too sure. I know that’s what you guys read these for, to know the things I can’t remember. I think it was simply a matter of looking up Junior, seeing ‘This Must Be It’ was a single, thinking “I really can’t remember how this song goes at all” and taking a listen. It wasn’t really a special occasion. Whatever the spark behind my decision was, I’m glad it was there because I find it to be a very enjoyable track. A real bop. Once the beat gets going, I can’t help but nod my end along to it until the eventual end.

The song features the vocals of Karin Dreijer, you may know them as Fever Ray or one half of The Knife. I’ve never done a deep dive into either acts, but I honestly should. In the few songs I know sung by Dreijer, I’m always drawn toward their vocal delivery and melodies. There’s still time for a whole discography discovery. Anyway, ‘This Must Be It’ sees Dreijer, I think, write about waiting for a couple of people to arrive – I’m guessing friends rather than strangers – and getting bored in the process, but then feeling at peace once they finally do and have a good time together. That’s just this simple guy’s interpretation. The string of evocative lyrics make the whole situation sound much more ethereal and otherworldly. It’s like the whole thing’s taking place in space, the song sounds so wide and expansive. With the Dreijer’s reverb-drenched vocal and the spacey production, anchored by the entrancing four-on-the-floor rhythm, it all makes for a very mesmerising experience. How could I have forgotten about this one? Seems silly thinking about it now.

#1229: Röyksopp – So Easy

When I was a young boy back in the 2000s, the British mobile network operator T-Mobile – now known to you and me as EE – used to run an advert on TV that was backed by a really cool piece of music. I didn’t know what the people were singing. To me, it sounded like “Ooh, ung, ooh/Haanay, hun, haanay/Ooh, ung, ooh/Da-da, day-da, doo”. I would sing it like that, anyway. I can’t remember exactly what age I would have been at the time. I’m sure it was under ten, though. And I just thought it was one of those songs where the people were singing gibberish on purpose. People do that in songs all the time, so it didn’t seem that strange to me. That melody would stick around in my head for a long while.

Fast forward to my second year in university, late 2014. I’d known about Röyksopp for a good five years by that time. ‘Happy Up Here’ was my song for a good few months in 2009. I was sat in front of my laptop, looking for some electronic music to listen to get me away from the guitar-oriented stuff for a change. The duo’s debut Melody A.M. appeared to have been well-received by critics around its release, according to the sources on Wikipedia. Maybe it would have made more sense to listen to the album ‘Happy Up Here’ was on. But Melody it was. So, I got to searching on Spotify. The first song on there was ‘So Easy’, and holy moly, this was the track that was in that advert all those years ago. Röyksopp made that tune. Well, this album was getting off to a fantastic start.

Searching up ‘So Easy’ on Google upon inadvertently finding answered the question I guess I had about the song for all of those years. Turned out, whatever vocals were on there weren’t gibberish at all and were in fact a sample of a song from the ’60s – one that very much had actual lyrics. “Blue on blue/Heartache on heartache/Blue on blue/Now that we are through” were the actual words. Swedish vocal group Gals & Pals sang them. And it’s these vocal samples taken from this performance that ‘So Easy’ is built around. Well, Röyksopp also lift the source material’s pizzicato string introduction, over which a funky little bassline is laid out. The song ends early, closing out with this little interlude that leads into the next song on the album, ‘Eple’. That’s one I would have written about, but things didn’t line up. But it’s not the last of Röyksopp on here.

#1113: Röyksopp – Remind Me

Ah, Röyksopp. It’s been a long while since I’ve written about a song by those guys. I won’t lie, I don’t know the duo all that much to write so much on their background if anyone reading was interested in that aspect. All I know is that ‘Happy Up Here’ had been in my iTunes library for some time, and there was a point during 2014/15 where I was looking for albums to listen to that were a little less guitar-centric. Röyksopp fit the bill. Their debut album Melody A.M. appeared to have received some fairly positive reviews, so I went for it. I can say it’s a pretty good record. I didn’t know what to expect when pressing play that first time. I was actually shocked when it came to its opening track. But I’ll save that for another post. What matters today is the album’s eighth track, ‘Remind Me’.

The tune was one that I had heard many years before when its music video played on one of those music channels. Don’t think it was MTV that time, but it was definitely one of them. What had remained in my head from that viewing up to the point of going through Melody A.M. was the song’s hook, “Remind, remind, remind me/Remind, remind, remind me”. Everything else I’d forgotten. So I was looking forward to hearing the song again, almost as if it were actually the first time. The track eventually arrived. But something was off. That hook that I had remembered for so long never arrived. Also, the song sounded totally different from how I recalled it. Well, it turned out that the music video utilised the single version of the track, which was a remix made by an obscure artist going by Someone Else. Probably because the album version didn’t have a clear chorus, which this remix rectified. I was unsure on how this ‘new’ album version sounded. But after giving it a few more plays, I came to appreciate it greatly. It was if that single version never existed.

In comparison to that single version (below), which is much more busier with a thumping beat and a commanding presence, the version on the album has an empty shopping mall/elevator/waiting room-music vibe to it (something I actually really like about it, makes for some really easy listening) that I think works to emphasise the melancholic nature of the lyrics, concerning the buzzkill of returning home after a hectic, busy time away and an attempt of rekindling a relationship that doesn’t go to well, as sung by Kings of Convenience vocalist Erlend Øye. Where a chorus would usually appear after the song’s first verse is replaced by an endearing keyboard refrain, mirroring the established vocal melody. The track’s beat kicks in after that little keyboard break adding a bit of momentum to the proceedings, but not so much that it overbears the soundscape. And these bleeps and bloops arrive in the mix before the final chorus, followed by a subtle, subtle guitar that suddenly appears during it. The track fades into silence, and it’s a bummer when it finishes. Not just because the song’s over, but also because this isn’t one of the most happiest songs out there. Leaves you feeling reflective and all that.

My iPod #484: Röyksopp – Happy Up Here

So it was one day when I was listening to the radio on an old Nokia mobile phone that the station (what it was I can’t recall) was frequently reminding the audience that they could vote to hear the exclusive premieres of two brand new singles to be released from their respective upcoming albums. One was by Calvin Harris (that turned out to be “I’m Not Alone“) and the other being Röyksopp’s new song “Happy Up Here”. Calvin Harris was the popular pick. Not really sure a mainstream audience would have really known who Röyksopp were, and Harris was already known for songs like “The Girls” and “Acceptable in the 80s“. “I’m Not Alone” got played to death and reached number one. Though it “Happy Up Here” that I started to like, maybe a few days/weeks later, when its video started showing in various places.

The track was something of a comeback single by the Norwegian electronic duo, released four years after their then most recent album The Understanding in 2005, and appeared as the first song on its album Junior. Its melody is driven by a sample of a twinkling keyboard riff taken from the song “Do That Stuff” by the 70s soul group Parliament alongside various electronic blips and swooshes, a steady beat, synthesized strings at some points and calming, airy vocals which come together to make a relaxing, uplifting, and comfortable two minutes and fourty-five seconds of your time. Another song about being happy, but in the case of feeling content with where you are at certain moment in time.

After hearing it the first couple of times I was sure that I heard that keyboard part somewhere in the past. It had the same sound, though it wasn’t the same note pattern. Turned out I was thinking of “Eple“, coincidentally another song by the duo. Quite funny.