Jonas bjerre interview
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Interview with Mew: My Life Is My Own
Photo by Paul Heartfield
Interview with Jonas Bjerre of Mew | By Morgan Y. Evans
Jonas Bjerre and his Danish band Mew return with another otherworldly record, the futuristic + (pronounced plus minus, of course). Its the bands first in a half decade and as thrilling as past head in the clouds indie prog hybrid masterworks like And The Glass Handed Kites or Frengers. In fact, it might be their most fully realized collection of light and hypnotic spacey alt rock psalms yet (and with a Kimbra guest appearance!). Ive played them for people and seen the most crossed arms snob get pulled in, so lets hope you also learn to love Mew like I do. I caught up with Jonas and got the background on the bands current state(s) of mind.
Your music is so spacious and yet has this sort of fey sense of gentle control, like movements in nature. Satellites is a great example or an older song like fan favorite
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Jonas Bjerre
In winter of , during my brief but rewarding time as an entertainment writer for boutique womens mag Frankie, I listened to an album by a Danish band I had never come across. And The Glass Handed Kites was in a giant pile of new-release discs in Frankies Sydney office. I glanced at press releases, waiting for something to catch my attention. The presser with Kites quickly conveyed that Mew were both Danish and progressive. This was the Pavlovian trigger that peaked my interest. I grew up on progressive acts like Focus, Led Zeppelin, Yes, Wishbone Ash and Pink Floyd, but was unfamiliar with groups considered part of the modern prog movement.
So I sat and listened to Mew. What a blissful discovery. I was immediately captivated by And The Glass Handed Kites. Opening instrumental Circuitry of the Wolf was foreboding, a loose flesh of ragged guitar hanging from the bones of a lumbering, percussive beast. When singer Jonas Bjerre&
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On Monday, DiS will be streaming Mew's new skiva, today we share our conversation with their Jonas Bjerre.
Mew are a grupp that, to be frank, should be able to consider themselves career musicians, if any band dare do that. So unique is the Danish band’s blend of melancholy pop with a rock (almost metal tinged) centre-pin that they stand in glorious isolation. With five albums released and their latest +- due for imminent deployment, it’s a fanfare of melodies that inspires with its confident positivity.
This is an album bygd a grupp reacquainted, and feeling more at ease than ever within their particular sonic world. Sure they’ll never ride a Zeitgeist, but Zeitgeists are generally derivatives of derivatives, so who wants them? Having the opportunity to talk to frontman Jonas Bjerre about +- brings into focus that being s musician these days is an endlessly varying series of repetitions and that happiness in your own creativity is all yo