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Algarnas Tradgard: Framtiden Ar Ett Svavande Skepp  
Reviewer: Ben Miler | See all reviews by Ben Miler
Section: Reviews | Category: Music | Area: Sweden | Topic: Music  
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What a totally strange and unusual group Älgarnas Trädgård is. This Swedish group, consisting of young, long haired hippies, released this album entitled Framtiden Är Ett Svävande Skepp, Förankrat i Forntiden in 1972, on a small Swedish label called Silence (the same label that brought you Bo Hansson).

What would happen if the Krautrock scene happened in Sweden, rather than in Germany? Can you imagine what would happen if bands like Ash Ra Tempel and Amon Düül II were Swedish and included Nordic folk influences? Then Älgarnas Trädgard would that answer!

The band consisted of Jan Ternauld, Dennis Lundh, Sebastian Öberg, Mikael Johansson, Andreas Brandt, and Dan Söderqvist, in which they played such odd combination of modern, archaic, and exotic instruments as violins, rebec, cello, guitars, sitar, piano, zither, organ, flutes, zinks, jew's harp, tablas, and synthesizers (Moog, VCS-3).

Jan Ternauld is also an artist, and he did the covers to a couple of Bo Hansson's albums (Magician's Hat, Attic Thoughts). Unsurprisingly, he did the cover to this album as well. Ternauld these days mostly creates computer generated artwork, instead of the old-fashioned way like he did for Älgarnas Trägård and Bo Hansson.

Most of the songs on the album bear very lengthy titles like "Two Hours Over Two Blue Mountains With a Cuckoo on Each Side of the Hours... That Is". That cut starts off with bells ringing, strange electronic effects, jamming on violin, and eventually ending up with some even more bizarre electronic effects that sound like they came off a very early Tangerine Dream album (like Alpha Centauri). The second cut, "There is a Time For Everything, There is a Time where Even Time Will Meet" is an odd, Indian influenced number, lots of sitar, violin, and tabla, ending with a truly mystical sounding zither.

"Children of Possibilities" is one of only two cuts with vocals (the rest are instrumental), this time with non-member Margaretha Söderberg handling the vocals. The vocals are in Swedish, and it is a truly amazing piece influenced by Swedish folk music (for all I know, it's a Swedish folk song, but no credits are made to who wrote these songs).

"La Rotta" is basically a very cool Nordic type song played on fiddle, not unlike the fiddling you hear from Celtic music. The next cut, with vocals (in Swedish), "Viriditas" is the epitome of underground spacy psychedelic. More great violin work, vocals that sound out of tune (which adds to the charm), odd sounding piano, and obviously sounding like it was recorded on crummy equipment giving the song that unique early '70s feel.

The next song, "Rings of Saturn" is a totally killer guitar jam and is by far the most rock-oriented number. Pretty intense stuff here, reminds me of Ash Ra Tempel. The final song, "The Future is a Hovering Ship Anchored in the Past" is mainly violin with strange electronic sounds, pretty creepy.

This album is the epitome of obscure. It's been reissued on CD by Silence Records (the same label that originally released the album on LP back in the early 1970s), but finding it, especially here in America, isn't easy, but if you want something unusual and exotic, give this album a try.

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Visitor Comments about Algarnas Tradgard: Framtiden Ar Ett Svavande Skepp
Posted by Lemongait on 2005-06-13 03:00:09
My Score:

Comment: Yay for AT!! Can''t get enough of ''em...

Posted by Carl Dexter on 2004-12-21 08:15:36
My Score:

Comment: Very diverse beautiful music that sounds like nothing else in this world. For that fact alone, this deserves all the admiration in the world. Sorta like krautrocks (genre) cousin.

Posted by Ben Miler on 2002-09-13 20:31:58
My Score:

Comment: Me again, if you want to hear how this album sounds like, go to Silence Records web site at:

www.silence.se

The only problem with this web site is it is all in Swedish, but they have a jukebox which plays songs in crappy RealAudio in their entirety from many of the album titles Silence Records carries, like Bo Hansson''s Lord of the Rings (Sagan Om Ringen), Magician''s Hat (Ur Trollkarlens Hatt), and Attic Thoughts (Mellanväsen), the self-entitled album by some hippie band called Träd, Gräs Och Stenar, other bands like Triangulus, Samla Mammas Manna, and most importantly, the Älgarnas Trädgård album I have reviewed.

Posted by Ben Miler on 2002-09-08 12:32:24
My Score:

Comment: If you want to find more similar obscure groups that I''ve been reviewing here, there are several sites to try: First and foremost is the Gibraltar Encyclopedia of Progressive Rock at www.gepr.net, which includes a listing of a ton of well known and obscure prog rock bands, a complete discography (if possible), and opinions of each band. Next is The Giant Progweed at www.progweed.net. The site is named that because they wanted to poke fun at an early Genesis classis, "The Return of the Giant Hogweed" off the Nursery Cryme album. Site that reviews mainly obscure prog rock by different people. The Älgarnas Trädgård album was also reviewed on that site. Another one, out of Norway, but luckily, the site is in English is Tommy''s Forest of Progressive Rock at: home.tiscali.no/progforest. Basically one guy, who goes by the name of Tommy Schønenberg, reviews tons of similar, obscure gems as well, of course he reviews big name prog bands too like Yes, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Genesis, etc.

Posted by Skip on 2002-09-07 18:12:58
My Score:

Comment: Ben, thank you so much for contributing your reviews to the site! You really found some weird shit to review. Excellent! Thanks for turning us on to such rare finds. I like your writing style and knowledge of the subject. Keep up the great work!

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