Fire Fortellinger, or 'Four Stories', was born from the restrictions of lockdown. With nowhere to go and temporarily detached from his Wobbler bandmates, Frøislie started making music! his home basement studio. It was, he says, "to keep my sanity." Working alone was a contrast to Wobbler's creative process, but that's what Frøislie wanted.
"In a band it's very democratic," he says, "and for the last three albums, we've jammed and worked off each other. You present one riff and then another... how about this? And it can take forever, for good or bad, but on this solo project, I wanted to make it spontaneously and quickly, not ponder too much, just go with my gut feelings." Initially, Frøislie started with no greater intent than to put down some ideas he could develop at a later date.
"Thank God I had the good preamps and everything set up, so I could keep those takes," he says. "I improvised and things happened, and it would be completely wrong to try to recreate something I've improvised, the spontaneous thing would be lost. I was very relaxed because I was thinking: this is just a test, it's a demo, so I'm having fun. I think you can hear I'm having fun. Plus, my studio computer was broken, so I basically had no plug-ins. I only had the analogue keyboards and stuff and a basic recording computer, so I had to do it very old school. No click tracks, no MIDI, but that made it organic."
As the music developed, Frøislie went back and forth from drums to keyboards, capturing ideas as the muses whispered in his ears, deploying an arsenal that includes a harpsichord, Mellotron, Minimoog, Yamaha CP70 and Hammond organ.
"I'm a huge fan of these old keyboards, plus that's what I had in my basement, so I had to use them," he says. "But I love the sound. Like the harpsichord, it's hell, basically. You're tuning it for two days and it goes out of tune in one day. The same with the piano. Then again, that piano is sort of out of tune because I was thinking, this is just a test. But I think it's charming. It's not supposed to be perfect. The Mellotron is not in perfect pitch, but that's the point. There's too much perfection these days."
He compares the Mellotron to an old, rundown car. "There are oil spills, you have to push it to get going sometimes," he says. "You're working on their terms or you're almost fighting them."
The only instrument Frøislie doesn't play on the album is the bass, which was recorded by Nikolai Hængsle from Elephant9. Frøislie started with synth bass parts, but realised the music was crying out for the unique tone of a Rickenbacker, so he picked up the phone.
"I thought, let's just ask the best bassist in Norway," he says. "The worst he can say is no. [But he said,] 'Yeah, I'll do it!' He's incredible."
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Each song spins a tale. Rytter Av Dommedag ('Rider Of Doomsday') was inspired by the legends of Ragnarök and a nearby landmark, a burial mound called Raknehaugen that's rumoured to be the resting place of the mythical King Rakne. Frøislie and his family took day trips to Raknehaugen "because my wife had a school project about cultural landscapes. We had to take these trips to photograph it and it was just such a magical landscape, it sparked the imagination. In the winter it's a ski jump, it's that big, but the legend is that it is King Rakne in there surrounded by white horses, treasure and so on."
Frøislie imagined Rakne being roused from centuries of slumber and coming forth to bring about Ragnarök, throwing in other dark legends for extra spice.
"He's like one of the riders of the Apocalypse from the Bible, there's Oskoreia or The Wild Hunt, I've mixed in everything," he says.
Less apocalyptic, Et Sted Under Himmelhvelvet (A Place Under The Heavens') is about longing for escape, a sentiment no doubt widely shared during lockdown.
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