.jpg&w=3840&q=100)
Smerz Are the Norwegian Duo Making the Off-Kilter Pop Music of Your Dreams
While promoting their debut album, 2021's Believer, Catharina Stoltenberg and Henriette Motzfeldt, the duo behind the cult alt-pop duo Smerz, remarked upon the fact that doing press interviews and photo shoots wasn't exactly something they enjoyed. You could chalk that up to the fact that, as Scandinavians—dividing their time between Oslo, where they're from, and Copenhagen—self-promotion doesn't come totally naturally to them: the Danish concept of Janteloven, a kind of unspoken moral code woven through Scandinavian society that discourages expressions of personal ambition or success, is deeply ingrained.
Speaking to them in the week before the release of their stellar second album, Big City Life, I have to ask first: Has that element of being a musician got any easier for them, or begun to feel more natural? 'No,' says Stoltenberg, without hesitation.
'No,' Motzfeldt adds, with an apologetic laugh. 'Sorry about that.'
'But, you know, sometimes it's good to have these conversations,' Stoltenberg continues. 'After you make some music and you're getting ready to put it out into the world, it's nice to try to sit down and figure out what it is, or what happened here. Even if the conversations are a bit more vague or open-ended, I think it's a good reminder for us that… that's okay.'
There's certainly a mysterious, open-ended quality to Smerz's music, although given the remarkable precision of their songwriting and production, 'vague' isn't necessarily the word I would use. On Big City Life, the duo flit deftly between genres—dream pop, glitchy electro, power ballads, shoegaze, even shades of trip-hop on album closer 'Easy'—blending all these textures into a sonic cocktail that is uniquely their own. And where their previous records have erred towards the cryptic (at least lyrically), on Big City Life, they're making room for big, overwhelming feelings: take the brazenly sensual yearning captured on the twinkling 'Big Dreams,' or the woozy rush of being head-over-heels in love so beautifully captured on lead single 'You Got Time and I Got Money,' the melody of which you could just as easily imagine being sung in a smoky 1920s Paris jazz club as at an underground club night in 2020s Berlin.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
14 hours ago
- CBS News
Lil Wayne to make stop in Minneapolis during 20-year anniversary tour
Derrick Thompson trial nears end after days of emotional testimony, and more headlines Derrick Thompson trial nears end after days of emotional testimony, and more headlines Derrick Thompson trial nears end after days of emotional testimony, and more headlines Five-time Grammy award winning rapper, Lil Wayne, is slated to perform at the Target Center in Minneapolis as part of a concert series celebrating his 20 years in the music industry. The tour follows Wayne's highly anticipated album release "Tha Carter VI," which comes out June 6. This album makes six in the Carter series, including "Tha Carter," "Tha Carter II," "Tha Carter III," "Tha Carter IV" and "Tha Carter V." Hits from this album series include, "Lollipop" (Tha Carter III), "A Milli" (Tha Carter III), "6 Foot 7 Foot" (Tha Carter IV), "Fireman" (Tha Carter II) and "Go DJ" (Tha Carter). The tour will make 34 stops across North America, including Minnesota on Aug. 20. Presale tickets for the concert went live on June 4. Additional presale tickets will be available all week, says a press release, until general admission tickets go on sale on June 6 at 10 a.m. on Live Nation's website.


Fox News
16 hours ago
- Fox News
Dolly Parton on 'never retiring' and the faith that helped her through husband's death
At 79, legendary music artist and entrepreneur Dolly Parton said she has no plans to slow down, but behind her busy schedule, she draws strength from something deeper to face life's toughest moments: her faith. Parton lost her husband, Carl Dean, in March after nearly six decades of marriage, marking a profound change in her life. Through the grief, she said her belief in God has helped sustain her. "My faith has helped me through it all because I am a person of faith, even though I lost him on this earthly plane," Parton told "America Reports" on Thursday. "I miss him every day." "Knowing that he's in God's arms now and not mine, but he's still in my heart and in my memories — I treasure all that, and that's how I get through my work and my faith that's carried me on through." Parton and Dean were married in 1966 in Ringgold, Ga., a place they returned to "every year" around their anniversary. This year, she made the journey alone. "I went down there the other day on our anniversary," she said. "I felt like he was there with me, and I put his wedding ring around my little gold chain and wore it. I wore my little original wedding rings, and I just stood there." Despite her loss, Parton hasn't slowed down. In the past year alone, she released an album titled "Smoky Mountain DNA: Family, Faith and Fables," marked the 40th anniversary of her Dollywood theme park, wrote a children's book, and prepared for the premiere of a Broadway musical based on her life. "I love my work. I don't ever want to retire," said the 11-time Grammy winner. "Everything that you do, it's just like a tree with many branches, with many leaves, and every dream — new dreams just kind of work off of them." The "dreamer-in-chief" joked about retirement only happening if she gets sick or "just falls over dead," and said each new project gives her more purpose and drive. "I really feel like I'm doing what I was meant to do. Every new thing gives me, just, new energy. Energy begets energy, as they say." Throughout it all, she credits her faith as the foundation of her strength and resilience. "I remember scriptures from the Bible like, 'Through God, all things are possible,' and, 'I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me' — not to sound like a preacher," Parton said. "I think if you grab on to those things, and you use that for strength and inspiration, there's just a lot of stuff that can be done, if you really believe that it's going to happen, and you have faith."


CNN
20 hours ago
- CNN
Morten Harket, lead singer of a-ha, has Parkinson's disease
Morten Harket has revealed he has Parkinson's disease. The singer of a-ha, the band behind the 1985 hit and innovatively animated music video 'Take On Me,' shared the news during an interview with the group's biographer. 'I've got no problem accepting the diagnosis,' Harket said. 'With time, I've taken to heart my 94-year-old father's attitude to the way the organism gradually surrenders: 'I use whatever works'.' Harket, 65, explained why he wanted to share his diagnosis publicly. 'Acknowledging the diagnosis wasn't a problem for me; it's my need for peace and quiet to work that has been stopping me. I'm trying the best I can to prevent my entire system from going into decline,' he said. 'It's a difficult balancing act between taking the medication and managing its side effects. There's so much to weigh up when you're emulating the masterful way the body handles every complex movement, or social matters and invitations, or day-to-day life in general.' According to Mayo Clinic, 'Parkinson's disease is a movement disorder of the nervous system that worsens over time.' Harket had 'advanced brain surgery' at the Mayo Clinic, which along with medication, 'have softened the impact of his symptoms,' the a-ha biographer, Jan Omdahl, wrote. 'In June 2024, Morten underwent a neurosurgical procedure in which electrodes were implanted deep inside the left side of his brain. These are connected to a small pacemaker-like device placed under the skin of the upper chest that sends electrical impulses through the electrodes into the brain,' Omdahl wrote. 'The method is called deep brain stimulation (DBS) and is among the most advanced treatments in neurology. The procedure had the desired effect: with the right electrical impulses now reaching Morten's brain, many of his physical symptoms practically vanished. In December 2024 he underwent a similar procedure on the right side of his brain, which was also successful.' Harket's voice, however, has been affected, he said. 'The problems with my voice are one of many grounds for uncertainty about my creative future,' Harket said.