Dungen

4

Dungen - 4

09/30/2008 | Kemado 

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All Music Guide Review

While Tio Bitar saw Gustav Ejstes relinquishing some of Dungen's instrumental duties to other musicians, specifically guitarist Reine Fiske, 4 is the closest he's come to employing a full-time band. The Swedish frontman confines himself to the piano and microphone this time around, only taking occasional stabs at flute and violin, while bassist Mattias Gustavsson and drummer Johan Holmegard join Fiske in creating Dungen's sonic stew. As before, the band brews up a nice mix of psychedelic rock, free jazz, and other vintage genres associated with mind expansion and counterculture ideals. The folk influence that peppered earlier releases isn't as prominent here, however, having been replaced by a newfound emphasis on piano. The instrument lends new, softer textures to several songs, especially when combined with washes of woodwinds and strings. "Marleras Finest," in particular, mixes piano-fueled jazz with vintage elevator music, sounding like something that would've piped through the speakers of a 1960s dentist's office after a laughing gas leak. Elsewhere, the bandmates turn their amplifier knobs to the breaking point while pummeling through a series of improvised psych-rock freak-outs. "Samtidigt 1" is a freewheeling guitar showcase taken from a jam session -- it fades in and fades out, seemingly stretching on for hours on either side of the recorded snippet -- while "Samtidigt 2" reprises the same approach several tracks later. Holmegard peppers his percussion with Mitch Mitchell-styled fills, and Fiske fills every inch of space with slashes and stabs of crunchy, distorted guitar, aptly earning his keep as the band's second-in-command. There are well-crafted songs here, too: "Mina Damer Och Fasaner" begins like a Brill Building ballad before settling into a bass-boosted groove, and "Det Tar Tid" finds room to showcase Ejstes' talent for stacked vocal harmonies. In short, 4 offers a cross-section of the band's catalog, mixing the structure-based songs of Tio Bitar with the instrumental workouts of albums like Ta Det Lugnt. Ejstes' fiddle playing is certainly missed, but that's a minor complaint from an otherwise top-notch effort. ~ Andrew Leahey, All Music Guide

4 Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 1
  • Sätt Att Se
  • 4:45
  • Sound Clip for Sätt Att Se from 4


  • 3
  • Det Tar Tid
  • 4:16
  • Sound Clip for Det Tar Tid from 4


  • 4
  • Samtidigt 1
  • 3:15
  • Sound Clip for Samtidigt 1 from 4


  • 6
  • Fredag
  • 4:19
  • Sound Clip for Fredag from 4


  • 9
  • Samtidigt 2
  • 4:38
  • Sound Clip for Samtidigt 2 from 4


  • 10
  • Bandhagen
  • 3:23
  • Sound Clip for Bandhagen from 4


  • 4 Notes

    from Kemado: Dungen's fourth studio album extends the acclaimed Swedish outfit's sound past psychedelia into something far more rare. Moving beyond mere stylistic concerns, 4 finds Gustav Ejstes' focus on the extremes of Dungen's sound separating into two entities. Blazing, raw guitar workouts have their own time and place, but now, so do stirringly orchestrated, jazz-cooled compositions with cinematic undertones.

    Bandleader Gustav Ejstes has made many allusions to his creative process as it likens to that of a hip-hop producer. On 4, that process is more evident than ever, both in the feel of each piece, and in the sense of intuition and control within the members of the group. New drummer Johan Holmegard joins guitarist Reine Fiske and bassist Mattias Gustavsson, while Ejstes steps away from guitar for the entire album, focusing on the piano as his lead instrument. Together, they have honed a classic and seamless sound, constructed with lavish studio flourishes and moving, narrative arrangements, and yet able to toughen up to tear veins of fierce blues-psych instrumentals up from the surface.

    The ten tracks on 4 comprise Dungen's most concentrated effort to date, beats surging forth and atmosphere changing as their sound continues to evolve. Every song here runs under five minutes, pushing the group to introduce confident melodies and arresting ambiance in tighter frameworks. Gauging from the results, this challenge has done them well.

    Included in this set are live favorite "Mina Damer och Fasaner," excerpts from a wild psychedelic jam session entitled "Samtidigt", and a storming, Northern Soul-influenced instrumental entitled "Fredag". These stand tall with some of the most fully-realized moments of Dungen's career; percolating prog-pop groover "Det Tar Tid" and eloquent opener "Satt At Se".

    With a penchant for lush pop portraits, and laced with orange sunshine guitar flash, 4 turns a page in Dungen's sound and story.

    Credits of 4

    • Gustav Ejstes
    • Flute, Percussion, Piano, Strings, Vocals, Producer, Engineer

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