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'Metal Will Stand Tall' is the debut release from
Swedish rockers The Poodles, a band that have literally rocked the hard
rock community with the sheer quality of their music. After what
turned out to be a long and stressful day for the band, we take time out to chill
and chat with bass player Pontus Egberg.
MM -
Hi Pontus, how's the tour been going so far and what's been the crowds reaction to
The Poodles?
Pontus -
The tour has been going very good over all our expectations actually.
The
response from the crowds have been very good everywhere, even though when
we started the tour the album wasn't even out in the stores in Europe.
It's been fantastic. MM - Do you think
there may be a chance that you will be headlining the tour next time you
come? Pontus
- That all depends on the record sales but we certainly hope so.
MM - I believe you had a bit of trouble on the way
here to the gig today? Pontus
- Yes, today we had a broken trailer. We barely made it but we were
able to still do the show which was great. We got here about 45 minutes
before we were due to go on stage so everybody just helped out and got the
gear in and rigged and we were on with just maybe 15 minutes later.
MM -
Have
you had a chance to speak to many of the fans after the gigs?
Pontus -
Yeh pretty much. We usually go out and hang around for a little bit
after the show and sign some autographs and stuff like that. The
fans have been very enthusiastic with us, it's been really good.
MM - I've definitely got the impression that all the fans think you are
going to be a phenomenal success and are currently on the verge of
explosion. Pontus
- Is that what they are saying?
MM - Yeh and I have to say I agree with them.
Pontus - Oh well let's hope so!
MM -
The tour itself hasn't been without incident, even before the events of
today, I heard you were involved in some kind of crash with the tour bus?
Pontus
- After about the fourth gig I think it was, we had been playing Oslo in
Norway and we were going down to Hamburg and it was really slippery on the
roads. Going through Denmark we actually crashed the tour bus. It
was kind of not so funny an experience. We all got out of it ok and
we got another ride down to Hamburg and another tour bus came and picked us up
so we could continue.
MM - You must have been a bit shaken up after
that had happened. Pontus - Yes it's not the kind of experience you
want to go through everyday. Just the driver hurt his leg a little
bit but none of the musicians or crew were hurt in any way.
MM – How would
you describe the bands music to the casual rock fan? Who do you
think is gonna dig your music?
Pontus -
Well I would say the music we play is Melodic Hard Rock with a lot of
energy and hopefully when we play live on stage it has a big impact on the
crowd. I would say anyone could enjoy our music.
MM - Anyone will
good taste in music. Pontus
- Exactly! We've been hearing a lot back home
in Sweden that people have been saying that actually they do not like hard
rock but that they really like our stuff. Well in that case they
like hard rock! It's just they don't get it, but it seems a lot of
people do when they hear our stuff.
MM - I think perhaps it's
because the band are so enthusiastic about what
they do and the music is so vibrant and powerful,
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it's real feel good music that puts you in a good mood. Pontus - Yes, well we all have such a fantastic time when we
are all together touring and I guess and hope that this comes across.
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MM -
After your entry into
the Eurovision you were described as a spoof rock band. Are you
still that band or following on from your success, have you taken on a
more serious side?
Pontus
– Maybe that is what people thought but I'd say that even from the very
beginning it wasn't a joke. It was a very serious decision to even
enter the Eurovision because I don't know how it is over here in Britain,
but back home in Sweden entering into Eurovision is a big deal. It's
a very big display, very important. The final in Sweden where we
competed was viewed by over half the Swedish population, so it does have a very big
impact. We are all musicians who have been doing this for many years
and have had albums out and done touring before. It's very serious,
but still it's also about having fun.
MM - Eurovision has always been seen as a bit of a joke over here in
Britain, the entries never seem to make an effort and they really don't
seem to like rock bands. Why do you think the rest of Europe seems to take
Eurovision more seriously than we do here in Britain?
Pontus – I don't know, perhaps maybe it's different in every
country and my guess about the rock acts after Lordi's huge success is
it's going to change. There will probably be more bands entering.
In Sweden it is a very popular thing.
MM -
After Lordi won, did
you ever think that that could have/should have been you?
Pontus
– If we have been in the big final, one scenario is that we would
have been stealing votes from each other, so none of us would have won.
We're very happy with the result that we got in the Eurovision and it's
taken us to Bradford for example and we've been doing this big tour, so
we're very happy.
MM – Your first 3 singles from your new album 'Metal Will Stand Tall' have
hit Platinum and Gold sales in the Swedish charts. Have you been surprised
at the bands success?
Pontus - Yes, I think we all were actually and that it all would
come so quickly. I think the first single 'Night Of Passion' hit
Gold after just 3 weeks or something like that, which is amazing in
itself. Even that was way over our expectations. It's all good
though!
MM
- You could perhaps imagine people would latch on to the Eurovision entry, but
to follow on with the other successes from that is a really positive sign.
Pontus
- Yes, as you say it is perhaps not that surprising that people liked that
first single 'Night Of Passion' and it went so well, but that we've been
able to follow up with two successful singles after that is really nice
and I guess it proves the listeners are really fans and don't just like us
for that one song.
MM -
Have you started to think about your next album yet, or are you
taking things one step at a time?
Pontus – Well we have definitely started to think about.
Actually just before Christmas we went into the studio and we recorded 5
songs for the new album and that's what we're going to do when we get back
home to Sweden. We have a few more gigs lined up back home in Sweden,
but the main thing is to enter the studio again and continue the
recordings for the next album.
MM -
Can you tell us anything about the songs that you've already done for the
next album?
Pontus
- Well actually you already heard one of them tonight. The second off last song
'Seven Seas' is one of the new songs. As far as it looks right now
it's going to be a very good album I think, but still very much the same as the
first album only better. We've done so many shows since we recorded
the first album and we're much more of a unit now than we were when we did
the first one.
MM - The album is still quite new here in Britain in particular, but it had
in fact been released much earlier in other territories.
Pontus
- Yes in Sweden and Finland it was actually released in May 2006. I
think in Japan and Russia it was released around about September 2006, but
then the rest of Europe was not released until January 2007.
MM - Yeh, I think although it is still very much a new album to us, it
is a little older to quite a few people.
Pontus
- That is what is so great about the responses we've been getting on this
tour, even though the album hasn't been out for very long a lot of
people seem to know the songs. Even by the people who don't normally seem
to enjoy what we are doing onstage, so that is a very good sign.
MM - I could imagine some festival appearances coming out as a result
of your successes on this tour.
Pontus
- Well we certainly hope so. It's a little early to tell maybe, but
that is our goal for the Summer, to try and hit some festivals in Europe.
MM - I don't know if you are aware but you have been voted quite high
in a number of different categories in the Melodic Rock Awards.
Pontus
- Yes actually I did hear about that. MM - It seems your
success is spreading all over the world, quite literally from top to
bottom.
Pontus
- This is the wonders of the internet. MM - Well
it's certainly making your music more available to all different people.
Pontus
- This is both a good and bad thing. Just spreading the word about a
new thing is fantastic, there was no comparison to it before.
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MM -
The band members have been involved in some of the best melodic/hard rock
acts in recent years, the likes of 'Jekyll & Hyde', 'Talisman' and 'Zan
Clan' to name a few. How did you all come together to form The
Poodles?
Pontus
– Well the band The Poodles has actually been around for quite a few
years as a sort of show band doing nightclub gigs, doing hard rock cover
songs. The Poodles in this current line-up was formed in September
2005 because that's when we knew we were going to be in the Eurovision.
We're all basically old friends and have played together in different
bands.
Pontus the
guitar player and Jakob
worked
together in 'Jekyll
& Hyde'.
Me and Pontus
worked
together in 'Zan
Clan'. We've known each other for
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many years but
never before played together in this line-up, so that's probably why
it came together like this. We wanted to get together the best
band that we could.
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MM - How would you compare the music that you are creating now with The
Poodles to the music that you were creating with your previous bands?
Pontus - I would say that now there is
perhaps more focus on the melodies in this band. Not that the bands
before were without melodies, but perhaps it is more focused now
to have the really strong melodies and the good songs.
MM - Yes, but I would say that all your earlier bands were really good
bands and had a lot of very good songs as well. I am half expecting
to see a stampede to re-release these old albums as a result of the
success of The Poodles, from all your old labels.
Pontus - Maybe, who knows. I would
say that most people in this business would say that no one is ever really
sure what will work and what won't and I can't really tell you why this
works, but I can tell you that in my opinion this is a very good band and
we have very good songs so that's at least a part of it.
MM - I think sometimes it can be simply the right time and the right
place. People are looking for something different and exciting.
Pontus - Yes exactly, it's all about the
timing.
MM -
Was The Poodles intended to be just a one
off affair with the Eurovision entry 'Night Of Passion'?
Did you plan for this to be a long term band or did it just evolve into
greater things?
Pontus –
I guess we were certainly hoping that it would be more than just for
Eurovision but we always took it just one step at a time. At the
time we entered we didn't even know that we were going to make a full
length album and then we did that because it went so well. Then it was
just ok, let's do this album and see where it takes us. It's been
constantly moving along so I hope it will keep doing that. MM
- It must have been so exciting to have the fans embrace your music and
for everything to go so well following on from that.
Pontus - Yes, it was madness, but it was
all good and it was an exciting and very nice experience. It has
opened peoples minds to different styles of music.
MM -
How did Tess from Alcazar get involved on the track 'Metal Will Stand
Tall'?
Pontus
- Basically because the band she's in Alcazar, has the same management
that we have back home in Sweden. So that's how we first met and
when the idea
came up, we all thought it was a cool thing to do. She's a
brilliant girl, a good singer and it turned out really well. She's
actually joined us back home in Sweden for a few live performances as
well.
MM -
Cool. Is Alcazar a rock band?
Pontus
- No, it's more of a disco dance music band. It's not really the thing
that people know her for, but like a lot of people she's an old rock girl
into AC/DC and stuff like that.
MM -
Who is the wonderful opera singer who features on the track 'Song For
You'? Pontus
– His name is Jonas Samuelsson-Nerbe and he's actually
Jakob's older brother.
MM - Is he a
professional opera singer? Pontus
- Yes, he is pretty much well known in Sweden. I think he has his hands full
of work.
MM - I
think it really works well with the song.
Pontus
- Yes it is beautiful, it works really well and that's one of the things
we really enjoy doing, the mixing of the different styles.
MM -
There's something for everybody on the album, all the songs work well
together and compliment each other. They all seem to work so well
together. Pontus
- Exactly.
MM -
The album contains a cover
of Ultravox's hit 'Dancing With Tears In My Eyes'. How did you
come to choose this particular song and how do you feel it sits alongside
the rest of the songs on the album?
Pontus
– It came about one night on the way home from a gig on the tour bus, it
was somebody's idea, I can't remember who's exactly, but somebody had the
idea ... "could we do a cover of this?" ... and we all thought yes, maybe
we could. I think it turned out really good. It fits pretty
well into the mix of the whole album. It's a brilliant song.
MM - Have you included the song in any of your live sets?
Pontus - We
have actually. We've played it a few times this Summer. We
played it at Sweden Rocks for example. It's not a first choice
for us, but when we play a little longer set we do include
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it in there.
MM - Are there any other cover's that you would like to do in
future? Will the second album have one on?
Pontus - I don't think it will.
There are so many good songs out there that could probably turn out as well as
that cover song on an album, but we have no plans in that direction right
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MM – How did you come to hook up with AFM as a label, is it just
for the one album or does it go further than that?
Pontus - Well
actually Oscar Dronjak from Hammerfall was the first one to give the album to the
A&R man at AFM Records, so thanks to them that we are now here! I
think he read about it in some magazine, in a Japanese magazine and
couldn't get a hold of it, but since they are Swedish they helped him out
with getting a copy. That's pretty much how it came about and it's
not just for this album, it's for at least one more album after this.
MM -
How have you found them to work with so far and how do they compare to
some of the labels you've been signed to in past bands?
Pontus -
So far as far as I can tell, they have been
doing a very good job and I'd say actually a bit better than labels I have
worked with in the past. When we've been on this tour we have gone
out and checked the magazines in the stores and we've seen adds and
reviews and that's very important that we get the material out to the
people who can write about it and also like this, we have been doing
interviews with the magazines and radio stations. After, or
preferably before the shows if you're not stuck with a broken trailer
somewhere! So that's very good. That means a whole lot that
they are helping us to get out word out to the media.
MM -
Well I don't know what it has been like in the rest of Europe but over
here in Britain it has been pushed hard.
Pontus - That's nice. It's hard
when you have been out on the road for 5 weeks to get a grip of what's
going on around you while you are in this tour bubble, but what we have
seen seems like they have been doing a very good job.
MM -
The whole rock community as a whole seems very excited about The Poodles
at the moment. All the feedback I've seen has been very, very
positive. Everyone thinks that you will be going all the way and are
here for the long term and not just a one off album. Pontus
- That's very good to hear. We certainly hope so and we get that
question all of the time in all the places we have been playing.
Everyone has been asking us when we will be coming back and if we will be
playing any of the festivals this Summer. The main criticism is ...
" oh you played too short!" ... which is good. We certainly hope to
be back soon to play another round. MM - Well this tour
has given everyone a taste as to what you're all about and so maybe next
time you can come back and headline and play some festivals.
MM - How long did the album take to create from initial idea to the
final conception? Pontus -
This album was actually very pressed for time, mainly because of the
success we had in the Eurovision that once we were done with that
competition, basically the record label said ok, you have 4 weeks to do
the whole thing. So we starting collecting songs from all over the
place and recording and mixing the album. I think the final mixing
was perhaps in the beginning of April and the album was released on May
10th! So it was very pressed for time, but we had already done a
little bit of work with the songs and pre-producing and things like that.
It was tough, but it turned out very well. MM - 4 weeks!
That is phenomenal! Some bands take 4 years to do an album never
mind 4 weeks! Pontus
- Yes it was something like 4 or maybe 5 weeks max to do the whole thing,
it was amazing.
MM - How long have you as an individual been performing and can you
remember the first time you ever played to a live audience?
Pontus
– I think the very first time was very early when I was maybe 11 years
old. I had a band with some mates in school and we played in front
of my class. I think more seriously than that perhaps when I was
maybe 14 or 15, I started to play more seriously and around then was
probably when I had some more serious live performances. I've been
doing this for a while now.
MM - Can you remember what was the first band that you saw
perform live as a fan? Pontus
- Motorhead. MM - What are your memories of that gig?
Pontus - I
remember it was very loud. I was only like 13 or something and I was
amazed by the level of the sound and all these people. It was huge.
MM - Did you ever think that one day you would be that person up on
stage and everybody would be rocking and screaming and cheering at you?
Pontus
- Not really. I guess that dream has always
been there and it's really awesome for people these days to be able to go
around the whole of Europe playing in front of people. It is such a
great kick to be able to do it.
MM - I've noticed on your official website that you have this Poodles
'Backstage Area' fan club thing going on. What made you decide to
start the fan club and do you perhaps see yourselves as some sort of hard
rock boy band with a poster on the back of everyone's bedroom door?
Pontus - I don't know, I had never thought
of it that way! It's not unusual for bands to have a fan club and we
just maybe do it a little different to other bands. It's all
basically online and you pay a small fee to become a member and basically
what you do is pay for a special t-shirt and badge and you get access to
this special page on our website which gives you a little more of the
goodies, stories behind the scenes and stuff like that.
MM - Every musician at some point in their life decides to pick
up an instrument and learn how to play. What was it that made you
decide to do so in the first place? Pontus -
I started playing the bass when I was about 14. The
reason was basically because a friend of mine wanted to start a band and
needed a bass player, so I said ok I'll try that. Even before that I
always had the dream to become a musician and to play in front of people.
I've been going to some music schools and stuff like that, but most of the
things I've learned, I must say I have either learned at home sitting in my
room practising, or the best school of all is just doing it. Playing it
together with a band and preferably live on stage in front of people.
That's the best school you can ever have. MM - Can you
play any other instruments or is it purely the bass?
Pontus - Not really. I can strum a
few chords on the guitar and maybe do some piano, really easy piano
playing, but I wouldn't say I was a guitar player. It's pretty much
just the bass guitar.
MM - At the moment you are out on tour with Hammerfall. Is there any
other bands you would like to go out on tour with, either as support acts
or as headliner? Pontus
- There are plenty. We always try to do our own thing and go
out every night and give a really good energetic show to the crowd and I
think it doesn't really matter who we play before or after. There's
lots of bands I would like to go out and play with, but no one in
particular.
MM - What bands did you grow up with?
Pontus - My
first introduction to this kind of music was Thin Lizzy, AC/DC and then
later I got into liking Led Zeppelin a whole lot and Deep Purple.
Then I went on to Black Sabbath and Iron Maiden. I started with
70's hard rock bands and then on to the 80's heavy metal bands. MM
- What sort of music do you listen to at the moment?
Pontus - Currently I am very much into
Audioslave and a band called Kings X. Audioslave is the most recent
band that I have got into.
MM - Finally is there anything we haven't already covered that you would
like to say to all our readers out there?
Pontus - Just check out our music and come see us live in concert if you get the chance, you won't be disappointed.
MM - I'd like to second that. This band certainly do not disappoint
with their live show and their debut album 'Metal Will Stand Tall' will
definitely be featuring in our top album releases of 2007. I'd like
to thank Pontus for taking the time out to chat with us tonight after what
must have been a very long and stressful occasion. We look forward
to seeing them return to our shores in the near future and wish them every
success with the new album. |