Bob Hund

bob hund
Background information
Origin Sweden
Genres Rock, Indie
Years active 1991–present
Labels Silence Records
Associated acts Bergman Rock, Sci-Fi SKANE
Website bobhund.se
Members Conny Nimmersjö
Johnny Essing
Jonas Jonasson
Mats Andersson
Mats Hellqvist
Thomas Öberg
Christian Gabel

bob hund (Swedish for "bob dog") is an indie rock band from Sweden. Their music, hard to classify, has been described as "what you might expect if you managed to merge Pere Ubu and Pixies with a touch of Kraftwerk".[1] bob hund have performed mostly in Scandinavia as well as in Poland and England. Some of their performances include Roskilde, Hultsfred, Ruisrock and Quart music festivals.

History

Logotype of the band bob hund
Logotype of the band bob hund

bob hund was formed in 1991 by Jonas Jonasson (keyboards) and Thomas Öberg (vocals) after meeting in high school. After six formative months the band's line-up was finished, with Conny Nimmersjö and Johnny Essing on guitar, Mats Hellqvist on bass and Mats Andersson on drums.[2] Legend has it that Essing joined rehearsals to pay off a 100 SEK debt to Hellqvist, and just kept coming back.[3]

The band was signed to Silence Records in 1993, and that same year released their debut EP, bob hund.[4] The following year they released their first album, also called bob hund, and won Rock Band of the Year at the Swedish Grammy Awards, Grammisgalan. (They won another Grammis for Best Lyrics in 1996.)[5]

In 1995, after extensive touring, the band went on hiatus as the members worked on new material, which would later make up the foundations for Omslag: Martin Kann (1996)[4] - named after a friend of the band, who've done most of the band's graphics work over the years. The album broke the top 10,[6] but singles I stället för musik, förvirring ("Instead of music, confusion") and Düsseldorf would both fail to break the singles top 10 - peaking at 13 and 28 respectively.

Though exclusively singing in Swedish, they started to gain attention outside of Sweden and Scandinavia. The band claimed in a press release that Graham Coxon - who has voiced his admiration of the band in interviews - asked to play with them, but that the band declined the offer.[7][8]

bob hund once again toured extensively, and was awarded Live Band of the Year by Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet.[8] In December 1998 Jag rear ut min själ! Allt skall bort!!! ("I'm Selling Off My Soul! Everything Must Go!!!") was released followed by the live album bob hund sover aldrig ("bob hund Never Sleeps").[4]

At the start of the new millennium, when equipment worth 115,000 SEK was stolen from their van.[9] During this time, the band members had slowed down the activity of bob hund to concentrate on side projects - among others Bergman Rock, a rock band consisting of all bob hund members, but where Öberg sang in English rather than Swedish. New bob hund material would not surface until single Ska du hänga med? Nä!! ("Are you tagging along? Nah!!") and album Stenåldern kan börja ("Let the Stone Age Begin") was released in early 2001. The album would be the band's first, and as of August 2010 only, to chart at number one.[6]

2002 saw the release of Ingenting ("Nothing"), a compilation album containing old demos from 1992–1993, a limited vinyl pressing of 1000 copies only, single Den lilla planeten ("The Small Planet"). The two CD 10 år tillbaka och 100 år framåt ("10 Years Back and 100 Years Forward") was also released this year. The first disc being a singles compilation, and the second disc contained a live performance recorded in London 2001. During the performance Öberg can be heard explaining, in English, that he'll only speak Swedish to the crowd so they'll know they've paid for the real deal.[10]

After the release of Det där nya som skulle vara så bra ("That New Thing That Was Supposed To Be So Good") the band went on an extended hiatus to concentrate on Bergman Rock and the dance side project Sci-Fi SKANE. The band started touring as bob hund again in late 2006, but would not release any new material until 2008s single Tinnitus i hjärtat ("Tinnitus of the Heart")[11] and album Folkmusik för folk som inte kan bete sig som folk ("Folk music for folk who can't behave like folk").

On June 16, 2009, Christian Gabel officially joined as the seventh member of the band, filling in on drums.[12] In the following year the new lineup released the four-track EP Stumfilm ("Silent Movie").

The group released an album on the 16th of March Det överexponerade gömstället ("The Overexposed Hideout"). As a form of commemoration of their 20th anniversary, a second album was released the 15th of February 2012, called Låter som miljarder ("Sounds Like Billions").

On July 6, 2013, the band organized a festival in Folkets Hamn, Helsingborg. At this festival the group would auction off their old instruments and other objects that were left in their old rehearsal studio. The group themselves did not play at this festival, and were instead DJ:ing.

On September 12, 2014, the band premiered a new soundtrack for the silent film Man With a Movie Camera at Cinemateket in Stockholm, with subsequent performances in Helsinki, Luleå, Gothenburg and Malmö.[13]


Discography

Studio releases

Compilations

Awards

Notes

  1. Kristoffer Noheden (2004-01-06). "Bergman Rock review". On Record. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  2. bob hund Official Web Site
  3. Interview Archived February 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. with Thomas Öberg, 4 juli 1998.
  4. 1 2 3 Silence Records Official Web Site Archived May 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  5. Grammisgalan. Official Web Site. See, History.
  6. 1 2 SwedishCharts.com bob hund Discography
  7. Groove - Interview with Graham Coxon
  8. 1 2 Press release for Helgen v.48 Archived July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. Aftonbladet February 16, 2000
  10. 10 år tillbaka och 100 år framåt - disc 2
  11. SVT - Sveriges Television, September 2008
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-03-04. Retrieved 2009-06-30.
  13. "Bob Hund - Mannen med filmkameran". Cinemateket. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  14. Silence Records

External links

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