Sunday, July 5, 2009

Thank you, Arvika!

Now that I have that Depeche Mode ranting and raving out of my system (well, sort of), I think I can tell abit about the festival in general.

We, meaning me and a friend, left early on Thursday, and had a stop at a shopping centre just across the border in Sweden, seeing as beer and food is cheaper over there, before driving the last bit to Arvika. As we unloaded the stuff we quickly understood that this might be one hell of a walk. I was sure I'd tried to pack as lightly as I could, but when you insist on such luxuries as an airmatress, a party tent and comfy camping chairs, you have to be prepared to haul heavy shit around. When you add the fact that we were stupid enough to shop lots of beer/soda and food BEFORE setting up our campsite, you get... a big pile of stuff to carry. I ended up hauling a 20kg backpack with an 11kg partytent strapped to it on my back, and in each hand I had a big, brown paper bag stuffed with food and drinks. The marshals at the entrance to the campsite nearly applaused me as I arrived huffing and puffing, drenched in sweat, and were kind enough to help me with my backpack and hand me some water. I think I earned some respect, and some of the marshals actually greeted me several times after that.

Luxury camping!
The campsite we'd chosen as a new feature at this years festival; the "quiet" camp. Which really is a bad name, it should've been named "the more luxurious, less noisy camp for a slightly more mature festival crowd". Or something. It was situated on a football field, meaning we had a flat ground, we had access to our "own" showers and toilets in addition to the normal port-a-potties, lots of marshals walking around picking up trash or just answering general questions, it was located much closer to the festival area than the other campsites - in short, the benefits were many, and I was very happy I chose to dish out the extra €10 to live there, well worth it!

The heat!
Now, large parts of northern Europe, at least Norway and Sweden, has had a few weeks of nearly tropical weather, with bright sunshine and temperatures from 20 to 35 degrees celcius. I will admit that I have spent the past 4 months praying for nice weather, the prospect of living at a festival campsite in heavy rain for days really sounded as much as fun as the swine flu, but I might've overdone it a bit. Living outsite with nothing but a cheap party tent to protect you from the heat can be one hell of a challenge, and feel like what amounts to pure torture; you don't have anywhere to run or hide but the shade, and that help only marginally. After a while you realise you just have to accept the fact that you'll be drenched in sweat until the sun goes down, and remember to drink lots of water. The heat also resulted in me drinking a lot less than what one could expect, because we had no way of cooling the beer we'd hauled all the way there, and the idea of being really hungover in that heat made me want to cry the big wet. All in all it was a good thing: I can remember everything, I didn't spend as much money as I might have done, I wasn't hungover and I now have a lot of beer in my fridge.

The Arvika Festival has grown a lot since I last visited it in 2003, with more campsites, more stages, more acts and more visitors, but it is still a quite "small" festival compared to others. And I really love it. The tickets are cheap, the food and beer doesn't cost TOO much, the marshals and volunteer workers are really nice, and there are bands and music to suit just about everyone's taste. This year I got to see Detektivbyrån, Mars Volta, Nine Inch Nails, Elegant Machinery, Bob Hund and Depeche Mode. I regret not seeing Røyksopp, but they played on the day we arrived, and I was so knackered I just had to sit quietly on my bum for a while and enjoy a beer that was actually cold. Nine Inch Nails did a better performance here than they did at the Øya festival in 2007, or so I thought, maybe I just got a better view (and a cold beer). Trent's performance of "Hurt" was the absolute highlight, the level of noise from the crowd dropped to zero, everyone sang along with intense concentration and a focused calm, it was actually very emotional.

Bob Hund
I was positively surprised by Bob Hund's performance. Bob Hund is a band I really don't know how to describe, they're labeled as "indierock" inspired by Velvet Underground, Gun Club, Kraftwerk and the Pixies, but that doesn't do them justice. The vocalist is one of the most fascinating characters I've ever seen, he freaks me out and pulls me in at the same time. He's energetic, hyperactive, eccentric, funny and intense, and the concert was interesting and entertaining to watch even though I don't have much of a relationship with their music. But I do think I will always prefer Bob Hund live, their studio recordings aren't half as interesting.

All in all this was my best festival trip to date. I didn't get too drunk, too hungover or too broke, I learned the value of taking the trouble to carry a few extra luxury items along, had great people for company, I saw some good bands, had a few near-religious experiences and had my best concert and musical experience of my life. Can't ask for more, can I?

My personal jesus.


Sweden. The Arvika Festival. Sunset. Tropical temperatures. 24 000 people. And Depeche Mode.

March 29th I bought my ticket to the festival, after a month of trying to get someone to come with me. The sole reason was Depeche Mode. I didn't need anything else. Everything else was just a bonus. Almost 4 months of painstaking waiting was ahead of me, and I did the only thing I could do: prayed for good weather. Might have overdone it with the praying, but by 21.55 on july 3rd I didn't care about tropical temperatures bordering on torture; all I could think of was that Depeche Mode probably was backstage, just metres away from me, and that I was about to see them live.

High expectations and long waits are dangerous, they build up to something that might or might not be as good as you think, and either way it'll be over way too soon, and then you'll be in such a state of anticlimax you don't know what to do with yourself. But I didn't care about that either, it was 21.59 and I felt like I was about explode.

I started off way at the front of the stage, but didn't get close to the fence, and typically ended up exactly behind a guy who was approximately 2 metres tall, and that's not even exaggerating slightly. So I quickly retreated out of the honestly rather insane crowd and went to a slope on the side, where I sat down for a while, but eventually got up and got a very good, although a bit distant, view. But then again, all 24 000 of us can't be sweated on by Dave Gahan, no matter how much some of us would want to... Thank god for huge video screens.

Before the show I decided that I wouldn't spend the entire concert with my eye glued to the camera, missing the concert itself because I wanted to take pictures of it. I therefore did a few short burts of shooting with my new compact camera, mostly resulting in horribly blurry photos, but a few of them are sort of ok, as is the short videos I recorded, some of which can be seen on this page. I've uploaded my pictures to Flickr and Facebook also, if you're interested.

How to describe this concert? Where to start? On stage were Depeche Mode, a band that's been at it for 30 years without going stagnant, a band that has such a long string of good albums it's historic, and so many hits it's impossible to fit them into a single show. A band that hasn't broken up, despite drug problems, arguing, feuds, in fact it's a miracle and a frankly rather amazing accomplishment that they're not just still together, but getting on with each other better than ever. They're in a category of their own, and has the best song writer ever in Martin Gore. I was mezmerized, hypnotized, ecstatic, in love, in awe. I couldn't stop smiling.

The absolute highlights for me were the achingly sad Precious, and Martin Gore's live performance of "Home", where his beautiful voice and ever more beautiful piano chords gave me goosebumps, chills and made me cry. The image that will stick with me forever, however, is that of 24 000 people waving their hands wildly back and forth together with Dave Gahan, who waved wilder than anyone, during "Never let me down again". That moment was pure magic in all it's ecstasy. I'm not even sure I believe I was there, and that it actually was THEM I saw on stage, virtually metres away from me.
This concert will probably be the closest I'll ever come to a religious experience.
Thank you Dave, Martin and Andy.


(The moment which made it all worth it: 24 000 people waving their hands to "Never let me down again")


The few rewievs I've read on this concert have been negative or indifferent, describing poor choices in songs, a lack of real hits, a band out of tune, a lack of scenography, people leaving and the whole thing being a gigantic disappointment. Now, I might be biased, or very easy to please, (both, most likely, I probably would've been happy if they'd just stood there and waved for 105 minutes) but I think they're wrong. I already harbor a strong dislike for self-proclaimed all-knowing music critics who think their opinion matter. Firstly; they have so many "hit songs" it's impossible to fit them into a single show, as I said before, and some are bound to be disappointed. The band being out of tune I didn't pick up on at all. And the lack of scenography and special effects is just a result of this being a festival gig; Bob Hund left the stage at 20.30, that left 90 minutes to rig down their stuff, and rig up for Depeche Mode, do line checks, sound checks etc. In short: there's no time for bloody statues or flying doves or huge rigs or whatever the hell they expected. In an arena show they might have hours and hours for rigging up. As for the people leaving; couldn't have been that many, because the entire area seemed jam packed with people, people stood or sat wherever they could.

The first thing I did when I came home was to grab my computer and hit the online ticket service, and the result is a ticket for their postponed show in Bergen, Norway, which was originally meant to take place on July 2nd. The tickets are horribly expensive, Depeche Mode even tried to sue the concert arranger to get the prices down, they've always been adamant that their productions, tickets and merchandise won't be overpriced. Sadly, for my wallet at least, they didn't get anywhere with it. I had two choices when I bought the tickets, the "normal" ones and the "golden circle", which basically is a closed-off section to the front and left of the stage, which has a limited number of tickets, meaning that I won't have to stand in line forever to get a good spot, and I won't get squeezed to death. It cost as much as the entire 3 day pass did for the Arvika Festival, and I more than likely have to go alone, but I really couldn't care less. I now have something to look forward to again! Now, what to pray for? Backstage passes?


Setlist:
In Chains
Wrong
Hole to feed
Walking in my shoes
It's no good
A question of Time
Precious
Fly on the windscreen
Home
Come Back
Peace
In your room
I feel you
Enjoy the silence
Never let me down again

Encore:
Stripped
Personal Jesus



(Depeche Mode - Enjoy the silence live @ Arvika 2009. Pure magic.)