Roxette – 30-year anniversary of Crash! Boom! Bang!

30 years ago, Roxette released their fifth album Crash! Boom! Bang!, including a stream of hit singles like Sleeping In My Car, the title track, Fireworks, Run To You and Vulnerable.

The album would sell more than five million copies and was followed by their second World Tour, which saw them perform for over a million people, including the second performance ever by an international act in China.

We’re celebrating this classic album’s 30-year anniversary with a unique special edition: a gatefold double album in black and white vinyl with 18 tracks and an 8-page booklet with brand new liner notes, as well as an 18-track CD version that also includes a bonus CD with 23 demo recordings of songs considered for the album.

Per Gessle says:

Roxette were among the three most played artists on American radio during 1989, 1990 and 1991, and we were on top of the charts all over the world. So, it’s no wonder we felt pretty confident when it was time to record the new album.

Having had that kind of success made us feel that we had a perfect opportunity to stretch out into new directions. To show slightly different sides of what Roxette could be. And I still think “Crash! Boom! Bang!” is our best album.

The 30-year anniversary versions of Crash! Boom! Bang! will be released on 6th December. Watch out for the fireworks!

You can secure your copy through THIS pre-order link, but the anniversary release will be available worldwide, so check it with your local record shop as well. CBB30 will be available on streaming platforms as well.

Watch the promo video HERE!

 

 

Tracklist double vinyl:

Side A

1.  Harleys & Indians (Riders In The Sky)
2.  Crash! Boom! Bang!
3.  Fireworks
4.  Run To You

Side B

1.  Sleeping In My Car
2.  Vulnerable
3.  The First Girl On The Moon
4.  Place Your Love
5.  I Love The Sound Of Crashing Guitars

Side C

1.  What’s She Like?
2.  Do You Wanna Go The Whole Way?
3.  Lies
4.  I’m Sorry
5.  Love Is All (Shine Your Light On Me)

Side D

1.  Go To Sleep
2.  Almost Unreal
3.  Crazy About You
4.  See Me

Tracklist CD:

1.  Harleys & Indians (Riders In The Sky)
2.  Crash! Boom! Bang!
3.  Fireworks
4.  Run To You
5.  Sleeping In My Car
6.  Vulnerable
7.  The First Girl On The Moon
8.  Place Your Love
9.  I Love The Sound Of Crashing Guitars
10.  What’s She Like?
11.  Do You Wanna Go The Whole Way?
12.  Lies
13.  I’m Sorry
14.  Love Is All (Shine Your Light On Me)
15.  Go To Sleep
16.  Almost Unreal
17.  Crazy About You
18.  See Me

Bonus CD: Demos

1.  Harleys & Indians – T&A Demo Aug 10, 1993
2.  Crash! Boom! Bang! – T&A Demo May 6, 1993
3.  Fireworks – T&A Demo Jan 30, 1993
4.  Run To You – T&A Demo Dec 12, 1992
5.  Sleeping In My Car – Stockholm Demo Version 1993
6.  Vulnerable – T&A Demo Dec 28, 1990
7.  The First Girl On The Moon – T&A Demo Dec 20, 1992 – Previously unreleased
8.  Place Your Love – T&A Demo Nov 10, 1992
9.  I Love The Sound Of Crashing Guitars – T&A Demo Jun 27, 1993 – Previously unreleased
10.  What’s She Like? – T&A Demo Jan 29, 1992 – Previously unreleased
11.  Do You Wanna Go The Whole Way? – T&A Demo Mar 21, 1993
12.  Lies – T&A Demo May 14, 1993 – Previously unreleased
13.  I’m Sorry – T&A Demo Mar 18, 1993
14.  Love Is All – T&A Demo Dec 17, 1992
15.  She Doesn’t Live Here Anymore – T&A Demo Dec 16, 1992 – Previously unreleased
16.  Almost Unreal – T&A Demo Feb 1993
17.  Crazy About You – T&A Demo Jun 20, 1993
18.  Sweet Thing – T&A Demo Dec 16, 1992
19.  Always Breaking My Heart – T&A Demo Dec 27, 1992
20.  Before You Go To Sleep – T&A Demo Nov 23, 1992
21.  Blue Umbrella – T&A Demo Jun 15, 1993
22.  It Hurts – T&A Demo Mar 7, 1993
23.  Gone Gone Gone – T&A Demo Feb 25, 1993

Marie Fredriksson’s 2014 live concert at Cirkus, Stockholm to be released on double LP

In 2014, Marie Fredriksson embarked on her final tour, performing her own Swedish songs. This record features her major hits such as Sparvöga, Ett hus vid havet, Den bästa dagen, Ännu doftar kärlek, Tro, among others, along with some then-newly written songs like Ett bord i solen. Marie herself explained to the audience that she wrote this song after receiving her cancer diagnosis. The tour travelled across the country, and the stop at Cirkus in Stockholm on 8th April was recorded. Now, the entire 18-track concert is available on this double vinyl, a direct capture of that unforgettable evening at the legendary Cirkus in Stockholm. It’s intimate, authentic, and filled with an overwhelming sense of giving everything to her audience.

This year marks ten years since the concert took place and five years since Marie passed away. This release is dedicated to remembering and honouring one of our greatest female artists of all time, Marie Fredriksson.

The record is a beautiful 180-gram double vinyl in a gatefold edition, with a total run of 1,000 copies. Release date of Live från Cirkus (2LP) is 6th December. Pre-order at Bengans!

Tracklist

Side A

  1. Så stilla så långsamt
  2. Kom vila hos mig
  3. Bara för en dag
  4. Det regnar igen
  5. Sista sommarens vals

Side B

  1. Ber bara en gång
  2. Sparvöga
  3. Ett hus vid havet
  4. Ett bord i solen
  5. Så skimrande var aldrig havet

Side C

  1. Ännu doftar kärlek
  2. Så länge det lyser mittemot
  3. Om du såg mig nu
  4. Efter stormen

Side D

  1. Den sjunde vågen
  2. Mellan sommar och höst
  3. Den bästa dagen
  4. Tro

Bid on a guitar signed by Gyllene Tider for a good cause!

This year Mustaschkampen, a campaign organized by Prostate Cancer Association in Sweden turns 10. To draw extra attention to this, together with their main partners they are organizing a live streamed digital auction. Bidding opened on 1st November and it ends live on the campaign website with the auction starting at 19:00 CET on Saturday, 9th November. Proceeds go directly to continued research initiatives around prostate cancer.

One of the items on auction is a guitar signed by all members of Gyllene Tider. Starting bid: 15,000 SEK.

To be able to participate, you must register on the campaign page by 17:00 CET on 9th November.

Per-Anders Nygård, campaign manager for Mustaschkampen says:

We want to try something new and fun, while also wanting to change the way men look at their health. The auction will be a way to raise awareness of prostate cancer and make more men dare to go to the doctor, while we can also continue to raise funds for research and development. It feels great.

Gyllene Tider says:

Mustaschkampen engages so many people all over Sweden. Of course, we at Gyllene Tider support the fight against prostate cancer. The fact that we sign a guitar together for a charitable purpose is something completely unique. Do you want to join in and contribute to Mustaschkampen’s important work while getting an acoustic guitar signed by Per Gessle, Mats Persson, Anders Herrlin, Göran Fritzon and Micke Syd Andersson? Take the opportunity to bid on this rarity. As bonus, you will get the book “Gyllene Tider – Hux Flux – Hela Sveriges dagbok” and PG plectrums.

Per Gessle on Nordic Rox – September 2024

Per Gessle and Sven Lindström count down from 10 to 6 on Sirius XM in the third part of their ’70s countdown in the September episode of Nordic Rox.

Per asks Sven how he is doing. Sven is fine. He asks Per how his summer was and PG says it was excellent. No touring for him this year, so he has been really lazy in the sun. Sven is joking that it is Per’s favourite position. Mr. G confirms, that’s where he belongs.

The guys are up to play music that defined the Swedish ’70s, goodies that have never been played on American radio before.

Sven and Per kick off the show Only Summer by Green & Granstrom. Sven informs that it’s a rather interesting cooperation between a guy from Malmö, Sweden, called Lars Brundin, songwriter, also photographer and a friend in the States called Jimmy Granstrom, who has been working with one of Lars’ tracks and written an English lyric to that. So that’s Only Summer and it was recorded in the States. So it’s a bit of a Swedish-American partnership there.

Late To The Party by Anna Lille is next, a new song from Norway by a 20-year-old singer. It’s a good track.

Shimmy Shimmy Style by Teddybears comes next. The guys are guessing it was released maybe 10 years ago. [It was released in 2018. /PP] Per loves the Teddybears. They have done some great songs. They are a pretty cool band, Sven thinks. They should produce more music, new music. He is always eager to hear more music from them. So if this message reaches them, back to the studio. Per says they are probably lazy in the sun. Haha. Sven says summer is over, boys. Get back to work! Haha.

The guys take another trip to Norway. and play Tired Old Dog by Sløtface.

Then comes Sällskapssjuk featuring Per Gessle and singer Lena Philipsson. Per says it’s an impossible word to say in English. He has some English friends and he tried to translate that phrase for them, but that word doesn’t exist in English. Sven says it means that you are really longing to be with someone. You are longing for company, Per says. It’s a great phrase in Sweden. Sven says that the immediate translation would be company sick, but that would take the focus away. This single was released a month or two ago and it’s also the title for the upcoming album. Per has recorded an album with lots of duets, and Lena is one of them. She is a great singer, and she is also going to be lead singer on the upcoming Roxette tour, starting in South Africa and Australia next year. Sven thinks that must be terribly interesting and exciting. Per confirms it is. He brought together the old Roxette band. They unfortunately lost Marie and also Pelle, the drummer, but the rest of them are coming with PG, and Lena is doing the vocals. They are going to play the old Roxette catalogue. It’s going to be cool, Mr. G thinks.

The guys get down to the mission of this episode, to dig deep into the Swedish ’70s, to songs that they think define that decade. At No. 10 there is an amazing song called Livet är en fest (Life is a party) by Nationalteatern. It was a big hit in 1974. Sven thinks it’s a fantastic album, very unusual also for the time, because they were like a prog band, a progressive leftist band. They didn’t sound like any other band. Per agrees. They were like a theatre. They went to schools, played performances. They had some really wonderful songs. This soundtrack to this particular show became a big thing. Per thinks it was a No. 1 album in Sweden. Sven confirms. It became a classic. They had a bit of a punk ethos to them. They started out like actors and then they learned to play to reach out to teenagers. Then they became better and better, but still had that sort of half amateurish thing, which is making them unique. According to PG, it sounds great. The sound of this record is really cool. It still is.

No. 9 is a classic Swedish artist. The song they play is from his debut album released in 1975. He is called Ulf Lundell, a big artist in Sweden. He is still around and touring once in a while. He was really big in the ’80s, especially. His debut album sounds like the mid-70s a lot. Sven agrees. The track is called Då kommer jag och värmer dej (I’ll come and keep you warm) and it is sort of a blues pop song. Quite cool. Ulf Lundell made a major breakthrough on the Swedish scene, both musically and culturally in general. He published his first book, Jack, about growing up in the ’60s. It was a big success. He came from nowhere and just boom, entered like that.

No. 8 is a song from 1977, so there is a bit of a punk influence here as well. The guys are talking about Magnus Uggla, who had his big breakthrough with this album and this song. He came from the glam rock scene. It was a sucker for Mott The Hoople and Ian Hunter and Bowie and that kind of stuff. He moved into the scene with one foot in glam rock and the other one in punk, the new wave scene. The title for this album, his third album, was Va ska man ta livet av sig för när man ändå inte får höra snacket efteråt (What’s the use of committing suicide when you can’t hear the talk afterwards). Haha. It’s a great one, Per thinks. The song they play was really big. It was everywhere in the late of ’77 and it was super controversial as well, because he was singing about going out, getting girls and trying to get girls laid. He wrote about it in a way that was really to the point with no further ado. There were a lot of controversial debates about if one can really write such songs. Per remembers that. He was a punk guy, but he was from a nobility family, so that was also a question mark, if you can really be a punk if you are upper class. Varning på stan is played.

The guys are ready to move forward to something completely different, as they say in Monty Python. Ted Gärdestad, who was a very young singer-songwriter in the early ’70s, had a big breakthrough when he was 15, in 1972. His first two albums were produced by Björn and Benny from ABBA and they were really wonderful songs. His brother wrote the lyrics and Ted himself wrote the music. You can still hear his songs all the time, even today. His music has just transferred over generations. It still moves a lot of people. The song they play is Per’s favourite song on this. It’s called Come Give Me Love. The girl singers you hear are Agnetha and Frida from ABBA, singing the chorus. Despite the English title, the Swedish lessons continue. It’s a taste of Ted Gärdestad at his best in 1973. Per thinks this amazing song has a wonderful sound.

The final song from the ’70s on this show is from the end of the decade, autumn of 1979. It’s a band that Per is totally in control over, everything that happened, because it’s Gyllene Tider, Mr. G’s power pop group. Per says this is a song from their first album recorded in 1979 and it became their first No. 1 single in the early months of 1980. It kicked the doors open for the major breakthrough and changed everything for all of them. It was a double A side single. The record label wasn’t really sure about which song they should promote. It was also the era of all this dance stuff that was typical of the late ’70s. The other song was more of a dance record and this was like a homemade sort of reggae style. Sven says they were heavily influenced by the new wave movement. Blondie, Elvis Costello & The Attractions, Ramones. PG adds Tom Petty. They loved the new wave and really loved proper songs and going back to the ’60s and ’70s as well. The whole attitude they had… they were like 18, 19, 20 years old. Sven says the 20-year-old Per Gessle sat down writing a lyric that made this one stand out, definitely on the radio. PG says it’s about checking out the girls on TV. The ones who present the show. You had the hostess those days in between the programs. It’s TV2. Sweden at that time had two channels. Sven explains the double meaning of part of the lyrics. What Per says basically is to put on TV2 and put on the girls on TV2. Per says it was a little game with the words. A little bit of innuendo, Sven says. And it made it happen, PG says. Sven says now the listeners are totally aware of what this song is all about and they play Flickorna på TV2 (The girls on TV2).

Next month the guys are back with the top five. Per promises it’s going to be sensational.

The next song on the show is a track about Elvis by Albin Lee Meldau. PG says he is a great guy and a fantastic singer. He is like a troubadour, singer-songwriter. Per has seen shows with him, just him and an acoustic guitar, which are amazing. He is actually touring in Europe right now and Mr. G is sure he is going to be big. Elvis, I Love You is a taster of an upcoming album in English, something to look out for. He is also Per’s partner in his duet album project. Per has made a single with him as well. He is wonderful, PG thinks.

Sweet Jackie by Sugarplum Fairy is wrapping up this Nordic Rox episode. Per thinks it’s a great song. Sven thinks the chorus is beautiful.

Sven and Per thank the listeners for joining them and Cigarettes by Anita Lindblom closes the show, as usual.

Photo by Anders Roos, 2019

Thanks for your support, Sven!

Per Gessle and Lena Philipsson on Efter fem

Per Gessle and Lena Philipsson were guests on Efter fem, TV4 last Sunday. HERE you can watch Anna Brolin’s interview with them.

The program starts with people from the streets singing Roxette songs. Anna says there is no doubt that fans are excited about the upcoming Roxette tour that starts in Cape Town in February. She asks Per and Lena how it feels. Lena says it feels good now. They have started the rehearsals and she is focusing on planning now. She has already started looking at lyrics to try to get into it already now. Per says it’s a test for Lena to learn all the lyrics. PG thinks it’s easier for him, because it’s complicated to learn all the chords, but he has a relation to the lyrics, because he has written all of them. He says they have started acoustic rehearsals and it’s really exciting. Anna asks them if the rehearsals go well. Per says they haven’t argued too much. Lena confirms. Haha. She says it’s going well and they look to the future. There are many songs to sink your teeth into, but it’s fun. She is really looking forward to doing this.

Anna asks Per how it feels to bring the Roxette catalogue around the world again. Mr. G says it feels fantastic. It was quite a difficult decision. He has been wondering what he would be going to do with it or if he would leave everything alone. It has taken him many years to decide. The main point is that there is a whole world out there that still loves this music. He has written basically all the songs that Roxette has recorded, so they are very much his babies in a way. But the token only fell into place when he worked with Lena a year ago in connection with that thing [he points at the new album that is on the table in front of Anna], the Sällskapssjuk album… In the studio he realized how good Lena is. She could sing these songs.

Anna says she is very curious about that call that was made after, but before they get down to that, here comes a little background info about both Per and Lena’s career.

Johan Macéus talks about Gyllene Tider, their first three albums, then the first connection between Lena and Per in 1986 when Per wrote the song Kärleken är evig, Lena’s success at Melodifestivalen. The same year, Per recorded the song Neverending Love with Marie Fredriksson. They called themselves Roxette and Roxette soon became a success in Sweden. In 1989 they also broke through in the USA with The Look. It Must Have Been Love was in the movie Pretty Woman and became a worldwide hit in 1990. Over the years, Roxette topped the charts again and again, they toured all over the world and have sold around 75 million albums. Lena won Melodifestivalen in 2004. Now the two stars unite. Last spring, they released the song Sällskapssjuk together as part of Per Gessle’s newly released duet album.

Per explains that the album is full of duets and one of them is with Lena. When PG worked with Lena in the studio, he felt that she was really good. Lena has all the qualities needed to be able to sing Roxette songs. It’s not the easiest thing, Per says. Anna asks him what qualities Lena has. Lena is laughing here, but Per says she has a personality and energy and she sings cleanly and nicely. She has everything a good singer should have.

Anna asks Lena if she agrees. Lena asks Anna if she really should answer that question. Haha. She says Roxette songs are quite extensive and demanding. They demand a woman.

Anna wants to know what made Per think that they should do something more together. PG says it was something he talked about before. It’s a decision that has taken a very long time to make and he needed these little things like feedback from the big Roxette audience around the world. Many have wanted this to happen. He notices from streaming numbers that Roxette is just keep getting bigger and bigger. Roxette is more than 30 years of his life. So when Lena came into the studio and he heard her singing, he thought, shit, that’s not a bad idea. He was thinking how he should ask her. He didn’t ask directly. A few weeks passed before they met again.

Anna turns to Lena and asks her how it happened. Lena says she was down there in Halmstad and sang this duet Sällskapssjuk. Actually, Per asked her if she would go to Halmstad or if she would rather record in Stockholm. Then Lena thought she would go down to Halmstad, because then she would be in Per’s environment and then they could bond a little and maybe have some dinner. It might lead to something more. Then afterwards, it didn’t take that long. Per says it was three weeks, Lena says it was a few days until Per contacted her and said they should meet, because he wanted to ask Lena a question. Lena doesn’t know what she expected. Maybe some tour together or some more songs together. She was very surprised when it was this particular question. She wasn’t prepared for that at all. Anna is curious what the question was exactly. Lena says it was a straight up question. Per asked her if she would like to join Roxette on tour. She was surprised and started thinking that it can be difficult, because then she has to sing Marie’s songs. She was wondering how it would be received. It’s not an easy task for another artist to step in and do it. Per was very excited and thought this would be fun. He told Lena that she should do her own thing. Then Lena was thinking for a little while and then she said yes. Per says it was a good decision.

Anna says they were digging a bit in the archives and found out that there is one thing that is common in Per and Lena’s creation of music. Both Per and Lena have created Sweden’s most famous na-na-na-na-na-nas. Here they show the two songs where they sing na-na-na-na-na-na. Per says he thought Anna was going to say that they had Sweden’s two strangest dialects. Haha. Lena says, that too. Haha.

Anna asks her guests what their relationship is to each other’s music. Per and Lena look at each other and they say na-na-na is apparently the secret link between them. Haha. Lena says they come from the same era and they have been in the music industry for a very long time. Per says the music industry is different today versus when they started. He adds that there is no 40-year age gap between them, they are both veterans. There are a lot of meeting points. Per doesn’t say it was better before, but it was different.

Anna turns to Lena and asks her about her relationship to Roxette songs in particular. These are very big songs, as she also mentioned before and they demand a woman. Anna is curious if there are any songs that Lena feels like it’s an honour to sing. Lena probably feels that with all the songs actually. She thinks the whole mission is like that, that she feels that it is important to shape up and do it really well. She absolutely feels that. It doesn’t apply to a specific song, it applies to everything. If she has to mention songs, then it’s the biggest hits, of course. That they make them so that it feels good and everyone is happy. It Must Have Been Love, Spending My Time, Dressed For Success.

Anna asks Per what the feedback from the fans was after the announcement was made and the dates were out. PG experiences a huge interest. One can see that in the ticket sales. People don’t really know what they are buying. Lena adds that it’s more like a pig in a poke. Haha. Per thinks it’s cool, because Lena is a magically talented singer and she is also magically good on stage. So if you don’t know who Lena is and you go to Melbourne or to Perth and see Roxette next year, you’ll be shocked at how good it is. Per is completely convinced of that.

Lena says she always finds it difficult when expectations are set this high. She doesn’t really like it, but she will do her best. She can’t do anything other than do her best. People around the world don’t know who she is. So she leans towards the fact that she is also Swedish and that it was Per who has chosen her, so it’s his fault. You can always blame it on him. Haha.

Anna says the tour starts in Cape Town, then they go to Pretoria, then around Australia, Munich and there are a few dates in Sweden, but only in Halmstad and Gothenburg. She asks what happened to Vetlanda. Lena is wondering too. Haha. Per says there will be more gigs in Europe next summer, but not all the dates are out yet. He can’t promise that Vetlanda will be there, but they can discuss it.

Anna says Per was on many world tours, he knows touring life very well. She asks what tips he has for Lena regarding a world tour. Per says it’s not much different than touring in Sweden. It’s a prerequisite that you like to be on tour. He thinks that both Lena and he does. It’s great to meet people. You get an enormously positive energy from being on tour. But you also have to take care of yourself. Sleep properly. There is a lot of waiting. Waiting at airports and waiting for everything. Per turns to Lena and says she has to go to bed on time. Haha. Lena agrees that there is no difference. It’s the same routine anyway. You check in at a hotel, rest before the concert, you go to the venue, sit in the dressing room and get ready. Then you have to perform and do a good job. It’s the same, just further away. Per says everything is about the concert. That’s the priority.

Anna says Lena and Per have known each other for a very long time. PG corrects her and says they don’t know each other very well. They have had parallel careers, they have run into each other at the Grammys, stuff like that, but they haven’t hung out. Lena says maybe they do that now on tour.

Anna says Per talked pretty nicely about Lena musically. Now she is curious what Lena thinks is the brilliance of Per. Lena says she doesn’t know how many songs Per has managed to write. It’s incredible! It’s crazy! He has exactly the same energy all the time. He is just as curious, just as interested in working as always, in a tireless, fantastic way. One is just full of admiration for this. Per says Lena is so kind and thanks for her words. He adds that it means he is very old. Lena says it means he is very talented.

Anna asks Per what the allure of going on tour with this incredible song catalogue is. Mr. G says that the journey Marie and he got to take part in is absolutely fantastic. If you look back at those eight years between 1988 and 1995, their heydays, it’s an unimaginable journey. There is almost no one who has experienced it from Sweden. So it’s clear that Per is longing to go back to that time. Now that he has the opportunity to hopefully be able to do it again, it just feels super exciting.

Anna wants to know what he is longing for most of all. Per says you are longing to come to new cultures, new countries, cities and people who even you don’t understand what they say, because they speak other languages, but they know every single song, every line of lyrics that you have written yourself. It’s an amazing experience, no matter if it is in Buenos Aires or in Warsaw or wherever.

Anna asks Per if it can happen that when they hang on to this a bit more, some more music can come from the two of them. Per says they don’t know. Anna turns to Lena if there can be more songs like this duet they released. Lena says she has no idea. It is Per who is writing. She has no idea what the future brings. They start with the tour and they will see if it feels fun and works well. So far it has worked great and they have so much fun. Per agrees.

Anna thinks a lot of people are excited to see the concerts. She says one just wants to go to Perth and see this. Per says she should come.

Anna thanks her guests for coming to the show and wishes good luck with the hanging, bonding and Cape Town in February. Per and Lena thank her for that.

Stills are from the interview