Marie Fredriksson’s biography in English – official press release

We have just received the official press release to the English edition of Marie’s biography, so we share it with you.

Marie Fredriksson’s Final Memoirs Gets English-Language Release
Iconic Roxette Singer Documented Her Influential and Inspirational Life Due From 1984 Publishing April 25, 2023

Cleveland, OH — Marie Fredriksson’s final memoirs, Listen to My Heart: Life, Love & Roxette, will see a worldwide English-language release from 1984 Publishing on April 25, 2023.

The 260-page hardcover is the fully candid and compelling life story of one of rock music’s most resilient lead singers. Given only a few months to live following a harrowing diagnosis in 2002 — yet surviving for 17 more years, until 2019 — Marie boldly forged ahead into a life with newfound courage and inspiration. She continued as both a solo singer and with Roxette, where she performed over 550 concerts to millions of fans, sold 75 million records, and released over 50 singles including several global hits. Stateside, the duo had four #1s with “Listen to Your Heart,” “It Must Have Been Love” (from the film Pretty Woman), “The Look,” and “Joyride.” In all, Roxette is Sweden’s biggest music group — second only to ABBA.

Heart-wrenching yet winning, and told with exceptional energy and sincerity, Listen to My Heart sheds new and revelatory light on the life and work of one of our generation’s most talented and courageous artists.

Marie wrote her memoirs in tandem with author Helena von Zweigbergk. “Ever since co-writing Marie’s memoirs in Swedish, I’ve always been asked about an English-language version; after all, Marie sang primarily in English with Roxette. I’m glad that we finally have that answer,” says Helena. “I was so deeply moved by the enormous amount of love that Marie both gave and received over the years, and I know how much this release would have meant to her. It’s a book about strength, love, a remarkable career and a woman who gave life her all, each and every day.” Helena wrote a new afterword for the book in August, 2022.

Marie’s family continues, “We know Marie would have been very excited seeing her biography in so many different languages, reaching fans in so many countries. This English version makes her life story available to even more people in the world, keeping her legacy alive.”

Filled with behind-the-scenes stories involving everyone from Tina Turner and Elton John to The Rolling Stones and Frank Sinatra, Listen to My Heart also explores her humble family beginnings, an early tragedy in the sudden loss of Marie’s sister, her transition into the music industry as a solo artist, and the formation and challenges of being in one of the world’s most successful pop groups. All while trying to maintain a strong marriage and be a mother to two young children in the face of a life-altering illness.

A new book foreword was penned by acclaimed director Jonas Åkerlund, Marie’s longtime friend and colleague. “Marie was my first true break in the industry,” says Åkerlund. “I’ll always be grateful for that — not only because of the projects that followed, but more because of the integrity, focus, and creative generosity that she taught me . . . this book is but one testament to the boundless creativity she exuded throughout her life.” Åkerlund directed Marie and Roxette in nearly twenty music videos and documentaries, and later worked with Madonna, Beyonce, Lady Gaga, Paul McCartney, U2, and Metallica.

A limited special edition of the book will contain Marie’s celebrated English-language solo CD The Change (2004), its first physical release in North America, along with Marie’s final recording “Sea of Love” (2017) as a bonus track. Along with the newly remastered music, the limited edition hardcover will contain foil gilding and a satin ribbon marker.

Both physical editions (plus an ebook) will be available worldwide at your local bookstore, plus on-line retailers including Amazon and many more. Store inquiries should be made to Consortium (US), Ingram (US, UK, Europe), PGC (Canada), and URP (record stores). If the title is not available in your country, please contact 1984 via e-mail.

Book cover photo is by Mattias Edwall, with book design by Midnight Marauder. Marie Fredriksson created the artwork for The Change album cover.

             

Listen to My Heart – Hardbound Cover            Listen to My Heart – Limited Edition Hardbound

             

UPDATE on 9th March 2023 from 1984 Publishing: due to production delays affecting much of the book industry, publishing date of the English version of Marie Fredriksson’s biography had to be shifted to 25th July in North America and 27th July in UK/Europe. Other regions should have the release also during that time frame.

Marie Fredriksson’s biography to be published in English

Marie Fredriksson’s autobiography, Kärleken till livet was first published in Swedish in 2015. It was then translated into several languages and published in German in 2016 (Listen to My Heart: Meine Liebe zum Leben), in Czech in 2017 (Listen to My Heart: Moje láska k životu), in Spanish in 2019 (Listen to My Heart), in Hungarian in 2020 (Listen to My Heart – Hallgass a szívemre), in Portuguese in 2021 (Listen to My Heart) and in Russian in 2022 (Love for Life). Finally, an English edition is in the making under the title Listen to My Heart: Life, Love & Roxette. It’s planned to be published by 1984 Publishing (USA) on 25th April, 2023 and it’s already available for pre-order e.g. on Amazon (look for other countries’ Amazon sites too, to get the best price regarding postage), at Barnes & Noble and on Book Depository, but probably more online book stores will pop up later.

The English version of the biography you can buy as an e-book or a hardcover, which is a limited edition – as stated on Barnes & Noble’s website. The limited collector’s edition includes Marie’s 2004 English-language solo album The Change on CD – previously unreleased in any physical format in North America – as well as bonus track Sea of Love (2017), the last song that Marie recorded. This edition also contains foil gilded page edges and a satin ribbon marker.

Listen to My Heart is a completely candid and passionate, heartbreaking yet often witty life story of one of rock music’s most resilient lead singers, Marie Fredriksson from Roxette (“It Must Have Been Love”, “Listen to Your Heart”, “The Look”, “Joyride”).

Given only a few months to live following a harrowing diagnosis in 2002 – yet surviving for 17 more years, until 2019 – Marie boldly forged ahead into a life with newfound courage and inspiration. She continued as both a solo singer and with Roxette, where she performed over 550 concerts to millions of fans, sold 75 million records, and released over 50 singles including several global hits. In all, Roxette is Sweden’s biggest music group – second only to ABBA.

Filled with behind-the-scenes stories involving everyone from Tina Turner and Elton John to The Rolling Stones and Frank Sinatra, Listen to My Heart also explores her humble family beginnings, an early tragedy in the sudden loss of Marie’s sister, her transition into the music industry as a solo artist, and the formation and challenges of being in one of the world’s most successful pop groups. All while trying to maintain a stable marriage and being a mother to two young children in the face of a life-altering illness.

Heart-wrenching yet winning, and told with exceptional energy and sincerity, Listen to My Heart sheds new and revelatory light on the life and work of one of our generation’s most talented and courageous artists.

The book contains a foreword by Marie’s longtime friend, director Jonas Åkerlund (Madonna, Lady Gaga, Beyonce, Paul McCartney, U2) and personal photographs from her family’s collection.

The picture is here for illustration. The final English cover has not yet been revealed.

Update on 17th September 2022: Amazon has just shared the cover:

Per Gessle on Nordic Rox – September 2022

The August episode of Nordic Rox on Sirius XM was a new wave special and here comes the second part of it in September. Sven and Per recorded the show on a sunny day in Halmstad. Per says he was born and bred in Halmstad, which was a tiny city, but nowadays 100,000 people live there. He was born there and still lives there a couple of months a year, especially in the summer season. It’s really beautiful, it’s on the waterside, just by Kattegat. The finest beach in Sweden is just around the corner, Per adds. Sven jokes and says Per is going to get a donation from Halmstad tourist office. Per laughs and says he hopes so. Sven asks PG „if you swim straight out here, where do you end up?” Mr. G tells you end up in Båstad, which is another tiny town. Sven adds it’s the Swedish Tennis Metropol. PG says it’s a 45-minute drive, but it’s 20 km on the water, so if you have a boat and the interest and you don’t have a hairdo that needs polishing, you can take the boat. The guys are laughing.

Sven and Per kick off the show with Crystal Ball by The Nomads. Mr. G thinks the song is beautiful and The Nomads is a great band. Swedish garage rock at its best, Sven thinks. The next one is Drifting Out by Little Dragon and then comes June by Shout Out Louds from their latest album, House.

The guys then take a trip to Norway for some night train music by the Cocktail Sippers. PG thinks Norway is a great country, „if you haven’t been to Norway, you should go to Norway”. Sven adds, if you can’t go to Norway, listen to Night Train. The next track is Endless Sleeper by The Raveonettes from Denmark. Per tells Denmark is a great country if you haven’t been to Denmark, you should go to Denmark. Haha. Sven says he thinks Per Gessle is here on the take from the Danish tourist agency, as well as the Norwegian tourist agency. Mr. G thinks The Raveonettes is amazing. Sven thinks the intro of Endless Sleeper sounds vaguely like the first track on the first The Doors LP, Break On Through. According to Per, it could be influenced by it. Slightly psychedelic track, Sven thinks. PG finds it very cool.

The next band is Sahara Hotnights, a Swedish band. Sven asks Per if he knows anything about them. Mr. G says they have been around for many many years and then they sort of broke up, but then they came back again last year with a new album. The guys are playing something little bit older on the show, Who Do You Dance For? from the Kiss & Tell album, which came out in 2004. It’s a cool gril band. They always had cool songs and great musicians. Per worked with the drummer, she did some TV things with Mr. G many years ago.

Here comes the new wave stuff from Sweden. Sven says he doesn’t know if you can call it new wave after 42 years, but this is the era from 1979. Per tells it WAS the new wave when it happened, so it’s new wave forever. PG is very pleased that he found the band called Sydkraft (= South Power) finally on Spotify. He likes this band because they are from Halmstad. They signed with EMI Records in 1978, so Per’s band a year later sent their demos to all the labels in Sweden except EMI, because they already had a band from Halmstad. Sven laughs and asks, „so you thought that door was closed?” Per says eventually, they wound up with the same record label, EMI. Sven asks how they ended up there, if it was because all other labels turned Gyllene Tider down. Per says EMI phoned him up one morning and said they were interested. He doesn’t know how they heard their songs. Sydkraft made only one album in 1979 and it was produced by the same guy who produced Gyllene Tider’s first album as well. Per thinks it’s a great record they did, but it didn’t go anywhere. It’s definitely the first time they are played on American radio. Sven tells „and if someone picks it up and puts it on the soundtrack of Stranger Things or whatever, these guys are gonna get a call that OK guys, finally you got a hit in the US”. The guys are laughing. The song played is Snack, which means talk or bullshit or rubbish or whatever, the Per and Sven say.

The next one is a track that was a big hit in Sweden in 1981 by one of the foremost punk bands in Sweden, Ebba Grön. Per thinks it’s a great band and he thinks it’s the second or third album they made and this was their breakthrough album and it has a couple of really great tracks. They became a little bit more commercial on this album, a little bit more song-oriented, which of course the mainstream audience loved. Sven says they listened to an interview by Mike Chapman. He was taking Blondie to the studio to make their third album and he forced them to get their act together. Sven thinks you can also hear on Ebba Grön’s album that they got their act together, the bass playing is fantastic. They are really tight as a unit. Per tells if you came from the new wave era, you started to play just because it was fun. Most bands didn’t sound that good, but that wasn’t important in those days. But eventually, if you had to have a career, you had to get your act together, the bass player had to play together with the drummer and the band had to sound great. That’s exactly what happened to Blondie and Ebba Grön here. The guys play one of the biggest hits of Ebba Grön, 800 grader. It sounds a lot like The Clash, Per thinks. Sven thinks it’s not a coincidence, they were really influenced by The Clash, you can hear it. It’s a very good song and still sounds amazing. The singer and guitarist, Joakim Thåström moved on with a second group called Imperiet and they were equally successful. Nowadays he is a solo artist and also very successful. Sven says when The Rolling Stones are gonna play Stockholm in a couple of weeks, he will be the support act. [So this episode was recorded a couple of weeks before 31st July 2022. /PP]

Japop is the next band, also from EMI Records. Sven asks Per what he knows about them. PG says it’s a short for Jan Andersson Pop. Jan Andersson is the lead guitar player. He used to be the lead guitar player for another Swedish act, Ulf Lundell, who is like a Bruce Springsteen figure. The song the guys play is from Japop’s second album, Rysk pop, which means Russian pop. Sven says it wouldn’t be a popular title nowadays. Jan’s got a great voice, PG thinks and he is an amazing guitar player. Per was surprised that this album didn’t do better than it did. Sven says it’s got some cool tracks on it. The song the guys picked is Blodspengar which means blood money. It’s got a cool vibe to it. It’s a great band, a trio, Per adds and they sounded really cool.

Next one is Magnus Lindberg, who wasn’t really a new wave-ish guy, but he was influenced by it. He started out being more like a singer-songwriter playing in a band called Landslaget. It was a sort of Swedish version of The Eagles. They had a girl playing the violin, Maybritte Nicklasson, who added little special things. Magnus left the band and started a solo career from a singer-songwriter point of view, but when the new wave happened, he got a new attitude and a new band together and it sounded really cool according to Mr. G. His album, Röda läppar, which means red lips, was pretty big. The title track is really wonderful. Unfortunately, Magnus isn’t with us anymore, but he still has a big following in Sweden and you can hear his music here and there all the time. Sven tells Kjell Andersson got together a bunch of artists to make a tribute album to Magnus, which came out earlier this year. Magnus is at his most energetic on this album, Sven thinks. Sven asks Per if he saw Magnus live. PG says of course, they toured and played with him. PG tells he was a great, enigmatic artist.

After the new wave section is over, Something Wicked by The Teenage Idols is played. Then it’s Safe And Sound by The Sounds and then comes Golden Age by Union Carbide Productions featuring Ebbot Lundberg on vocals.

Anita Lindblom’s Cigarettes is closing the episode, as usual.

Still is from a 2017 teaser video for Swedish Radio.

Thanks for your support, Sven!

En akustisk konsert med Per Gessle – PG Unplugged concert film on SVT

SVT broadcast a 1-hour-long cut of Per Gessle’s unplugged show recorded in Karlskrona on a beautiful Thursday evening, 5th May 2022. You can watch it HERE until 23rd Feb 2023 (rights valid for Sweden only, but works with VPN outside Sweden).

From 21 songs on the original setlist, 13 have been picked by Per to be in the TV cut. As he says, he didn’t want too many “obvious” ones. Only Swedish songs are there, 9 from Gyllene Tider, 4 PG solo, no Roxette. Marie is mentioned though in one of the stories and this way the O’boy joke – that was present during the whole tour – is also included. There is a nice balance between the songs and Per (and the band) talking in between. It reflects the real feeling of how the concerts were with all the fab hits in their acoustic arrangement, the anecdotes, the crowd reactions, the connection among gang members on stage. Wonderful people, excellent musicians all of them! At one point, when Per thanks MP for the amazing sound, the camera spots Mats – woohoo! – and Åsa is standing there behind him, so this way the stage set designer also shows up in the film. Well-deserved! The crew also pops up here and there, changing instruments or doing their stuff in their tech spots.

Right at the first moment, when the band and Per entered the stage I felt like I was sitting there in the front row again. This time in my living room, but the intimate atmosphere really comes through the TV screen as well. The complete recording is pure professionalism. The close-ups are just as awesome as the parts recorded from far behind to show the whole stage and the audience in front of it. The sound is fantastic too, both Per’s and Helena’s vocals are magical and Clarence, Christoffer and Magnus also sound fab on their instruments.

If you’ve been listening to the Helsingborg gig on streaming 24/7, now you can switch to the Karlskrona show and watch this amazing audiovisual delight all day and night. I’m extremely happy that Ljudet av ett annat hjärta is saved forever in this set.

Setlist in the TV cut

1. Kung av sand
2. Flickan i en Cole Porter-sång
3. Tycker om när du tar på mej
4. Det hjärta som brinner
5. Ljudet av ett annat hjärta
6. Varmt igen
7. Juni, juli, augusti
8. Min hälsning
9. Födelsedag
10. När vi två blir en
11. Vid hennes sida
12. Sommartider
13. När alla vännerna gått hem

Skipped songs from the original setlist: På promenad genom stan, Småstadsprat, Min plats, Tuffa tider, It Must Have Been Love, Vilket håll du än går, Här kommer alla känslorna, Listen To Your Heart.

It could be a full-length show, yes. It’s compact instead, but feels absolutely complete thanks to all the professional cuts and the flow of the songs Per has picked for this film.

Stills are from the video.

 

Per Gessle on Nordic Rox – August 2022

Sven Lindström starts the August episode of Nordic Rox on Sirius XM by telling they have pulled their brains together to maximize their IQ to pull up today’s list of goodies. It’s an exciting list, Per adds. They went back to 1979 with focus on Sweden. Sven tells Per was a major part of that era, the late ’70s is when PG started playing professionally. Mr. G tells they got signed by EMI Records in 1979 when his band, Gyllene Tider was really fresh and really young with lots of pimples. The guys are laughing.

First they kick off with Sonic Surf City’s Let There Be Surf. Next song is Sugar Town by ShitKid and then comes Rock ‘N’ Roll Highschool by Teddybears.

The next track is a song Roxette recorded in 1995, She Doesn’t Live Here Anymore. It was actually Gyllene Tider playing the drums, the bass and the guitars. Per explains that in 1995 they just came off this huge Crash! Boom! Bang! world tour that lasted over a year and they were supposed to release their first compilation album, Don’t Bore Us, Get To The Chorus! Sven laughs and says he knows it was a saying by Roxette’s American manager, Herbie Herbert. Per says he was supposed to do a solo album after the CBB tour, mainly because Marie wanted a second child, so she wanted to take a break. PG also started writing songs for his Swedish band, but then this compilation idea came up with Roxette. So he took a couple of songs, e.g. June Afternoon, She Doesn’t Live Here Anymore from his solo thing and made them into Roxette records. Then they did two additional tracks, so it was 4 new songs on that compilation album. Sven adds Per also wrote a song for Belinda Carlisle during that era. Mr. G tells that was actually a song he wrote for Roxette, but nobody liked it in the Roxette camp except him, so he presented it to Belinda and her English record label. It was Always Breaking My Heart. Belinda recorded that and another song Per wrote, Love Doesn’t Live Here.

After they play SDLHA, Sven asks Per how does it sound now. Mr. G says it sounds great. He remembers recording that motorcycle in the beginning of the intro. It was his old Harley Davidson bike. That was fun. He thinks it’s a good track and they did a great video and had a good time doing that.

The guys play A Passanger from Johnossi’s new album, Mad Gone Wild.

Here comes the new wave part of the show. They pick some songs from Sweden from the new wave era, 1978-81. This is actually when Per got off the ground. He tells it’s a very important era in pop music. You came off the progressive music and everyone was supposed to be a very good player, but then suddenly when the punk and new wave thing happened, it was OK not to be very good. That fit Per perfectly, he laughs. Everyone started bands and got together. Here come tracks by Swedish bands singing in Swedish and it sounds amazing and really good according to Mr. G, a lot of enthusiasm and adrenaline going on. Seldom heard – for good reasons – on American radio.

Sven introduces the first band, Docent Död, which translates to „Doctor Death”. Good punk name, the guys think. The picked track is Solglasögon (Sunglasses) is from 1980. Sven asks Per if he remembers hearing it for the first time. PG tells he thought this was so good. He especially liked it because it sounded really cool, so much better than most Swedish recordings at the time. In those days, in the analogue days there was a big difference in how it sounded in the UK or in Los Angeles or New York compared to Stockholm. Things changed of course when everything became digital, then everything started to sound the same. Per was blown off by this band and their attitude was really cool. It still sounds like a hit record for Mr. G. Sven agrees.

The next group is Reeperbahn. It’s a notorious street in Hamburg, Germany, where The Beatles arrived in the autumn of 1960. Sven doesn’t know if the band took the name from this sort of Beatles connection. Per thinks they just took the name because they thought it was hardcore. The song they play is Lycklig (Happy). Sven remembers Per once said he was impressed back in the days by the sound of this group. Per thinks they were a very good band. Dan Sundquist played bass and he became a really good producer as well. He knew what he was doing even in those days. The one who wrote the song was probably Olle Ljungström, the guitar player who was also singing. They did many good songs, something to look up to, Per says. The guys are laughing.

The next song slows the tempo down a bit. Tant Strul – roughly translates to Auntie Hassle – was one of Per’s favourite groups. An all female band from the new wave scene in the late ’70s. PG liked them a lot. He thinks Vild blomning (Wild blooming) is their best song. It doesn’t really make sense if you don’t understand Swedish, but the lyrics are really beautiful and Kajsa Grytt, who wrote the lyrics for this band is a great lyricist. Per always loved this song. You can hear this era, the band is almost tight, everyone is almost in tune, and it sounds real. Sometimes you just need to listen to music like this instead of all this autotuned stuff that goes on at the moment. Sven tells that this recording is not that far away from the first rehearsal. It’s organic and charming. Sven remembers Per mentioned he always wanted to cover this song. PG says he just liked the song a lot. He thinks it has a great melody and lyrics. He always finds it interesting to read lyrics by female artists, because it’s a different perspective of things. He is not going to do a cover of it, but if there was a Top10 list of Swedish songs that he might do a cover of, then this is definitely on the list.

The next one is Jag kysste henne våldsamt (I kissed her violently) by Anders F. Rönnblom from 1980. This guy made his debut album in the early ’70s and then he got a kick out of the new wave era and started doing shorter and more energetic songs. Per thinks this is like a reggae track. This was Anders’ biggest song. It wasn’t a major hit, but it was a hit record you heard once in a while. It didn’t top the charts, it was on the B roads, as Per says. Mr. G likes the sound of it, he likes the bass and he thinks it sounds really cool. PG listens to it once in a while. Sven shares the info that die hard Anders F. Rönnblom fans are called F-heads.

This song wraps up the new wave section of this episode of Nordic Rox. The guys play three more songs. One of them is Buffalo Stance by Robyn & Neneh Cherry feat. Mapei and another is Hello It’s Me by Todd Rundgren. He is American, but Sven tells they sometimes open the door to Swedish heritage. He once read Todd’s father is from Swedish and German descent. Per jokes and says „so that’s why his first name is Todd”. Sven says he thinks so and his last name is Rundgren which is a very Swedish name and translates to „round branch”. „Important information you can’t live without”, the guys are laughing.

The usual show closer is Anita Lindblom’s Cigarettes.

Photo by Anders Roos (2019).

Thanks for your support, Sven!