Roxette In Concert 2025 – Cape Town – 26th February 2025 – #1

On 2nd May 2024 it was announced that Per would take the Roxette band on the road again and embark on a tour together with Lena Philipsson to do what he loves the most; perform his songs live in front of a dedicated audience.

Per said in 2024:

This is all about my Roxette songs, this huge bundle of music and lyrics I’ve been writing for well over three decades. I’m not starting a new duo. Marie will always be irreplaceable. However, I’m really lucky to have found an amazing voice and a brilliant performer in Lena Philipsson.

I co-wrote Lena’s first major hit back in 1986 and she’s one of the brightest shining stars Sweden has ever known. I’m extremely proud she wants to join me in my trek to keep the Roxette legacy alive.

Lena said in 2024:

I’m both excited and thrilled about embarking on this tour. I really look forward to working with Per – he is a phenomenal songwriter and a neverending musical force.

The tour was set to start in South Africa with 2 gigs – both sold out – and 8 shows in Australia, to which 1 extra gig was added in Melbourne after the first Melbourne concert got sold out. Since then, 10 shows were announced in Europe and 2 extra shows were added in Sweden after the first Halmstad and first Gothenburg gigs got sold out. The second Halmstad show is also sold out by now.

It’s always a good sign when tickets are selling very well for a tour already in the beginning. Roxette In Concert 2025 kicked in with a sold-out show in Cape Town, South Africa. This is the place where Roxette had their last concert with Marie Fredriksson on 8th February 2016. At the same venue, Grand Arena, GrandWest. It all begins where it ends, isn’t it?

Per was the first to arrive in South Africa a couple of days ago and Lena and the band joined him some days later. PG did some interviews for radio and newspapers during the past two days and tried to get rid of the pollen in sunny Cape Town.

The gang had a soundcheck before the premiere today, about which Lena posted two video snippets, so we could be sure they would perform The Big L. and Sleeping In My Car.

The doors opened at 19:00 local time and the fans could get their merchandise stuff at the stand. There are 3 different T-shirts (grey elephant tee with tour dates on the back; black elephant tee with tour dates on the back; black Listen To Your Heart tee), 1 hoodie (black elephant hoodie with tour dates on the back) and 1 cap (star cap).

There was no support act. Per & Co. – Lena Philipsson, Dea Norberg, Clarence Öfwerman, Jonas Isacsson (how amazing to have him back in the band!), Christoffer Lundquist, Magnus Börjeson, Magnus “Norpan” Eriksson – entered the stage during an intro and the gig started a couple of minutes after 20:00 local time.

From the snippets I could see online, it was a magical night and an amazing first show. Per was incredibly happy to be on stage again and very enthusiastic, Lena was a rock goddess (and gosh, her voice is very similar to Marie’s voice!) and the band was on fire! It was a seated show, but they made the audience stand up. And sing along, of course!

I have to mention that Norpan, the drummer, posted before the gig and dedicated the show to Pelle Alsing. So lovely!

Before It Must Have Been Love, Lena thanked for the support of the crowd and paid tribute to Marie: “It’s one of my favourite Roxette songs and I would like to sing this one for Marie…”. Marie is never forgotten and she lives on in our hearts and in all these wonderful songs.

Regarding the setlist, 21 songs were played and YES! YES! YES! Vulnerable is included! It was all worth the wait! Thank you, Per, in the name of thousands of Roxers! Fingers crossed you keep it in the set during the whole tour, because all fans deserve to hear it live!

Setlist

  1. The Big L.
  2. Sleeping In My Car
  3. Dressed For Success
  4. What’s She Like?
  5. Crash! Boom! Bang!
  6. Fading Like A Flower
  7. Opportunity Nox
  8. Things Will Never Be The Same
  9. Vulnerable
  10. Milk And Toast And Honey
  11. Wish I Could Fly
  12. Stars
  13. She’s Got Nothing On (But The Radio)
  14. It Must Have Been Love
  15. How Do You Do!
  16. Dangerous

Band presentation

  1. Joyride

Encore 1

  1. Spending My Time
  2. Listen To Your Heart
  3. The Look

Encore 2

  1. Queen Of Rain

When I did the interview with Lena for RoxetteBlog in May 2024, she said “I’m gonna do everything I can to honour Marie”. Lena, I think you just did that! Hats off and good luck for the upcoming shows!

To those who were skeptic if it would work out, check out some snippets from the show and you’ll see it works. Lena is not Marie, Marie will always be irreplaceable, but the songs and the way Per, Lena and the band perform them sets a loving memory for Marie too. As Per said in the interview I did with him in June 2024: “If you like the songs and you are open-minded a little bit, give it a chance.”

See you on tour then? Hope so! Check the dates HERE and get your tickets, Roxers!

Next stop is Pretoria, South Africa on 28th February!

Videos from Instagram and Facebook (snippets)

The Big L.
Sleeping In My Car
What’s She Like?
Dangerous
Joyride
Spending My Time
The Look

Most videos are by Lukasz Suda for roxette.pl. Thanks for sharing!

Articles

Expressen (including photos) before and during the gig; after the gig

All photos in the article are taken by Lukasz Suda. Thanks for your support! And thanks a lot to Sandra Knospe as well for some details!

Per about the premiere:

Wow! What an amazing crowd! What an amazing response! Haven’t played here for nine years and we get so much love from this beautiful audience. Had a blast at this sold out Grand Arena, the band was tight, had a pretty decent setlist and Lena was unbelievable!!!! She was up for the challenge and, boy, did she deliver! Hats off! See you Friday in Pretoria!

Lena about her first show with Roxette:

Nämen alltså… så KUL det var ikväll. Så glad och så nöjd. Fantastiskt att få vara med, så lättad att premiären är klar. Och fantastiskt att bästa Åsa Nathell och Agneta Christiernin kom ner för att titta! Tack för filmen Åsa!!! Så härligt gäng, musiker tekniker och Per Gessle som fick för sig att jag skulle kunna göra detta. Alla runtomkring [like + 5 stars with emojis]! Underbara låtar att sjunga! Och tack Christer Lindarw för hjälp med min sparkling outfit!

In English: “Well… it was so much FUN tonight. So happy and so satisfied. Fantastic to be there, so relieved that the premiere is done. And fantastic that Åsa Nathell and Agneta Christiernin came down to see us! Thanks for the film Åsa!!! Such a wonderful gang, musicians, technicians and Per Gessle who thought I could do this. Everyone around [like + 5 stars with emojis]! Wonderful songs to sing! And thanks Christer Lindarw for helping with my sparkling outfit!”

Interview with Per Gessle by Hallandsposten before the Roxette tour start

Jan-Owe Wikström did an interview with Per for Hallandsposten before the Roxette In Concert 2025 tour starts tomorrow. Per regarding the tour:

It’s the most exciting and the most uncertain thing I’ve done since Gyllene Tider’s comeback in 1996. You don’t know at all how it’s going to work, how it’s going to be received.

He explains it’s absolutely not a new band. It’s him, one half of Roxette, the Roxette band where Jonas Isacsson is back for the first time since 2001 and then Lena who is hired as a singer. The other option would have been to not make a comeback at all so this was the next best option, he points out.

Per tells Jan-Owe that it’s 26 degrees in Cape Town right now and he didn’t understand at first why he had an allergic shock, until he realized that it’s full pollen season over there. He took one pill and it was over in an hour, Per laughs.

We’ve actually sold as many tickets this time as when we were there with Marie. I never thought that! At the same time, the music industry has completely changed, where in four years we’ve increased the number of streams on Spotify by 40 percent. So I think it benefits us “craftsmen”, people want real music live.

It could even have been a joint tour with Bryan Adams in Australia, Jan-Owe says.

Yes, indeed. We play almost in parallel, so he wondered if we would go together. But unfortunately, we had already booked venues and started selling tickets. A bit of a shame, because it would have been great fun.

At the rehearsal a little over a week ago, there were 21 songs left. Per reveals:

There have been a lot of “kill your darlings”, but that’s because many songs have the same character. But there will still be two that we’ve never played live with Roxette before.

To the question how the rehearsals felt, he replies:

Very good! Lena is extremely professional. Now it’s about finding our roles. Marie and I had known each other for so long, so it was natural for her to step forward as long as she could. Then I got to the front on the last tour and solo and with Gyllene Tider, I’m the one who does it. We’ll see how it goes here. I mean, the rehearsals are one thing, but in front of just over 10,000 people: “How will Lena act in, for example, “Sleeping In My Car”?” So it’s going to be a challenge, really fun. It’s just a matter of not interrupting each other. Hahaha.

Jan-Owe asks who decides in such situations. Per explains that Lena of course had ideas regarding her singing, but otherwise, Per has the final say.

After the two Halmstad gigs at the end of July, Per has nothing else booked.

We’ll see. But I have several projects that are currently on hold.

To the question if there could even be new Roxette songs with Lena on vocals he replied:

Not at the moment. That has never been the intention, it has been that the song catalogue should live on. People want to hear Roxette’s old hits, not something new. But at the same time – when you work together for as long as we will now, you never know what it might lead to.

Jan-Owe is curious if there are any plans with Gyllene Tider.

Right now it feels a bit finished, but it has felt that way before too… If this tour develops into what I hope for with gigs on more continents, Roxette will be priority 1.

The Roxette musical wins numerous categories at the 2024 BroadwayWorld Sweden Awards

Joyride – The Musical was nominated in all possible categories at the 2024 BroadwayWorld Sweden Awards and after the voting ended on 31st December, now winners of the categories are announced. Check it out HERE!

The 2024 Regional Awards honor regional productions, touring shows and more which had their first performance between 1st October 2023 through 30th September 2024. Local editors set the categories, readers submitted their nominees and then voted for their favourites.

Categories in which Joyride – The Musical was nominated:

  • Best MusicalJoyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best EnsembleJoyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best Performer In A Musical: 4 actors from Joyride were nominated: Jessica Marberger, Marsha Songcome, Alexander Lycke, Tilda Hallström (Winner is Sayuri Yukawa – BEETLEJUICE – Östgötateatern)
  • Best Supporting Performer In A Musical: 4 actors from Joyride were nominated: Sanna Martin, Patrik Martinsson, Oscar Pierrou Lindén, Sara Lehmann (Winner is Alexander Larsson – DREAMGIRLS – Chinateatern)
  • Best Direction Of A Musical – Guy Unsworth – Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best Scenic Design Of A Play Or Musical – David Woodhead – Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best Lighting Design Of A Play Or Musical – Ulrik Gad – Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best Costume Design Of A Play Or Musical – Torbjörn Bergström – Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best Sound Design Of A Play Or Musical – Avgoustos Psillas – Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best Choreography Of A Play Or Musical – Miles Hoare – Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Best Music Direction & Orchestra Performance – Joakim Hallin – Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera WINNER!
  • Favourite Local Theatre – Malmö Opera WINNER!

Joyride was nominated in 11 categories and won 9 of them! Category 12 was Favourite Local Theatre where Joyride is played: Malmö Opera! This is pure awesomeness! Hats off to all involved in the making of this amazing musical and big congratulations to all the winners! So well-deserved!

Joyride is performed until 27th April 2025 at Malmö Opera. All shows are sold out! In case you can catch a ticket, make sure you go and see it!

The Roxette musical continues its joyride and the next stop is China Teatern in Stockholm with the premiere on 11th September 2025. The set at China Teatern is directed by Guy Unsworth, who also directed the show at Malmö Opera. However, a completely new ensemble will be selected. Tickets will be released in spring 2025.

Interview with Per Gessle in Svenska Dagbladet – “Marie always made my songs better”

Elin Liljero Eriksson did an interview with Per for Svenska Dagbladet. Elin and Per met in the Cornelis room at Södra Teatern in Stockholm.

It has been a busy year for Per. In addition to the feature film about Gyllene Tider and a musical with Roxette’s songs at Malmö Opera, he has turned 65 and released his first album of original material in over eight years – the duet album Sällskapssjuk. Now he is preparing for a world tour with Roxette next year, together with Lena Philipsson. He is really longing to go on tour again.

How his most successful project would be managed after Marie Fredriksson passed away in 2019 has not been a matter of course. Per explains that at first he didn’t want to continue with Roxette. Then he felt that this is over 30 years of his life and he has written almost all the material, songs that he wants to live on. Roxette has also been streamed more than ever in recent years. When he then made a single with Lena for his latest album, it felt right to ask her. But they haven’t started a new Roxette, Lena is hired to manage the Roxette catalogue.

PG is shocked at how many tickets they are selling for the new Roxette tour. There has been skepticism from some fans, but there are a lot of people who think it will be fun to hear the songs again.

Per wrote the lyrics of Kärleken är evig, Lena’s song that ended up at the second place in Melodifestivalen 1986. About writing songs for other artists, PG says he never liked it. Also if you write together with others, it usually means a lot of compromises that don’t make anyone happy, unless it becomes a hit. But that’s not really why Per is doing that. He is at his best when he gets to do things his own way, which is reminiscent of his upbringing in Halmstad.

I was a loner during my school years. I lived in my little bubble, listened to an extremely lot of music and was quite shy. But I was the one who got to sing “Staffan var en stalledräng” in third grade. I can’t believe I dared it, because it was incredibly unlike me. But there was something in me even then, that I wanted to be a pop star.

Per’s mother was a teacher of porcelain painting, his father was a plumber. They had a piano which was sometimes played by Per’s sister, but no deeper interest in music can be traced in the family, except to a violin-playing relative in the 1800s.

I don’t know where it comes from, but I’ve noticed that I have a completely different musicality than the fantastic musicians I’ve had the privilege of working with all these years. To this day, I can’t sit down at a piano and play my songs. I can play them wrong in the most ridiculous places. But if you ask Roxette producer Clarence Öfwerman to play anything from The Beatles, for example, he’ll play it even though he has never done it before. What I have is that sometimes I hear something in music that they don’t.

Elin wants to know if Per hears melodies.

Yes, I don’t know how they get to me. I have no idea how to write a hit. I’ve never had a formula for it. But I’m so glad I love commercial pop music, it’s in my DNA. That’s why there has been a lot of that kind of music. The melodies are the interesting part.

Elin is curious if Per has ever had complexes about not being a typically trained musician. Mr. G thinks „complex” is perhaps not the right word, but he has always felt inferior. Already on Gyllene Tider’s early tours, MP had to go on stage and tune Per’s guitar, because Per couldn’t. But when it was tuned, PG rolled on.

About Marie Per says:

Marie always made my songs better, that’s why I needed her. If she could have written those songs herself, she would have dumped me in the nearest trash can. But she couldn’t. We complemented each other very well.

Marie joining Roxette was not a given.

She was much bigger than I was at the time. No one around her, including the record company and producer Lasse Lindbom, wanted her to do anything with me. She did this against everyone’s will.

To the question how that could happen Per replies:

On the one hand, we had a fantastically pleasant relationship, but above all we were united in the desire to play abroad. But from Marie’s side, it was always the feeling of “we’ll see what happens”. Therefore, it was important for me to deliver. So I wrote the “Look Sharp!” album that was full of goodies. She liked the material for it very much, and I noticed that she sang in a different way when I could have a say. There was a sexiness in songs like “Dressed For Success” and “Dangerous” – a completely different Marie than the one who sang ” Ännu doftar kärlek”.

Look Sharp! was the start of a global Roxette hype that led to intense touring for several years. Elin says that despite the fact that both Per and Marie had partners, there were often rumors that they were a couple.

No, I have never had a relationship with Marie. We had a very intense relationship through Roxette, it was like our child. But after the Crash tour in the mid-1990s, everything changed, because Marie had a child. Then it became a different focus in her life, which was perfectly fine.

Per says he doesn’t really feel at home in the music industry anymore. It’s not because it is worse or better. That’s because it’s different from how it was when he was growing up. That’s why he still likes album covers. If you are 15 years old today, you don’t care about that.

Elin informs about the many projects in Per’s life. In addition to Gyllene Tider and Roxette, he has released several solo albums, runs Hotel Tylösand together with his wife, where he also has the photo gallery Tres Hombres Art and a solid Ferrari collection. He has a house and studio in Halmstad, in addition to his two floors on Strandvägen in Stockholm where he lives. Financially, he could have sat back a long time ago, but Per Gessle can hardly handle free Sundays. He says then it is impossible to get hold of anyone, the offices are closed and everyone is hungover. He wants access to things. Per says you can try to use Sundays as a contemplation day, but every seventh day is a bit too often.

Elin is curious what Per does when he contemplates. Mr. G says he walks and thinks a lot. Åsa likes to have the TV on in the mornings, which is a big schism in their family. Per is easily stressed by too much information, and if it is negative, which it often is these days, he can get quite low. Silence is a way for him to survive.

I never have music on unless I’m actively listening to it. Not in the car either. If it’s a nice car, I want to listen to the engine.

Regarding losing many around him in recent years, Per says:

It has obviously been very tough and has probably affected me more than I think. You are reminded of the impermanence of life.

Elin asks Per if he often thinks about death.

No. The most annoying thing about aging is that it’s so easy to look back. Besides that, it’s a very young world we live in, it’s not quite made for my age. 40 years ago I thought it was great, now it’s something I have to fight against. But if my ambition had been to only do bigger and bigger things, I would have gone crazy. Because what am I supposed to do with it? If I come up with an idea, I implement it. If I feel like it, I write a song. There will probably be a day when I feel like I’m done, but I’m not quite there yet.

Read the original interview in Swedish by Elin Liljero Eriksson and check out the photos by Rickard L Eriksson HERE on Svenska Dagbladet!

Rickard also shared the photos on his Instagram.

Per Gessle on Nordic Rox – December 2024 – CBB30 Special

Per Gessle and Sven Lindström are celebrating the 30th anniversary of Crash! Boom! Bang! in the December episode of Nordic Rox. The album came out in 1994. Sven asks Per how it feels, because he is celebrating something almost every year. PG says that’s the way it goes. It feels good. Roxette had an eight-year span when they were at their prime. The Roxette heydays were between 1988 and 1995. Then in 1995, Marie got her first child and everything changed from there. Crash! Boom! Bang! is the last big album in that era. It was recorded in London, on the Isle of Capri in Italy and in Stockholm. It took forever to make, Mr. G adds. There are lots of songs and it’s got some nice stuff in there, he thinks.

Sven says it’s coming with a bonus CD as well with some demos and he promises an interesting flashback to 1994. But before that, they kick off with Driving One Of Your Cars by Lisa Miskovsky. Per thinks it’s a great track. It was one of Lisa’s earliest singles, but it’s still a great song. It has stood the test of time.

Ahead Of My Time is played by Teddybears featuring Daddy Boastin’. It’s taken from the Soft Machine album. Sven thinks it’s a cool band. Per agrees. Great productions, great producers, and they have been producing so many other artists as well. They always appear with the bear heads on stage. Something for the new line-up of Roxette to be inspired with, Sven suggests. Per says why not, then they are laughing.

Final Gørl by Sløtface from Norway is next. The song is from their latest album Film Buff. Sven thinks they are a great band. Sven and Per played some songs from them in previous shows.

Then comes Are You Still Having Fun? by Eagle-Eye Cherry. It’s a great song, PG thinks. The guys are having fun and Sven says they are going to have even more fun now, because now it’s time for the Crash! Boom! Bang! special.

The album came out in spring 1994, after about 12 months of recording and preparations and songwriting. Songwriting took even longer, Per says. They started recording CBB in 1993. They just came off the big Joyride tour and they started working immediately on this album. Sven thinks that if you compare it with the Joyride album, Per was in a different frame of mind when he started writing for this one. Mr. G says it’s true in a way. When they recorded Joyride, they had a breakthrough with the Look Sharp! album. Per wanted Joyride to be a super mainstream, catchy album. Basically, every song on the Joyride album was written to be a single. But it was a different ballgame when he started writing Crash! Boom! Bang!, because they had been touring for over a year and they were on top of their game. PG felt a little bit more relaxed. They started using other Swedish musicians and also experimenting a lot in the studio and trying things out in a different way. Maybe CBB didn’t become as mainstream as Joyride. Looking back at it, Per thinks there are a couple of tracks that you could have thrown away in the waste paper basket even then. Nevertheless, the highlights for Mr. G are really, really high in Roxette history.

Sven says the Joyride album was written to be smash hits all over the place. When they presented Crash! Boom! Bang!, it was a 15-track album and almost an hour’s playing time. Per explains that the vinyl was basically gone. The CD was there, so you could extend the album’s playing time. Those days they had these open budgets, so you just went on and recorded and recorded. They did so much stuff. When they eventually played what they had done for their record label, they loved it, but they said the classic words, „we can’t hear a single”. Per was really pissed off by that, because he thought they had so many great tracks. Especially, he thought that Roxette had made giant steps forward, artistically at least. And Marie was singing really great. Songs like What’s She Like?, Run To You and Love Is All are great tracks for Per and for Marie as well. But the record label didn’t agree. So PG was really pissed off and he went home and wrote another song. That turned out to be Sleeping In My Car, which became the first single. That was written out of frustration, in furious anger, but it turned out nice. Per always loved Marie singing that type of songs. It’s not really her cup of tea, she was never really a power pop girl, but when she sang songs like that, she was always the best.

Here they play Sleeping In My Car, the single that paved the way for the Crash! Boom! Bang! album.

The CD version of the anniversary release has a bonus CD with quite a lot of demos written for the album. 23 demos. It was basically all the songs that Per wrote for the project. He looked back into his archives and it’s more songs than he remembered. Sven was a bit surprised to find out that this upcoming song, She Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, was written for the Crash! Boom! Bang! album. It was recorded by Per’s power pop band Gyllene Tider and it turned up on the compilation album Don’t Bore Us – Get To The Chorus!. Per says he wrote the song together with Mats Persson from Gyllene Tider, who also co-wrote Listen To Your Heart and Spending My Time. They wrote the song for Crash, but they didn’t record it. They had so many songs, these typical power pop, guitar driven songs. Per was basically the only one in the band who really loved that kind of music. And of course, since he was the writer, he presented these songs, many of them, for Marie and their producer Clarence Öfwerman, but it wasn’t really their cup of tea. So lots of these songs were leftovers. Then they recorded it eventually for the first compilation album that Roxette did in 1995, called Don’t Bore Us – Get To The Chorus!. It became a single, but that was years later. Sven says, if they asked him – nobody asked him at the time –, he would have taken out some of the slower numbers and replaced it with She Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.

Per says, when you are in a band, you have to compromise. Just like in your marriage. Haha. Sven was a bit surprised that this was recorded in December 1992, so when they recorded material for the Crash! Boom! Bang! album, they considered those sort of power pop numbers. PG explains that when you make an album and you spend a year in the studio, time goes by and you write new stuff all the time. At the end of the day, you want everyone to agree on what you are recording. That’s also how you get a good vibe in the studio and what’s the best for the band. So sometimes you have to kill your darlings. On every album that Per has been involved with, if it’s Roxette or with other bands, it’s always compromises. There are always songs that he felt like this is a much better song, it should be on the album, but it became a B-side instead. Sven says it’s because you want everyone to be on the bandwagon as well. Sven adds that Per is never short of songs when he is recording an album. Per smiles and says no, because he keeps himself busy. Now they go back in time to a demo recorded in December 1992, probably shortly after it was written. We can hear Per and MP and a drum machine. This is how it sounded when it was written in 1992. She Doesn’t Live Here Anymore. Silly little demo, Per says. Charming stuff, the guys think.

They guys are digging deeper into this demo bonus CD with another track that never was recorded by Roxette, but eventually became a single by Belinda Carlisle. Per wrote Always Breaking My Heart also in 1992 for Roxette’s Crash! Boom! Bang! album, but they never recorded it. He kept it and a couple of years later he got an invitation to produce and write a couple of songs for Belinda Carlisle, which was amazing. She was one of Per’s favourites. He loves The Go-Go’s and he was really honored by the request. PG wrote a song for Belinda called Liberty, which she didn’t like, so they never recorded it. Then this song, Always Breaking My Heart, came to mind, and Per felt like this sounds like an old The Go-Go’s song. Belinda liked that one, and the A&R guy who worked with her, loved it too. So they decided to record Always Breaking My Heart. Then Mr. G wrote another song called Love Doesn’t Live Here, which also turned up on that album of hers. ABMH was actually written for Roxette to begin with, so what they have here now is Per’s acoustic demo from Christmas 1992. Both She Doesn’t Live Here Anymore and Always Breaking My Heart were written around the same time. Per explains that they stopped touring, the Joyride tour ended in summer 1992, and they released the Tourism album with Roxette. One of their biggest songs was on that album called How Do You Do! in summer 1992. As soon as that tour was over, Per started to focus on writing. Autumn 1992 was a big writing time for him. Sven asks PG if he remembers where he was at that time, December 1992, music-wise, things that inspired him. Per says it’s far away. The grunge scene just started to happen, so of course he listened a lot to Nirvana and Oasis. But as always, the ’60s and ’70s stuff, the glam rock thing, all those things are in his DNA. Every time a new band came along that he really liked, it didn’t really change his life that much, because he is still a child of You Really Got Me by The Kinks.

Sven thinks that the best moments of the ’90s, guitar, pop, rock, is like a confirmation of all the things Per loved about the British Invasion. And also the new wave thing in the late ’70s, Per adds. Technology moved forward, it sounds different, it sounds harder and rougher, and better, for that matter. You start to listen to the same things with new ears, so to speak. Sven says in this case, we have to imagine the distorted guitars and the crashing drums, because it’s Per in troubadour mode. There is just an acoustic guitar, a tambourine and a little piano on this demo. This is how it was written. Per says that recently – that means the last decade, haha –, when he makes demos, he makes them just on an acoustic guitar or just a piano, to get the vibe of the song and the vibe of the lyrics. When he wrote the songs for Joyride, he basically produced the demos. Roxette producer Clarence Öfwerman didn’t like that Per came to him with a sort of finished product, because he wanted to produce it, which makes sense. So Per gave that up eventually. This is the other side of the spectrum. Sometimes it depends a little bit on what kind of music you are working with. If you are going to hire an outside producer, it’s better to just show a little bit of what you are after, lyric-wise, melody-wise and chord-wise and then let the producer do the rest of the work or at least suggest something and you do it together with him or her.

Here they play the 1992 demo of Always Breaking My Heart.

There is another leftover that never made it to the album back in the days, but for a while Per thought of this one as a single. PG confirms, he always loved this track, Crazy About You. It was written for the Crash album and they had a little problem with it. It sounded really fresh, it was something really new for Roxette to do a song like this. Then they did another take, this is the second version actually, this is a little bit faster than the first one. In those days you had to re-record everything to change the tempo, not just press a button. Haha. Per always felt that this could be a contender for becoming a single, but at the end of the day, they had lots of tracks on this album, so this became a leftover. Per doesn’t know if it became a B-side or if it came out on something else, but it wasn’t on the album. It found its way into the extended version of Crash! Boom! Bang!. This four-minute-long song wraps up the CBB special. Sven says there was a heavy competition to get on the album. Per thinks it’s a nice song. He doesn’t know how good or bad it is, but at the end of the day, you try to make the best possible mix of ballads and mid-tempo songs and up-tempo songs on the album, so this was a leftover. Life sucks. Haha. Life sucks, but you can always enjoy some fine wine, which is a bridge over to the next song, I Need Some Fine Wine And You, You Need To Be Nicer by The Cardigans from Malmö.

Painted By Numbers by The Sounds is next from 2006, from the album Dying To Say This To You.

The show ends with this and the guys thank the listeners for joining them. Cigarettes by Anita Lindblom is played as the last track, as usual.

Still is from the Bag Of Trix talks recorded by Anders Roos.

Thanks for your support, Sven!