swedish press sample may 2016 vol 87:04

8
61st Eurovision Song Contest Royal College of Music Swedish Sound Art NYA SVENSKA PRESSEN EST.1929 Swed sh Press [ ] i May 2016 Vol 87:04 $4.95 www.SwedishPress.com Music: the driving force of innovation in Sweden 2016 04

Upload: swedish-press

Post on 28-Jul-2016

215 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Swedish Press is the world’s leading magazine on all good things Swedish. An authority on design, business, culture and travel since 1929, Swedish Press delivers insightful news and commentary in a visually striking format. With a nod to the past, and a peek to the future, Swedish Press is your go-to source for updates and inspiration from Sweden.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

61st Eurovision Song Contest Royal College of Music Swedish Sound Art

N Y A S V E N S K A P R E S S E N E S T . 1 9 2 9 Swed sh Press[ ]i

May 2016 Vol 87:04 $4.95www.SwedishPress.com

Music: the driving force of innovation in Sweden

201604

Page 2: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

Lundsbergs Skolatradition – style – education

Sweden’s foremost and oldest boarding school, founded in 1896, offers something quite out of the ordinary – a modern pedagogical approach based on a more than 100 years old tradition. We are very proud of the confidence placed upon the school by generations of parents over all these years. We are also especially honored to count several members of the Swedish Royal Family among the graduates from our school.

Welcome to our INFORMATION MEETING

Church of Sweden New York, 5 East 48th StreetThursday, May 5, 2016 at 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

www.lundsbergsskola.se | +46 550 74 05 00 | [email protected]

Sidney Lind is the ambitious young girl that smiles at you from the cover of our school’s information booklet. A few years ago, when she was still living in Chicago, she decided to reconnect with her Swedish heritage. She found out about Lundsbergs skola and thought it might be the perfect place for her to practice the language as well as acquiring a more profound feeling for the Swedish culture and society.After graduating from Lundsbergs skola, Sidney is now studying medicine at the prestigious Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm. Her goal is to become a pediatric surgeon and her dream is to work for MSF International.

Page 3: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

Swedish Press | May 2016 3[ ]

4 Letters to the Editor 5 From the Editor’s Desk

Swedish Headlines6 Headline News: New legislation in wake of Brussels terrorist attacks6 News at a Glance7 Swedes in the News

Business8 Business News8 En lysande svensk ekonomi/men hel del balansproblem9 Company File: Record Union

SWEDISH PRESS (ISSN 0839-2323) is published ten times per year (Feb, Mar, Apr, May, June, July/Aug, Sept, Oct, Nov, Dec/Jan) by Swedish Press Inc, 862 Peace Portal Drive, Suite #101, Blaine WA 98230 for $39 per year. Periodical postage paid at Blaine, WA 98230-9998 (No. USPS 005544).

US POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Swedish Press, PO Box 420404, San Diego, CA 92142-0404

OFFICE: 9040 Shaughnessy Street, Vancouver, BCV6P 6E5 Canada

US MAILING ADDRESS: PO Box 420404, San Diego, CA 92142-0404

WEBSITE www.swedishpress.comE-MAIL [email protected] +1 360 450 5858TOLL FREE +1 866 882 0088

PUBLISHER Claes [email protected]

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Claes [email protected]

ART DIRECTOR Joan [email protected]

COPY EDITOR Alisha [email protected]

REPRESENTATIVESCalgary: Carin Pihl +1 403 931 0370Thunder Bay: Elinor Barr +1 807 344 8355Toronto: Gunilla Sjölin +1 905 727 9837Winnipeg: Laurel Anderson-McCallum +1 204 255 5224Los Angeles: Birgitta Lauren +1 310 201 0079New York: Timothy Lyons +1 732 685 3747San Diego: Sue Eidson +1 858 541 0207

ADVISORY COMMITTEE Björn Bayley, Peter Ladner, Brian Antonson, Christer Garell, Anders & Hamida Neumuller

SUBSCRIPTION rates per year $39, 2 years $69, 3 years $99, 1 year abroad $105. Digital edition $28. Subscribe Toll Free at 1 866 882 0088 or at www.swedishpress.com. VISA and Mastercard accepted.

ADVERTISING visit www.swedishpress.com/advertise-usfor advertising rates. Call +1 360 450 5858 or +46 725 607800.

SweMail TRANSLATIONS to English of the Swedish parts of Swedish Press are available free of charge every month. Visit http://members.shaw.ca/swemail1/

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Reproduction in whole or in part without written consent of Swedish Press is strictly prohibited. Unsolicited material is welcome, but never the publishers responsibility. Enclose stamped self-addressed envelope for return. Statements and opinions expressed by the writers and claims in the advertising are their own and do not necessarily represent Swedish Press.

CANADIAN PUBLICATIONS MAIL AGREEMENTNo. 40010214 Return Undeliverable Canadian addresses to Swedish Press, 9040 Shaughnessy Street, Vancouver, BC V6P 6E5 Canada

We acknowledge the assistance of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage.

N E X T I S S U E D E A D L I N E : M AY 1 0

N Y A S V E N S K A P R E S S E N E S T . 1 9 2 9 Swed sh Press[ ]i

Swedish Press is the world’s leading magazine on all good things Swedish.An authority on design, business, culture and travel since 1929, Swedish Press delivers insightful news and commentary in a visually striking format. With a nod to the past, and a peek to the future, Swedish Press is your go-to source for updates and inspiration from Sweden.

Global Swedes16 Putting Sweden on the Map – At Home: Cecilia Rydinger Alin

Cover image: (Top right) Frans representing Sweden at the 2016 Eurovision Song Contest. Photo: Malin Lauterbach. (Bottom right) Renato Girolami in the main role of Falstaff at the Royal Opera. Photo: Micke Sandström. (Bottom left) Rock concert. Photo: donatas1205/123rf

CONTENTS ( May 2016 )

Lifestyle18 Top Sju19 Theatre: Falstaff, Operan

Hemma hos20 Design: Martin Molin’s Musical Marble Machine21 Treats à la Susanna22 Lär Dig Svenska23 Road to Community: Syrian band Svärd Lycka

In the Loop24 Landskapsnyheterna27 Canada, US & Beyond28 Calendar and Events

29 Ads and Info

30 Sista OrdetSweden’s keyboardist/composer Stefan Nilsson returns with The Gift

31 Press Byrån

Feature 10 Sound Art in Stockholm

Interview12 Lotta Jakobsson – Safety is best when you can’t see it...

14 2015 Reader Survey Summary

Heritage15 A brief history of Eurovision

PRINTED IN CANADA

The new campus of the Royal College of Music in Stockholm. Photo: Manne Lindwall

Photo: Record Union

Sweden Måns Zelmerlöw won the 2015 Eurovision Song Contest. Photo: Elena Volotova (EBU)

Page 4: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

Swedish Press | May 2016 10[ ]

In recent years, Stockholm has solidified its position as an international capital for pop music. With the prominence of Swedish songwriters and producers pioneering the music industry both at home and abroad (most notably Max Martin, who has worked with virtually every charting pop artist) and the country’s rich legacy of

successful musicians (from ABBA to Ace of Base to the newer exports, like Tove Lo and Zara Larsson), the city is ripe with musical talent and production know-how.

At times, though, it seems that Sweden’s tremendous success in the realm of commercial music overshadows other,

By Lara Andersson

Sound Art in Stockholm

lesser-known forms of music production. Compared to the sea of studios geared towards churning out pop-hits, there are very few spaces in Stockholm dedicated exclusively to the exploration of more esoteric musical traditions. Very little attention is directed towards the dissemination of such creative efforts.

Elektronmusikstudion (EMS for short), tucked into the lower level of München Bryggeriet in Södermalm, has been active in Stockholm since it’s inception in 1964 as the center for electroacoustic music and sound art. Run as an independent part of the Swedish Performing Arts Agency, EMS originated at a time when music production truly was a science—entire rooms housed large computer complexes and producers tinkered with chords and cables to generate as-of-yet unheard sounds. Concurrent with the likes of Steve Reich and Philip Glass, who pioneered minimal music in the mid to late 1960s, early EMS musicians developed tracks based on sound samples and audio loops. EMS, explains studio administrator Ylva Skog, “was primarily a space for introverts, hunched over their equipment all day to create the antithesis of pop music.” It was and still is, in many ways, “for those who aren’t interested in making typical melodies or following in ABBA’s footsteps.”

Though the number of electromusic enthusiasts was small, the studio’s membership remained relatively steady as the years progressed, moving to its current Södermalm

A set of acoustic panels made uniquely for EMS, housed in their largest studio complex.

An example of the type of synthesizer that once dominated electronic music.

Page 5: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

Robyn – for a microphone-building workshop. EMS continues to host events in its locations and, as of now, is consistently booked for classes and workshops, where visitors can enjoy six fully-equipped studio spaces, rare synthesizers and an ex-tensive collection of reading and listening materials.

Located just one flight of stairs above EMS is Fylkingen, an organization launched in 1933 as a forum for new music and intermedial art. Since its move to München Bryggeriet in 1987, Fylkingen and EMS have enjoyed a close relation-ship, with many EMS producers presenting their music in the Fylkingen auditorium. Every week, Fylkingen hosts performances, which range from music, to video, to dance and sound-text composition. It is here that many of Stock-holm’s most active sound artists perform their works, in a receptive and encouraging artistic environment. Amidst many others in Stockholm’s tight-knit community of sound artists, sisters Nadine and Tanya Byrne are exploring the intersections of sound, film, transcendence and ritual in their performance duo, “Ectoplasm Girls.” Yet another artist, Tara Transitory, is producing work that investigates transgender history in South-East Asia as well as the cross-sections of gender, noise and catharsis. Stockholm’s sound art scene may be lesser known than its pop counterpart, but it is rapidly expanding, opening its arms to new voices and curious minds.

Swedish Press | May 2016 11[ ]

location in 1985. As electronic music became more and more commonplace and less avant-garde, however, the organization’s existence was jeopardized. In 2004, the Swedish Performing Arts Agency, responsible for funding EMS, posed an interesting and still very relevant question. “They wondered,” says Skog, “Do we really need to allocate our funds to a group of loners, primarily men, who show-case their music by placing an audience in front of two large speakers?” After extensive deliberation, it was decided that EMS would remain intact but, in order to stay relevant, it would have to broaden its horizons.

Since 2004, the studio has opened up to a wider range of producers as well as several partner organizations. As Skog notes, “we will never be a space for the production of

pure pop music because we don’t want to compete with more commercial studios. But we are encouraging music that is not as strictly experimental as it once was.” Since most production-related fields are male-dominated, EMS is also making a pointed effort to

bring women into the studio and transform their locale into a gender-neutral space. “Our walls,” explains Skog, “used to be covered with photos of influential music producers. But they were, of course, all men. So we took them down in favor of a more neutral aesthetic.” In 2014, EMS partnered with Popkollo – an organization that introduces under-represented demographics (women, trans-people and asylum seekers) to the basics of music production and boasts the support of musical artists like Grammy-nominated

Tara Transitory aka One Man Nation.

Photos on page 10: Elektronmusikstudio. Photo below: Benoit Daoust

Page 6: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

E X C L U S I V E I N T E R V I E W W I T H L O T T A J A K O B S S O N

Swedish Press | May 2016 12[ ]

Lotta Jakobsson, a professor, Ph.D. and a 27-year veteran at Volvo Cars in Sweden, is the senior technical leader on injury prevention. She spoke with Swedish Press about past, present and future trends in the car safety innovation of Volvo cars.

Safety is best when you can’t see it…

By Birgitta Laurenexpectingfitness.com

“All my life I have worked on the mechanics of how much impact the human body can take before it breaks,

so we can help prevent both accidents and people getting hurt. An old lady’s femur for example, will break with only 3 kilonewton force, vs. a young man’s femur which can be exposed to 15 kN before breaking. Different parts of our bodies are stronger than others. An accident can come from any direction, which is why the seat belt is designed the way it is, across the hip and chest, our bodies’ strongest parts, to protect most of us in most cases. The three-point seat belt was invented in 1959, and though we would like to, we have never come up with anything better, but we are working on it. ”

Volvo started prioritizing safety in the 50s, to protect the individual, before Sweden even changed to right -side driving in the 60s. We have always been so good at safety that the concept gives us extra energy to do even better. We are a small company, which improves our tactics across departments. It’s a ‘culture’ and a mindset. We don’t wait for safety

organizations to tell us what they want. In 2013, they started a new category called “small overlap crash” to see safety in crashes involving say only 20% of the front side corner of the vehicle instead of a full frontal crash. Since Volvo had already worked on this since the 90’s, we did very well, while everybody else failed miserably. We do our own crash testing and did it so well, pushing everybody else to work that much harder. This did cause some concern.

We were also first in creating safety measures for whiplash safety in the 90s, and being 10 years ahead of international whiplash safety standards has given us an edge and a great reputation for safety. There are so many details, but we are happy every time we succeed. All in all, the important thing is: lives are saved.

How do you blend safety with design and still make a beautiful car? Safety is best when you can’t see it. Children must be in the safest position.The belt must be well designed both for comfort and aesthetics, so that

Integrated booster cushion for a child and the three-point seat belt.

‘The Excellence Child Seat Concept’ with a safe rearward facing seating position.

Volvo really dominated the safety pick awards of IIHS crash testing in 2016 in all but one category. How come Volvo and Sweden are so good at making safe cars?

Page 7: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

Swedish Press | May 2016 13[ ]

S E N I O R T E C H N I C A L S P E C I A L I S T S A F E T Y , V O L V O C A R S

it gets used. But we do try to hide everything, while ensuring everything is there when you need it. There are many dimensions to keep in mind. We also have the lowest child car passenger fatality rate in the world due to our unique design having children ride facing the rear.

Tell us about Volvo’s Vision 2020. Volvo’s concept for “Vision 2020” is to have our cars so safe that no one will die in a Volvo in an accident after 2020. It’s our guiding star, our

soften the blows just like a technique in helicopters. This is unique for Volvo. Our ambitions are to control and minimize impact in all collisions and eventually prevent collisions. Now we have the ability with self-braking cars to control left hand turns, and preventing collisions with objects from cars, to pedestrians and bicycles. There are however many other situations we are working on. We have just invented a mechanism for detecting and auto-brake for large animals with long legs, such as elks, and deer, so they don’t end up in the front window. They are dangerous and it is very difficult to construct a brake system for them. We are the only ones with any brake system for animals and traffic crossings. In Europe we also have a system that makes a Volvo blink with rear warning lights in case a car is coming from behind with too much speed to warn the oncoming car, as well as tightening the belts of people in the Volvo, for better neck protection.

But rules in America in regards to the color of the blinking lights are preventing us to include this mecha-nism in Volvos in the US. We hope this will soon change.

Volvo also has new more comfort-able chairs. Our chairs still lead in injury protection which has halved whiplash injuries. Women in par-ticular are at risk for neck injuries. To make our cars safe in all driving environments we have to study how people drive in different countries. In Sweden people drive rather respon-sibly in an organized fashion but some countries drive more relaxed like in China. We do a lot of research on this, filming traffic so we can understand traffic in other countries.

single focus and mindset: that all people matter. The question is how to technically solve all safety issues for all people. We identify who gets hurt how, address these issues in new cars and we now have totally unique safety details for “off-roading”. 50% of all US auto accident fatalities happen when a car goes off the road. It’s a large area of concern, since there are so many different ways of going off road. The biggest issues have been the impact on the human body when bouncing around during off-roading and the impact from the bottom of the vehicle hitting the ground which could cause back inju-ries. To minimize back injuries our belts now tighten during off-roading for better protection, and our seats

The City Safety system in the new Volvo XC90 features Cyclist detection with full auto brake, day and night.

Close-up Volvo S90 seat Made by Sweden.

To make a difference in the world is very gratifying. My work is to save people’s lives, which is fun and makes me proud. I get to work with doctors, scientists, physical therapists, and other engineers, which fuel my passion and give me total work satisfaction.

What is your favorite Volvo? I drive a V60. Technology is fun and I always want to have the latest, so my next car, which is not available yet will be the V90. Otherwise I really love the old C70 coupe, but its very old fashion. My son wants us to have the new XC90.

All photos: Volvo Cars

Volvo S90

Page 8: Swedish Press Sample May 2016 Vol 87:04

Hope you enjoyed this sample of Swedish Press.

To read more, please click the link

https://swedishpress.com/subscription

to subscribe.