Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Passenger Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Jens Lekman
Reviews

Jens Lekman Review

Oct 5, 2012
-
Posted by Adam Peters

SOURCE first encountered Mr Lekman back in 2004, playing a theatre in his hometown of Gothenburg alongside a brass section as the rain sheeted down outside. That gig went on to be released as a live EP in the States, showcasing Jens’ studied crooning – each song a lament to lost love or friendship with a different girl. It was the darkly comic lyrics that really stood out, peppered with oblique references to Cliff Richard and “lukewarm English beer”.

Eight years and a temporary relocation to Melbourne on, new album ‘I Know What Love Isn’t’ finds Lekman more doomed in love than ever, much to the benefit of fans of deeply sung lyrical Swedish folk pop. Tonight in Brighton, he is by turns charming and a little shambolic, ending his set by inviting audience members to approach him after the show if they want any more songs, having begun it by forgetting to turn his guitar pedal on as he silently strummed the first 30 seconds of opener ‘Become Someone Else’s’, his face a picture of confusion.

Jens has long been something of a heartthrob to the Scandi indie set, and much of the front third of this crowd is a cluster of impossibly blonde headband-sporting Swedish girls. The song introductions are in many ways as lyrical as the tracks themselves. The new album’s title track, he explains, is about a suggested marriage of convenience to allow him to remain in Australia. An offer which he turned down as “it’s illegal, so if I’d gone through with it, I wouldn’t be able to tell the story [in song]”.

Lekman introduces ‘Waiting For Kirsten’ as the tale of a weekend he spent stalking actress Kirsten Dunst around Gothenburg, but as with all his songs, there’s far more beneath the surface here, and the song goes on to rail against the erosion of free healthcare and rise of the far-right in Sweden. Despite the slow, stripped downbeat timbre of most of these compositions, the headbands bounce along in time and the world’s most civilised moshpit threatens to break out on several occasions.

Although known for touring with all-female backing bands, tonight Jens’ accompanying musicians are evenly split gender-wise, with men on drums and keys, women on violin and bass. Said bassist looks far too ‘rock’ for this kind of thing, but the ensemble (supplemented by pre-recorded samples) is tight, the singer himself adding electro-acoustic guitar and well received ‘air xylophone’.

Tonight is Leonard Cohen’s 78th birthday, and it’s somewhat fitting that Lekman, in many ways a younger, Swedisher Cohen gives ‘The Opposite Of Hallelujah’ and ‘A Postcard To Nina’ a workout. The stylistic inspiration for these tracks – the former a tale of a sister and a ocean, the latter a riff on ‘Famous Blue Raincoat’ even down to the “yours truly, Jens Lekman” sign-off – is obvious.

As the Haunt’s ferociously early weekend gig curfew approaches and loitering headbands wait to take Jens up on his offer of an after-hours personal performance, he just has time to regale us with an anecdote from his last visit to Brighton – a mix-up at hotel reception that resulted in him being installed in a suite intended for German footballer Jens Lehmann. It seems too contrived to be true, and one suspects he tells the same anecdote wherever he plays, but surely a man who wears his heart as far down his sleeve as Lekman is incapable of lying. Isn’t he?

Haunt, Friday 21st September 2012
Words and photos by Adam Peters

Oct 5, 2012
Email
Adam Peters
Adam Peters started out publishing football fanzines in the late 80s. Various jobs on video games magazines and a brief dalliance scripting photo love stories for the teen press followed. Switching media to television, he co-wrote David Walliams' first sitcom, was somehow once BAFTA-nominated and now concentrates on pre-school animation series. Coming full circle, in 2013 he launched a roller derby fanzine.
← PREVIOUS POST
Venetian Snares Review
NEXT POST →
Adolescent Review
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Love Supreme Festival 2026 – Sunday Review
    Jul 9, 2026

    The final day of Love Supreme was superb, with one of the greatest performances in the festival's history.

  • Love Supreme Festival 2026 – Saturday Review
    Jul 9, 2026

    Day two of the festival delivered top quality shows from across the soul music spectrum.

  • Passenger, Hove Park 6th September
    Jul 8, 2026

    Local boy Passenger (aka Mike Rosenberg) will play an outdoor gig in Hove Park on Sunday 6th September

  • Love Supreme Festival 2026 – Friday Review
    Jul 7, 2026

    The first fully progammed Friday got the festival off to a flying start with a host of new and established talent.

  • Wild Women Review
    Jul 6, 2026

    Five very different stories masterfully constructed and told with absolute conviction: a deeply empowering, moving and fun experience with stunning acting.

  • Levellers Announce Full Support Line Up For Hove Park Show
    Jun 26, 2026

    Levellers have released details of the eclectic supports for their exclusive Hove Park show.

  • Opus Kink Announce Debut Album and Launch Show
    Jun 24, 2026

    We love the gothic glory that is Opus Kink who are releasing their long awaited debut album.

  • The Great Escape 2026 Review: Part 2
    Jun 20, 2026

    Peaches provides the teaching, while Morn, Maquina and Alice Faye provide all that is glorious about live music.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Jens Lekman Review - Brighton Source