Music videos?
A proper band needs music videos, right? You know, for promotion and stuff. I don’t think we ever made any for that purpose. They’re probably more of a “hey, we’ve got a video camera, let’s go out and film something” situation.
Back when we were BPA (note on that band name below), we acquired a friend whose parents had a video camera (hello, David). We grabbed some props (a plush rabbit) and a tape recorder to play back music with and went out without a plan.
BPA – Technojalusi
This track is mainly a take on the 1925 hit song Tango Jalousie by Jacob Gade. You know, this one. Anyway, Jan made the first version, and true to form I went in and made a mess of everything. The first thing I did was to shift the opening riff to fit the beat better – at least I thought so but Jan has never forgiven me for it. Then I extended it and added some samples with no relation to the actual track. Anyway, we went out in the forest outside my sisters house and jumped around a bit.
BPA – That Wasn’t Nice, Nigel!
One of those tracks now lost to history (note on lost tracks below). The only recording I have of it is an old RealAudio file, which I had to use on this video because the VHS audio was even worse. The main riff is using a really weird sample which I don’t know the source for, but there are samples from Monty Python & The Holy Grail in there. The idea for the video was just that Klas finds a coin, and Jan and me has to impress him on the playground to win it.
A note on the band name BPA: Short for “Bosse På Arlanda” (Bosse (name) at Arlanda (airport)) and is a reference to the 1991 comedy radio show “P3 Megashow A-Go-Go”, where each week a boy named Bosse would get in various troubles. That he is at Arlanda airport is just because it had to fit with the abbreviation BPA, a construction company. For whatever reason.
A note on lost tracks: Somewhere around 1994 there was a misunderstanding. A lot of our tracks were stored on Klas’ Amiga hard drive, which he wanted to sell. The hard drive, not the tracks. We can’t sell them. Anyway, he asked us if we had backed everything up, which we hadn’t but apparantly we said so, so it was all wiped and destroyed and we would never see these tracks again. We’ve got recordings on tape of some of it, and there’s a text file somewhere with lots of track titles we’ve used, but I’d say there’s a good 50 tracks lost forever right there. Yay.