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30 MusicWeek 07.09.12 FEATURE SOUNDTRACKOFOURLIVES


Soundtrack Of Our Lives are splitting after 17 years. They were great, but never quite hit the big time. And they’re fine about that


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TALENT  BY TIM INGHAM


I


LIVES WELL LIVED


n a just world, this article would sit in your hand as heavy as a coffee-table book. It would be creaking with anecdotes and


compliments from leviathans of Beatles- influenced bravura – all raising a final, frothy ‘skol!’ to one of the greatest, grooviest, most gracious rock bands to poke their hirsute jowls above the parapet in the last 20 years. As is stands, it’s a threadbare single page – one


even this SOOL acolyte had to wrestle with my editor to justify. And I should know, for I am he. Seventeen years of Soundtrack Of Our Lives is


over. Six psyched-out, blissed-up, throaty, gutsy, chest-pounding long players are left behind. As for B-sides, have a go on Hang Ten – one of the trippiest, hypnotically soothing offcuts you’ll ever pop in your cranium. And yet, the tribute well runs dry. There are no


public tears from Dave Grohl. Keith Richards must be busy. Perhaps Roger Daltrey’s on his holidays. Sweden’s best-crafted export since Brolin and


Dahlin’s ping-ponged Euro ’92 heartbreaker will graciously bow out in front of 1,000-odd fans at London’s Heaven next week. The band will wear massive, sweaty smiles, but the good people at The Guinness Book Of Records shall go untroubled. Ebbot Lundberg is fine with all of this. SOOL’s


beefy, beardy frontman cares little about mistakes and missteps. He’s sanguine about the lack of public esteem projected towards his retro rock masterpiece Communion, and the fact that his entrusted handlers never engorged the all-too- brief UK media exposure shone on 2001’s Behind The Music. He’s not even fussed that Noel Gallagher flagrantly (albeit with public


COMING UP


ABOVE A lasting Soundtrack: Ebbot Lundberg, front and centre of SOOL – the band he formed in 1995


acknowledgement) nicked Confrontation Camp’s walloping crunch for poor Oasis cousin Lyla. He’s just delighted he got to meet his punk


heroes. “Many of them have passed away, of course,” he explains, in a cheerful facing down of mortality that speaks volumes about how many of his 46 years have been spent at the table of rock‘n’roll’s delights. “But I’ve heard nice things from the singers of The Vibrators [Ian ‘Knox’ Carnochan] and UK Subs [Charlie Harper]. I was confused and starstruck at the same time. It’s not about celebrity – I don’t give a shit. These people


POWER IN THE UNION


SOOL play London’s Heaven next Thursday (Sept 13). The band’s final album Throw It To The Universe is out on Monday (Sept 10)


created such exciting things at a crucial time in my life; a time when I was taking things in.” As for career highlights? Straight back to those


formative idols. “It was kind of weird having the drummer and


bass player from Peter And The Test Tube Babies working for us – that was, ‘Fuck!’ They were my favourite band when I was 14. Meeting people like that was why I started doing this in the first place.” Soundtrack Of Our Lives – as characterised by


Lundberg’s humble hero worship – openly embrace the past without being stuck in it. But eventually, the present catches up with everyone.


“It’s a relief we didn’t get that much hype, to be honest. Our lives are nowhere near as important as the music” EBBOT LUNDBERG, SOOL


“We made the decision to split a year ago when


Before forming Soundtrack Of Our Lives in 1995, Lundberg and SOOL bandmates created the punkish Union Carbide Productions (above). Famous fans included Kurt Cobain, REM and Sonic Youth. The singer hasn’t ruled out a post-SOOL reunion. “There are lots of ideas and people to work with


coming up,” he says. “We’ll see. Maybe Union Carbide will show up again for a very brief moment. I’m just excited and looking forward to start doing other things.” How would he like SOOL to be remembered? “As a great experience for anyone who wants to


come into our universe. It’s just the perfect sound, isn’t it? It turns me on and I hope it will turn on new people in the future too.”


touring in the States,” he says. “It meant everyone could see the end coming before recording the last album. It’s not normal for a disbanding group to feel this good. We’re stopping on top.” Lundberg’s philosophical acceptance of the end


of SOOL extends to the group’s inability to break through to a mainstream audience: “It’s a relief we didn’t get that much hype, to be honest. Our lives are nowhere near as important as the music, and I don’t know if we’ve had the looks you need or whatever. “Sometimes people make art for 20 years or


more, and only after all that time do they get the recognition they deserve. You have to focus on what you’re actually doing, not what other people think of you. That’s the challenge, the struggle. “We had a fucking great time. Really, I’m just so happy we made the grade.”


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