Essayer OR - Gratuit
Guided By The Light
Prog
|Issue 163
Swedish proggers Gaupa have gone from five members to four, but it isn't holding them back. With new mini-album Fyr the group have started afresh - and as guitarist David Rosberg and bassist Erik Sävström tell Prog, change isn't always a bad thing.

There’s something unusual in the water over in Scandinavia; it continues to excel as a hotbed of musical creativity. Sweden’s Gaupa have already staked their claim in recent years as one of the area’s hottest freethinking exports, and their current release is likely to cement their place in the progosphere further. It’s only a mini-album, but Fyr packs a powerful punch, and it’s perhaps all the more impressive given it comes after the quartet had to press the restart button when guitarist Daniel Nygren called it quits last year.
Prog is speaking to sole guitarist David Rosberg and bassist Erik Sävström on a video call ahead of Fyr’s release, but amid the celebration it soon appears that the recording process behind it - which was more fragmented than usual - wasn’t all joy and sunshine.
Sävström, who admits he is more of a stage man than a studio dweller, says it was a “trauma”, while Rosberg describes the process as “tough”.
“The previous recordings we’ve done,” says Sävström, “we’ve always done everything in one studio. But that dude who recorded us then, he stopped doing it. He recorded us and mixed everything and was co-producing everything, so he was a close friend. It was a loss not to be able to record at his place.”
“It was a very different approach this time,” adds Rosberg. “It was a bit hectic to get everything done as well, so everything was quite last minute. But I think we got some nice songs in the end, so I’m happy with it. The process was a bit too rushed for me, but I’m happy with the result.”
That end result is four songs - Lion’s Thorn, Heavy Lord, Ten Of Twelve and Elastic Sleep - which span 24 minutes and grab Gaupa’s atmospheric, freethinking and stoner-speckled rock by the neck and inject fresh chutzpah - a gift for die-hards and newbies alike. (The digital release also contains a bonus live version of Sömnen/Febersvan.)
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition Issue 163 de Prog.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Prog

Prog
The Power of Three
Despite a musical pedigree that includes prog luminaries like Mostly Autumn, Riversea and Lee Abraham, Moon Halo remain relatively undiscovered. Following the release of Trichotomy, their third studio album, Prog caught up with Marc Atkinson, David Clements and lain Jennings to find out how their three-way creative collaboration works.
4 mins
Issue 163

Prog
Art Music
Robert Reed and Steve Balsamo's progressive electronic duo Chimpan A are back with their long-awaited third album, the teasingly-titled Music Is Art - Vol. 1. Comprising original material and some surprising cover versions, the doublelength record also includes a host of impressive musical guests. The pair discuss making big-sounding songs, fanboy moments in the studio and their plans to cast us all under the Chimp spell!
7 mins
Issue 163

Prog
Sending Signals
British prog rockers Ihlo are back with their longawaited second album. Legacy affirms their status as a force to be reckoned with and takes their synth-infused dynamic sound to a whole new level.
4 mins
Issue 163

Prog
Brave New Worlds
Nearly half a century after Jeff Wayne took a leap of faith with his Musical Version Of The War Of The Worlds, the US composer and lyricist returns to his best-known work with some deluxe new collectors' box sets. Prog catches up with him to discuss grand reimaginings, almost working with Peter Gabriel, and how AI could shape his future tours.
7 mins
Issue 163

Prog
Who Do You Think You Are?
On his latest solo album, Jakko M Jakszyk has embarked on a very personal journey after a period of self-doubt. Son Of Glen is a companion piece of sorts to his acclaimed memoir, Who's The Boy With The Lovely Hair?, on which he explores themes of identity and familial bonds. He tells Prog about \"the proggiest thing\" he's ever done and what the future might hold for King Crimson.
7 mins
Issue 163

Prog
RICK WAKEMAN DIGS DEEP INTO EMOTIONS
Melancholia is the keyboard virtuoso's first-ever LP of self-composed instrumentals.
2 mins
Issue 163

Prog
EDENSONG
New York proggers return with first studio album in almost a decade
2 mins
Issue 163

Prog
BE PROG! MY FRIEND READIES THEATRICS AND SURPRISES FOR THIS YEAR'S BARCELONA WEEKEND
The 2025 edition will feature headline sets from heavy hitters Tesseract and The Pineapple Thief.
2 mins
Issue 163

Prog
PROG FOR PEART
There's a moment when Forgotten Gods' Mark Cunningham sings Everybody's Hero – written about Neil Peart – and we're reminded that great live music truly transcends the mundane and touches the soul.
5 mins
Issue 163

Prog
GET ME OUT OF THE CAGE!
The curious tale of The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway on tour
21 mins
Issue 163
Listen
Translate
Change font size