13. Victor Van Vugt

13. Victor Van Vugt

Hello loyal listeners! We’ve been busy recording and touring since you last heard from us, and in the muddle of it all, thought we’d lost the files for 4 brilliant episodes we’d recorded back before we got busy again. And then - magic! They appeared. Enjoy!

In Ingrid’s first producer talk, Sarah and Björn sit down with Australian-born, Berlin-via-NYC-via-London producer extraordinaire Victor Van Vugt. With names like Nick Cave, PJ Harvey, and Beth Orton in his bag, he lets us in on his magic touch during a brief visit to Stockholm. And even contemplates moving up north to foot his daughter’s latest dentist bill.

Episoder(23)

23. Peter Morén of Peter Bjorn and John

23. Peter Morén of Peter Bjorn and John

Approaching the 20th anniversary of the album which shot Peter Bjorn and John from Swedish indie obscurity to global mainstream success, Sarah sits down with Peter Morén and her trusty podcast co-host Björn Yttling as they prepare to take this very album – “Writer’s Block” – on the road. Over the course of an hour, they let her in on plenty of band dirt from the past 30 years. From touring with their “Indian” rock band in the early 90s pre-John, to the dogmatic approach they use to write and record albums, to how they decided on Peter Bjorn and John as a name (and how to really spell it), and on to that hot midsummer day in 2006 when Victoria Bergsman quickly recorded her vocals on “Young Folks.” That epic track that would change it all. The conversation rounds off with reflections on future hopes for the band, how they maintain a healthy relationship to that viral track while writing album after album, and a decision on which of the three would qualify as the biggest brother in the band. Who could it be?

23 Apr 1h 4min

22. Joakim Berg – Kent goes live!

22. Joakim Berg – Kent goes live!

On 18 October 2024, the impossible came true. Kent announced that they would be reuniting as a band on stage for three Stockholm shows, which quickly turned into six due to overwhelming demand. Fans were excited – fans were divided. Suddenly, anything and everything was possible.    Quickly the question arose: who would be first to get an interview with the legendary frontman, Joakim Berg? Who would get the lowdown on what had finally brought the band to this gigantic decision to play live again? Something they had promised would never happen again, since striking the last note on “Vi är inte längre där” on 17 December 2016.   The answer came in quickly. No one… Until Joakim bumped into Back to the Music with Ingrid’s moderator, Sarah Snavely, and asked her if she wanted to continue the conversation they’d had a year ago. He still had a few things to say about music, his process, the big wild world, and the upcoming shows, but journalists asked such boring questions. How about another session at Ingrid Studios?   In this episode, Joakim Berg, Sarah Snavely, and Björn Yttling sit down for a deep dive on setlists, rehearsals, future plans, and a whole lot more. Intimate, exciting, and entirely honest, this two-hour interview gets way beneath the ordinary surface, revealing a man who takes his privileged position seriously and intends only the best for his fans. An artist in a band that takes nothing for granted, especially not the incredible relationship he has with each member of Kent, which he was reminded of from the very first rehearsal. “I belong here. These are my people.”   Episode highlights:   How My Bloody Valentine in a school cafeteria sparked his friendship with Martin A short demonstration of his signature claw-handed guitar playing  An explanation of his favorite Kent song A story about a pair of very sweaty PVC pants How YouTube is a key player in figuring out how to play Which Kent member loves ABBA the most

18 Mar 2h 2min

21. Jenny Wilson

21. Jenny Wilson

Coming straight from a massage table to the Ingrid Studios floor, Jenny Wilson dives straight into what music means – and has meant over the decades she’s been making it – to her life. With a strong belief that it's the greatest art form of them all, she explains how songwriting has helped her ride the ups and downs of an incredible existence. Raw honesty and a big beating heart power this songstress, and our conversation, onwards. From playing in a band to going about it solo to composing an opera. From social media to krautrock dreams to the favorite thing she’s ever written. Join Sarah and Björn as they go Back to the Music with Ingrid à la incomparable Jenny Wilson.

31 Jan 1h 3min

20. Abstract Crimewave's Joakim Åhlund

20. Abstract Crimewave's Joakim Åhlund

From trombone to bass to guitar to vocals. From punk to jazz to rock to indie. From music videos to music production to the uncomfortable landscape of lead singing. “I’m always thinking about music,” Jocke Åhlund explains to Sarah and Björn (who he shares a band with) over the course of a raucous hour at the studio. We dig in deep on his long-standing relationship with music. Including how he loves the Ramones for having a single sound and drumbeat, but has trouble himself making music that holds to one genre. Get the lowdown on this multihyphenate’s magical non-formula, and learn just what Swedish music may be all about.

17 Jan 1h 3min

19. The Go-Betweens' Robert Forster

19. The Go-Betweens' Robert Forster

Refusing to wear headphones in the softest way imaginable, Robert Forster of The Go-Betweens' fame joins Björn and Sarah on the evening before his departure from Sweden after a month-long recording session. He takes us back in time to the recording industry of the 80s, explains how he taught Grant McLennan to play bass with zero musical training, and what it’s like to be both a musician – and a music critic! Oh, and let’s us in on the gig he played at the inauguration of the Go Between bridge in his hometown, while disclosing his favorite studio in the world as….

8 Nov 20241h 3min

18. Johnossi's John Engelbert

18. Johnossi's John Engelbert

A week before releasing his 8th studio album, John Englebert of Swedish rock duo Johnossi joins Sarah and Björn to share the highs and lows of his creative process. He waxes lyrical on everything from scientology and air miles to why Johnossi started without a bassist, how the White Stripes helped them along, and how the band’s songwriting process has evolved over two decades together, because, you know, “Rehearsing is boring.” Oh, and we learn what Ossi really thought of the lead single on the new album when he first heard a demo back in 2019. A truly raucous ride of a conversation, we leave him with the last word: “Music is a magical thing."

3 Okt 202448min

17. Anna Ternheim

17. Anna Ternheim

Having recently returned to her native Sweden after nearly an entire adulthood living in the U.S., Anna Ternheim joins us in the studio for a fun and inspiring conversation. Over the course of an hour, she lets us in on how: -she thinks she’s incredibly slow in the creative process -the first album carries a magical energy  -different places influence her sound, while she always follows the same routines -playing with a band vs. on her own feels -she’s found her songwriting formula   Fun fact: we recorded with her on the same day as her fellow Dead People bandmate Joakim Berg. With similarly kind and generous spirits, it was simple to see how these two found themselves in creative communion.

16 Mai 202458min

16. Joakim Berg – part 2

16. Joakim Berg – part 2

After 15 years giving zero interviews, getting this man in the podcast seat was…easy. When we asked him to join us in the studio for Back to the Music, he said yes and even arrived early. Sarah and Björn then sat the Swedish rock legend known as Joakim Berg down for a fun 90 minutes of music (and everything in-between) chit-chat. In episode 2, the conversation deepens and broadens, touching upon:   Why Kent is so loved by the Swedish folk  What the band fought about when they were together A secret room at Arlanda Airport in Stockholm that is very dear to his heart If Kent could possibly maybe someday...

18 Apr 202446min