Lindstrøm & Christabelle
Smalltown Supersound / Oslo
After the release of Lindstrøm’s critically acclaimed solo album Where You Go I Go Too,
in 2008 and 2009`s collaborative album with Prins Thomas, II, Norway’s maestro of disco
returns once again. This time he teams up with sultry vocalist Christabelle, to bring us
Real Life Is No Cool, an edgy pop album of structured chaos and hypnotic beats.
Hans-Peter Lindstrøm actually began work on Real Life Is No Cool before Where You
Go I Go Too, it just so happened WYGIGT was finished first. It was his work on this new
album, containing 10 short pop songs with vocals, which became the impetus behind
creating the epic and colossal masterpiece, WYGIGT (with only 3 long tracks and a
opening track clocking in at 28 minutes). Essentially, WYGIGT was a kind of reaction to
his work on Real Life Is No Cool. When WYGIGT began making waves around the
world, Lindstrøm went back into his studio to complete Real Life Is No Cool.
Christabelle (also known as Solale to Lindstrøm followers) has been working on and off
with Lindstrøm since 2001. Their relationship began when she immediately fell in love
with his sound after hearing her brother Dennis (a friend of Lindstrøm) play some of his
tracks at home. Upon listening, she proceeded to lay down vocals on some of his tracks,
and her brother then delivered them to Lindstrøm. His first impression was, “Wow! This
sounds totally fresh, wild and quirky”. A meeting was set up and the two found a common
ground. ”We found out that we shared many of the same musical references, such as
Motown, Grace Jones, 80s soul, Vanity 6, etc.” says Lindstrøm. “We even tried to make
a cover of Zapp`s ‘Computer Love’. This meeting led to a collaboration resulting in two
12”s -- 2003’s “Music In My Mind” and 2005’s “Let’s Practice” (then under the name
Lindstrøm and Solale). They never planned on making an album together, but the
collaboration slowly evolved into a collection of songs that ended up becoming Real Life
Is No Cool. (The title is a line taken from the album track ‘Keep It Up’ -- a track about
violent relationships.)
Christabelle, whose full name is Christabelle Silje Isabelle Birgitta Sandoo, was born in
1981 to a Norwegian mother and a father from Mauritius (an island in the Indian ocean)
in Oslo, Norway. Her father is a musician and music teacher, her mother a vocalist, and
her brother a drummer. “All my life I have been surrounded by music, musicians, and
instruments, so it was kind of obvious that I would also make music”. She started
working with some of the best producers in Norway, but got off to on the wrong foot as
she soon rebelled against their slick sound and attitude. As she said, “There was simply
no room for going crazy and having fun, and I didn’t want to sell my nomad soul”. One of
the things that attracted Lindstrøm was this rebellion against being “produced”. He would
just let Christabelle do what she was inspired to do – she found room for improvisation
and was able to let herself loose working with him. She created most of the lyrics on the
spot, while the two were jamming, and recorded half of the tracks’ vocals at home and
on her own, using a simple Shure SM55 “elvis”-mic, which gave her vocals an intimate
and raw character. Lindstrøm would then edit and produce the jams later. Christabelle
was not into the house music that Lindstrøm was into at the time, which forced him to
think differently. The result was a more loose and improvised sound than what Lindstrøm
had done before.
Lindstrøm calls their collaboration “structured chaos”, him being the structure and
Christabelle bringing the chaos. This chaos is also very much a part of Christabelle`s
personal life. She has always been a nomad -- impulsive and restless, she’s a selfdescribed
“on-the-road girl”. She moved to London when she was 16, and, since then,
has lived in Paris, Marseille, Mauritius, and Stockholm. She now lives in Oslo. She is, in
many ways, the total opposite of Lindstrøm, who lives a quiet family life and makes disco
nine to five, Monday to Friday, traveling to play one gig a month so that he can have time
with his family.
Real Life Is No Cool is a meeting of these two different personalities.
www.smalltownsupersound.com, www.feedelity.com, http://www.myspace.com/feedelity
For more info contact joakim@smalltownsupersound.com
Photos and artwork can be found here: www.smalltownsupersound.com/d l

