Label:
LPX2:
EAN:
7041889514335
Catalog number:
PLZ044
Release date:
11.10.2024
Info:
20th anniversary release of Sondre Lerche’s classic album featuring 4
never before heard bonus tracks on 2xLP limited edition white gatefold
vinyl.
First re-pressing of this album in over a decade!
I just listened through the brand new remastered Two Way Monologue
album. It’s the first time I’ve heard the album in one sitting since we
finalized the recording sometime in 2003. From Love You to Maybe You're
Gone. And beyond.
And what a trip it's been, from then to now, from Monologue to Avatars,
basically. My immediate impression upon hearing it again actually
confirmed my notion that these two albums are some kind of kindred
spirits — only separated by nearly twenty years of life. Hearing Two Way
Monologue now I can feel myself aching and stretching towards another
sense of freedom and another level of expression in music. It was
something I couldn't quite grasp as the time — a need for more space,
more adventure and clarity of emotion, channeling a more esoteric state
of mind. If I don't quite feel that I achieve any or all of this, I say
so with the sense that I did achieve something else worth capturing. The
album strives for expressions way beyond my reach at the time,
especially in terms of words and singing. To me it sounds like I’m
wrestling both my limitations and my abilities. I'm not quite sure what
was most frustrating to me at the time: all that came easy, or
everything that was so hard-won.
There's a beauty and brutal honesty to these very visible growing pains,
and this continuous project of self-liberation, agency and identity
through music and performance. Hearing it again now, in hindsight, with
extra warm sonic clarity — remastered by Jørgen Træen, who mixed and
co-produced Two Way Monologue back in the day — felt quite overwhelming
and grand.
And as it turns out, I reunited with Jørgen on some of Avatars Of Love
just a few years ago, so us revisiting Two Way Monologue together is
maybe just another full circle moment.
I remember interviewers often asking me at the time: is this
thematically a concept album, what with the title and several songs
depicting various failures to communicate? I hadn't even given it a
single thought. I was not thematically conscious. I just wrote one song
after another. I had landed on the album title, cause it felt like such a
good song title, and everything else felt more or less contrived. I
remember threatening my label that I’d name the album «I wish I were
you, Scooby Doo». I don’t think I was joking. In the end I was wise
enough to realize Two Way Monologue would make the best album title. But
not wise enough to have made the connection that seemed so obvious and
intentional to everyone else; that Two Way Monologue was a collection of
songs about the struggle to express oneself and communicate with
clarity in real life.
Some of these songs were written right after I had finished recording my
debut, Faces Down, while anxiously awaiting the end of my high school
years Faces Down could come out and life could begin. Soon thereafter I
found myself touring the world and basking in the newfound attention of a
global audience. And just as I thought things might wind down so I
could start recording the next one, the US label Astralwerks decided to
release my debut in North America, a full year after it had been
released in Europe and Asia.
I was 19 and a pretty strange combination of calm, cool and extremely
ambitious and driven in terms of all that was going on career-wise at
the time. The interest from the US took me by delightful surprise. For
any Norwegian artist in 2002, the US seemed a dimension entirely out of
reach, a sphere as distant as any galaxy out there. And there I was, on a
plane to NYC for the first time, straight from the first few weeks of
trying to record Two Way Monologue at home in Bergen.
When I first courted US and Canadian audiences with songs from Faces
Down, the songs that were to become Two Way Monologue remained my little
secret. But as I continued touring the USA and Canada throughout 2003,
first opening for Nada Surf, the Jason Mraz, I started trying out some
of the new songs in concert. I remember doing It's Over, with Ed
Harcourt on piano. Days That Are Over had been with me a while, I wrote
that in my hotel room after shooting my first ever music video, for You
Know So Well, in Oslo, fall of 2000. Wet Ground was written around the
same time, while I still lived with my mom, and ended up on Two Way
Monologue in the shape of my solitaire home demo recording, captured as
soon as I had received my first ever songwriter’s royalty check and was
able to get a mortgage from the bank to buy my own apartment. I was
living, if not the dream, a dream.
Other songs on the album were last minute add-ons and bursts of
inspiration: towards the end of the sessions we felt like the album
could use a couple of songs that were more structurally and emotionally
direct. In response, I quickly wrote On The Tower, Track You Down and
It's Our Job, sometime in January of 2003. The latter two recordings
maintained a lot of elements from my ramshackle home demos paired with
my band of musicians. While it’s hard for me to imagine the album
without these three songs at this point, I still sometimes feel these
and other lyrics might have benefited from another round of
considerations and rewriting. But that’s the beauty of making a record:
it remains a document of both your abilities and limitations, neither of
which you were completely aware of at the time.
The addition of those three songs meant that other key tunes that had
been in the mix had to be excluded from the album. One of them was, in
my mind, supposed to be the centerpiece, no less. But the excitement and
self-confidence with which I had written the song gradually evaporated
with each attempt we made at recording the song. By the time we were
mixing the album, September Something was not even finalized, and
remained incomplete and alone on my hard drive. Until now!
Sifting through the archives and vaults for this reissue, I was reminded
of September Something’s existence. I remembered the burst of
inspiration I felt at first, and the humiliating disappointment I felt
as I realized it was nobody's favorite, not even my own, and certainly
not with those lyrics. Rediscovering it now I could sympathize with what
the original lyrics were trying but failing to express. And I felt
compelled to give my old self a hand. I tasked my former guitar player
Kato Ådland with rearranging and finalizing the original recording,
using as much as possible from the 2002 sessions, including my old
vocals where possible. Kato was essential to making Two Way Monologue
happen, far beyond his role as my guitar player at the time. He went
above and beyond to try and understand my knotty visions for these songs
and recorded all the band demos at his studio. We've worked together
ever since. In order for me to want to share September Something with
the world, the lyrics would need a lot of help and revisions. I gave it
another go, wanting to fulfill my intentions from back then, with the
added luxury of time, growth and perspective. The lyrics were originally
an attempt at a cheeky self-referential, self-deprecating,
self-commenting tale of my life thus far, but it was all over the place
and felt awkward even then. Returning to it now, I tried not to
overthink it, and leave some of the awkwardness in. I now feel happy to
have been able to free the song of its composer's original failure to
rise to the challenge. And to get to unite my 2002 voice with the sound
of my current self, as we trade lines and harmonize, 22 years apart.
And if you get to the end of it, you may recognize a piece of music that
in fact did survive this song, and went on to be heard by more people
than probably anything else that actually ended up on the Two Way
Monologue album.
Discovering the music of Prefab Sprout in 2001 was the single biggest
influence on my songwriting on Two Way Monologue. Their music changed my
whole outlook on what I was trying to do as a writer, and deeply spoke
to me as a musician, teenager, son, boyfriend, dreamer, ego…you get it.
Paddy McAloon captured it all and continues to inspire my work to this
day. I consider him one of the finest songwriters alive at this moment.
Among the many songs inspired by this initial rush of Prefab-inspiration
was a song called Rejection #5. A song that's neither the greatest song
ever written, nor anywhere near the greatest song I've ever written. I
guess it made sense at the time. I remember it feeling new and
meaningful, pointing more towards my fourth album, Phantom Punch, than
anything else. I was so in awe of the nervous energy exhibited on the
debut album by Prefab Sprout, Swoon, that I reached out to their bass
player, Martin McAloon, asking if he'd be able to replicate some of that
vibe on my recorded attempt at early Prefab-anxiety. He was gracious
and game, and recorded his part at home in Newcastle. As I received his
recording, I was, in fact, swooning beyond belief. And although the song
was not quite up to snuff — and I was not quite ready to embody this
nervous excitement and energy yet — I've always treasured having a demo
lying around with Martin McAloon playing beautiful fretless bass. It's
time you all hear it.
Another vault-discovery was the demo of a song I had completely
forgotten about, You Are Impossible. I believe this was another one that
I wrote and recorded in my new apartment, trying to come up with a few
more songs for the album, in January 2003. For some reason I never
played this one for my band or my producers, and it remained forgotten
by all, even myself. When I recently found it on a dusty CD-R, it was
the first time I got to experience hearing one of my own songs without
having any recollection of writing it. It was quite the strange
sensation. But more importantly: I quite liked it!
And so I decided to task my current keyboardist Alexander von Mehren and
bass player Chris Holm with recording, arranging and producing the
track. I asked them to be faithful to the spirit of my 2003 demo, and to
keep in mind everything they remember about the Two Way Monologue era
and sound. And they would know: they were regulars at my shows back
then, two years my juniors, attentively fan-boying when Two Way
Monologue came out. Since 2011 I've had the pleasure of playing with the
two of them, and Dave Heilman (who you'll also hear on drums on this
recording), on stage and on my albums since then. We are also joined by
old friends, singers Julian Berntzen and Nathalie Nordnes, who both sang
on the original TWM album and were important new people in my life
around the time all of this went down.
I chose to leave the You Are Impossible lyrics exactly as they were, and
sang the song at the best of my 2024 abilities. I don’t understand all
the words, or even all the melodic leaps and transitions 2003 me chose
to make, but I stand by that guy. My voice has changed, and hearing it
on the 2003 demo — and pretty much all of Two Way Monologue — I was
struck by how polite, gentle and bird-like I sounded back then. It was
another strange time in my life. I can never go back, but I am more than
happy and proud to revisit.
– Sondre Lerche
Tracklist:
1. Love You
2. Track You Down
3. On The Tower
4. Two Way Monologue
5. Days That Are Over
6. Wet Ground
7. Counter Spark
8. It's Over
9. Stupid Memory
10. It's Too Late
11. It's Our Job
12. Maybe You're Gone
13. You Are Impossible
14. September Something
15. Rejection #5
16. Weakest Spot