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Victoria Bergsman wanted to travel to record in a mysterious, relatively uncharted area avoiding the usual clinical studio experience which she has always disliked and found to be an uncreative environment. She chose Pakistan. The rhythm, drums and flutes of Pakistani music had long captivated Victoria and this, coupled with a deep admiration for one of her favourite singers Abida Parveen and the legendary Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, helped her choose Pakistan as the place to record her new album. Another attractive factor was her interest in Sufi musicians who play in order to enter a trance like state, using music to transport themselves to another time and place. Victoria is one of very few Western women, if not the only one, to record in this region, and the bureaucracy, cultural differences and prejudices she had to overcome to see this project through almost beggar belief. It’s therefore little short of a miracle that this album turned out the way it did. Victoria, previously best known for her work with The Concretes and Peter Bjorn & John’s worldwide smash hit single ‘Young Folks’, now works under the nom de plume Taken By Trees. This new offering follows in the footsteps of Taken By Tree’s debut album Open Field (2007) and will be released via Rough Trade Records on September 7th. Victoria and her recording engineer and sole accompanying musician, Andreas Söderström, left Stockholm for Pakistan after months of bureaucratic paperwork and visa wrangles. They were in fact advised by the Swedish government not to go, unless they had a very strong reason. They were told they could not guarantee their safety.

Despite this, and once finally in Lahore, a dramatic cultural hurdle had to be surmounted – Victoria was deemed ‘everyone’s property’ when men discovered she wasn’t married. She was dragged away leaving Andreas to fight for her safety; they had to swiftly pretend they were a married couple. Whilst making enquiries about local musicians, they met Faseeh the hotel owner's son, who introduced them to his father, Malik, an enigmatic character who had recently owned a pet lion! Malik’s house was a local gathering place for Sufi musicians and so the recording operation was set up around his home, inside and out. Several barriers still had to be overcome though; the notion of a woman in charge of the recording session was an anathema to them. It was only over time, as they began to respect her as a musician rather than looking down on her as a woman, that Victoria’s vision for the record was translated and eventually recorded. Furthermore, the electricity would go off for an hour every third hour. But nothing could stop these local musicians, who had played with famous artists like Abida Parveen and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.

Constant reminders of the inherent dangers of being a stranger in these regions occurred throughout the recording process. One day, Malik who had many connections and who was hugely respected in the local community, arranged for Victoria to witness (and actually film) Ashura, (where men and boys purge themselves with whips until they bleed, sometimes to death). Despite all the careful arrangements she still had to be briskly swept away when some people realized a woman was present and began to spit at her.

These wildly unusual circumstances surrounding the recording process helped create an inspired and stunningly beautiful album that evokes images of Pakistan in a completely unique way. Söderström’s powerful, often minimal guitar work, Victoria’s sublime, mysterious vocals and enigmatic lyrics, powered by the sounds, beats and rhythms of genuine local Pakistani musicianship has created a magical musical concoction. Add to this the production skills of Dan Lissvik (one half of the ultra creative Swedish duo ‘Studio’) who pieced the whole project together back in Sweden in the Spring of 2009, and you really have a genuine Album Of The Year contender.
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