Meer were playing in Germany a couple of years ago when a man came up to them after the show. âHe wanted to thank us, but he started crying,â says co-vocalist Johanne Kippersund Nesdal. âAnd he just cried and cried. He said, âYou are making me do this.â Getting that kind of reaction from a grown man makes you realise that your music is impacting peopleâs lives.â
Itâs not surprising they provoked such a reaction. The Norwegian eight-pieceâs music is big in every sense: melodically, emotionally, dramatically, marrying the intricacy and grand sweep of modern prog to the accessibility of pop. Even their name is a play on âMerâ â the Norwegian word for âmoreâ.
âWe always want more,â jokes Eivind StrÞmstad, Meerâs guitarist and also Johanneâs husband.
The pair are speaking to Prog via Zoom from a room in the theatre that Nesdal and her brother and co-vocalist Knutâs parents own in the lakeside town of Hamar, 90 minutes north of Oslo (current productions: a summery spin on Shakespeareâs A Winterâs Tale and a version of Alice In Wonderland). Nesdal and StrÞmstad both work here. âHe married into the family business,â says the singer.
Appropriately, thereâs a sense of drama to Meerâs third album, Wheels Within Wheels. The uplifting rush of their music is powered by the Nesdal siblingsâ distinctive voices: Johanneâs powerful and soaring, Knutâs lithe and melodic. The latter came fourth in the Norwegian heats for Eurovision in 2014. âWe both love to sing, but heâs more into the glam, TV stuff than I am,â says Johanne.
Wheels Within Wheels doesnât exactly set its sights on Eurovision, but it does come with an unashamed desire to balance complexity with catchiness.
âWe wanted to write songs that people would have fun singing along with,â says Johanne. âSome of the songs are a little more pop-rocky. You can dance along to them.â
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JAKKO M JAKSZYK
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