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Tiia wrote:
An interview!
In German.. any volunteers to translate the most important parts at least? :)


Thanks for posting, Tiia! Wow, it's a pretty long interview, actually! I surely not a German specialist, but (AFAIK) they're talking about band in general, band's name meaning, The Moth, Lolli (it was made up when Poets were designing SoL cover - they put the lollipop instead of cigarette in a plane chair), designing covers and doing the ideas for music, the beginning - Max Payne, Late Goodbye, the Internet and so on, that Ollie and Marko mainly write the songs and Captain is for technical stuff, about guys musical past, other favorite music of guys, about the recent German tour and album release there, the new album (they're currently recording it and it should be out some time in 2008), the CoR video etc.

Ehm, if it's going to help anyone :P well, let's hope someone will translate it :)

By the way, I really like when the interviewer really knows what he's talking about :) . Good job!


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Good summary, wlodi. I couldn't have done it better.
Give me an hour or two... maybe it will even take till morning, but I'm on it.

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Oh, Marvin, thanks I'm :oops: Thanks in advance for translating this article :)


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Here is another interview (again in German..)
Just wanted to put the link here so I don't loose the site.
The Interview was before the Gig in Berlin :)

http://www.bizarre-radio.de/index.php?p ... ew&id=6602

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Thanks, Kodachi!

It seems like Ollie has his own company and he was/is producing ringtones for mobile phones :) And he also made the first official PotF ringtones - Late Goodbye and Lift!

"BR: Was mögt ihr am touren am meisten?
M: Das Schlafen. (grinst)" :D

They're really amazing... so they did interviews, then the gig and they still came to talk with us. I love PotF :oops:


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Hey great interviews, some old and new facts in those!

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New facts? :o


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at least some i didn't know before :P

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Tiia wrote:
An interview!

In German.. any volunteers to translate the most important parts at least? :)

Finally it is done. But beware: this is looong.
---

[If Marko or Olli are reading this, they will surely say 'we never said that', but translating something to english that has probably been translated from english to german before always ends up strange. So sorry for any mistakes. -Marvin]

Poets of the Fall interviewed by inn-joy
Finland makes a name more frequently by it's intense music. Here's a new one: "Poets of the Fall"
Their first album "Signs of Life" was and still is only available as import. With their second one they finally want to conquer Germany as well.
"Carnival of Rust" - Release Date 20.04.2007

Although not quite on schedule, we were able to talk to Marko the singer and Olli the guitarist - about the beginnings, the plans, the music and the inspiration for the poets.


inn-joy: "Poets of the Fall" - What is the meaning behind this name?
Marko: To sum it up, it means "Grace under Pressure". On the one hand there is this poetic, constructive side, i.e. you create, visualize or interpret something and make a poem out of it. Basically it means that we all go our own way and will eventually vanish, but we can all try to organize it as lovely as possible. That's what "Grace under Pressure" is about. "Poets of the Fall" - when you are falling anyways, you might as well make a poem out of it.

inn-joy: We thought "Fall" was referring to the season - autumn...
Marko: It does! It also refers to autumn, because this is our favorite season, as especially in Finland - and surely you got that here as well - the trees turn red and yellow and this is just so amazing and inspiring that it's a great time for writing songs. It entails a certain yearning, because spring and summer are over, winter is imminent and now it's fall and everything fades, all your emotions are rising in you and it's just a good time to make music.

inn-joy: What is it with the moth?
Marko: It has a similar meaning! It also represents the fall. It only has one night to live and somebody catches it, pins it down. Basically, you can say the moth means something like "Seize the day!"
However, in different cultures the moth has different meanings, but telling more about that would go beyond the scope here...

inn-joy: And the lolli? What's that about?
Marko: (laughs) That was one of our crazy ideas. Back then we were designing the cover for our first album that was only released in finland so far and had this plane-seat with the open ashtray. It would have been boring to put a cigarette in it. It was plain fun and lets you see from a different angle what could be there instead of just a cigarette in an ashtray.
Olli: I also believe that this says something about our consciousness - that we aren't that old. Somehow we are still childish. The lolli represents us more than a cigarette would..
Marko: Oh yes! It does! And I would never advertise cigarettes and I think it wouldn't be like us to put cigarette smoke on the cover.
Actually, the lolli didn't belong to the "Carnival of Rust"-Album either, but when I thought about the idea of carnival, I remembered the typical pictures from carnivals. There's the red and white colors and the spirals everywhere. Additionally there was the rust-aspect that is a contradiction like "Poets of the Fall" - "Carnival of Rust". So there is always an image of something positive and something negative.

inn-joy: Are you designing the covers yourselves?
Marko: Basically yes.

inn-joy: The whole band together?
Marko: Generally I do that! Usually I put the ideas down on paper and write something about it. Then I submit it to friends who do this professionally and know me well enough to know how I think, because if I try to do this on the computer by myself, I hardly succeed to create what I imagine. And I owe these friends a lot, because I want to see my ideas come true and with their help it is possible.

inn-joy: Working together brings us to the next question: "Poets of the Fall" is a three-man band, but on stage you are six. Are they always the same musicians? And what is behind all this?
Marko: They are always the same. There's Jake for second guitar, Jani playing Bass and Jari drumming. The six of us feel like a family, a band, but when it's about promotion or basic stuff, then it's just the three of us.

inn-joy: The others don't want to do this or aren't they allowed to?
Marko: (laughs) We don't let them, because we're assholes!
No, seriously - we have all been in bigger bands before and if everybody has the same right to say something in a decision, it gets chaotic, just like in the old saying "Too many cooks spoil the broth!" and nobody wants to eat that! There were three of us in the beginning and we decided to keep it that way. We are often asked about it, but that probably is because as a band we often have guest musicians, but if I would perform as solo-artist "marko" with a live band, nobody would care twoo oots about it.
Olli: This works quite good for us, because that way everyone has his function in the developing process of our music
Marko: Yes, we wanted to find people we'd like to work with and give them a chance in the band. So far, everything is going well...
Who knows, maybe one day this will change, so that there will be six people on the fourth or fifth album-cover. But right now they already are on our tour photos and on our Website.

inn-joy: Let's go back to yur beginnings. Did it all start with the computer game "Max Payne 2" and "Late Goodbye" - the song you contributed to it?
Marko: 2003 was the year when Olli and me were sitting in the car and thinking about what we wanted to do with our lives. We wanted to give the 'Make a band'-idea another chance before we become doctors or lawyers or something like that. So we were sitting in the car with a piece of paper on our laps and were making a plan, a real 'business-plan'. (laughs)
We didn't have any clue about this, we just had these ideas and visions and wrote them down and from that day we started making music together. We met Captain when we were doing "Late Goodbye" and asked him if he wanted to join the band and so we were three.

inn-joy: So the story of the "Poets" began with "Late Goodbye"? The band didn't exist before?
Marko: Yes, "Late Goodbye" was the beginning. Before that, the band only existed on our business-plan. (laughs)
Olli and me have been writing songs for two years before that, but we weren't the "Poets of the Fall" until the three of us met, wrote the song "Late Goodbye" and thought of a name for our band. We had written down hundreds of names, until one day I wrote "Poets of the Fall" and Olli just said "This is it!".

inn-joy: Why did you go this way, via a computer game and the internet?
Marko: Well, the point was that none of us had money, so we weren't able to promote our band in any way and this was a crazy plan, because I knew the creators of "Max Payne 2" from my childhood, Sam Lake (storywriter, ed. note) and some others. We're good friends and were hanging out together a lot and that's how it happened - you probably heard the story - Sam and me were driving home one evening and we were spinning this idea that it would surely be cool to make a song for his computer game. Three weeks later - I had already forgotten all of this again - Sam had been asking the company and asked me if I couldn't write a few songs and we could talk to the guys once more. I wrote three songs out of which Olli and I chose two I presented to Sam and "Late Goodbye" was the one they chose. The song was first sent to Remedy ("Remedy Entertainment" finnish computer game designers, ed. note) and afterwards to the Publishers in New York who were thrilled by the song and wanted to put it on the radio, but we preferred having it in "Max Payne 2". That really was a great start and a clever marketing stratey for a band that had nothing to show yet.

inn-joy: Right, that wasn't the typical course, something different for a change.
Marko: No, that wasn't typical at all, it has never been done before. I've heard Avril Lavigne has had a similar history, but besides that it was a quite unique marketing stategy.

inn-joy: Have you written "Late Goodbye" together with Sam Lake?
Marko: Sam gave me a poem or rather a mess of words he had scribbled on a note. I read it and instantly had some ideas and a melody that started playing in my head when I read some lines like "we keep driving into the night" and so I built the song from Sam's words and phrases and added some more, until it became "Late Goodbye". It was a very quick creative process, because it didn't take me 10 minutes to finish the songtext and another 15 minutes later I had the melody for it which I played to Olli on the guitar the next day.

inn-joy: So you always write the text for your songs first and then the melody or does this happen the other way around as well?
Marko: That depends on where the idea is from. Sometimes it's some kind of musical idea that gives you a melody to which you write the text. Then some chunks of text come to your mind and you try to remember what you were feeling when you wrote the melody and you try to put that into words.
some other time you have a complete text and we try to find a melody for it together like we did with "Maybe tomorrow is a better day"; that was a song where the words came first and we then tried to find a melody that fits.

inn-joy: So you are the band's songwriter?
Marko: Olli and me write most of the songs together.

inn-joy: And Captain is in charge of technicak stuff?
Marko: That's right. He takes on arranging and producing the songs. Usually Olli and me have the ideas for our songs and write some sort of acoustic version together - songtext plus guitar melody - which we then take too captain, so to speak his living room is our sound studio, arrange the song, record it and mix it. In most cases we meet some more times to enhance and improve the song until it is in a final form that satifies us.

inn-joy: The three of you have different musical backgrounds and histories. Marko, you were and are a Rock singer, Olli, you are a Jazz guitarist and Captain is from the Industrial-Trance scene. Does this become important in influencing your music as "Poets of the Fall"?
Marko: Of course! It's teamwork. How many times did I have a text and tell the guys "Hey, I'd like to sing it like this. Olli, what would you play to that?" And Olli plays a melody in his manner on the guitar and captain usually adds some of his ideas that make the songs more interesting or just make them sound differently.
Olli: Yes, that really is an ineresting way of working, because he simply has - because of his background - a different view of the things, the music, our songs. So he often has completely crazy ideas for the songs which fit right in in most cases.

inn-joy: Olli, is it hard for you or Captain to change Marko's ideas? Is he hard to convince?
Olli: No, not at all. It usually is very easy to...
Marko: ...talk me into something? (laughs)
Olli: (laughs) Yes, exactly! No, seriously, since he's very open-minded it's very easy to talk to him and work on ideas with him, change them. That helps a lot in the process of writing songs.
Marko: (laughs and whispers) He's just saying that...
Olli: (laughs) no, it has always been easy for the two of us to work together creatively.

inn-joy: So you always decide everything democratic so that the result - your music - always conforms to all your ideas?
Marko: Basically, yes. But now and then there's also situations where we don't completely agree - then I have the final say. Sometimes this is necessary or some things would never get done.
Olli: Oh yes, that's right.

inn-joy: Which bands or singers would you call your idols?
Marko: For me that would be bands like "U2", "Metallica", "Def Leppard", "Pearl Jam", Alice in Chains"
Olli: I used to listen to basically the same bands, "Pearl Jam", "Rage against the Machine" and much of the Grunge stuff that was rising back then, like "Nirvana". I guess in the 90s we all listened to the same CDs. But I have listened to a lot of Jazz as well.
Marko: Oh, I also was a great "Prince"-fan
Olli: Well, while we're at it, I have listened to a lot of "George Michael", "Madonna" and this pop stuff. Captain on the other hand had his classic CDs...
Marko: Yes, he can probably sing any opera spontaneously. (laughs)
Olli: Besides that he also has a lot of Progressive-Rock especially from the 70s and 80s, like "Pink Floyd" and - he keeps talking about that - ELO (Electric Light Orchestra, british Rockband of the 1970s and 1980s who combined their music with classic string arrangements, ed. note)

inn-joy: Is that also the kind of music you're listening to at the moment?
Marko: Yes, we basically still listen to bands like those.
Olli: I also listen to a lot of gutar music.
Marko: Partly, I've stopped listening to music with someone singing, except that person does it very good, I often listen to soundtracks, like those made by Hans Zimmer. He made the "Black Hwk Down" theme, great composer. And I also like Vangelis, this solemn, spheric music you can always discover newly.

inn-joy: What inspires you to write your music and especially the lyrics?
Marko: Life. All our lives and experiences. The lives of our friedns, of our family, of our bus driver (laughs) - whatever happens that draws our attention, touches us.

inn-joy: Do you also write finnish texts?
Marko: If somebody wants it, maybe in cooperation with another finnish artist, yes. But for "Poets of the Fall" this won't happen, it never entered the equation.
Olli: Writing english songtexts feels natural for us, because we have always been listening to english music.

inn-joy: Ever since 2004, you have been piled with awards for your music. Why are you taking off internationally only now?
Marko: Well, that's mostly because we have our own, independent record label, so we don't have a contract with one of the bigger labels. That means that things don't go so fast, because on the one hand we don't have that much money to invest in our marketing. Of course it would be easier to promote us on TV or put posters in the streets and record shops as soon as we release an album. On the other hand it takes longer to build commercial relations far enough that you can for example perform at festivals like Rock am Ring [big german rock festival. -Marvin]. You have to know who to talk to or you don't get a chance to play. When you're with a bigger label, they do that for you and you play in front of some thousand people as a newcomer and that's how it all begins. But we'll have to make one step at a time. First it was Finland, now we will go for Sweden, Denmark and especially Germany.

inn-joy: How do you look out at your - hopefully soon-to-come - success, when you are known and recognized more and more? Are you looking forward to it or are you seeing it more skeptical? Are you afraid of it?
Marko: I'm looking forward to it. I think this is something you have to deal with when you have a public job like this and want to be famous. I would not want to be on every front page, especially not the tabloids. But I think dealing with publicity is a part of our job as "pop(ular) musicians".

inn-joy: Is the support tour for "Sunrise Avenue" some sort of test for an upcoming own tour?
Marko: Basically it is. But we have been getting requests from fans to play in Germany for a long time. And since Germany is a big and highly populated country, a support tour is a good idea because there is a great audience that - even if they aren't there because of us - still hears us, so things can go their way. Otherwise we would be playing for 10, 20 people in some small clubs which would be very expensive. It still is, but it's worth it. And it's more fun to accepted by such a wide crowd.

inn-joy: So you prefer playing in front of a larger crowd over playing for a smaller group of people?
Marko: We have already played before crowds of some 10000 people, for example at festivals, and we have been to clubs with less than 100, but it doesn't matter for how many people you play, as long as there is one person who wants to be there and listen, it is enough to motivate you to give your best. And with huge masses like the 40-50000 people last year at the biggest finnish festival it's the same. It simply is an award and a gratification by itself when there's so many people who accept you and your music and applaud.
Olli: But it also is a very emotional experience to perform in front of a smaller groupp of people, when you can almost see every single face. You can see the emotions move, from you to the audience and back, because it's very intimate, very united, that's just great.

inn-joy: Let's tlak about your albums. Your second one, "Carnival of Rust" will be released here first. Why is it that way aroound and will the first one be released later?
Marko: Well, we released both of our albums "Signs of Life" and "Carnival of Rust" one after another very fast although we were advised against it. Our first album was in the Top Ten for a year and still was there when we released the second one - so we had two albums at the same time in the Top Ten. Then of course we started promoting the second one and now we're just continuing this here. The first album will be released here as well. That's called "Soft Release". We won't be promoting it, but it will be available here as well.
Olli: This way we can release and promote our third album, if we are fortunate enough to be able to release another one, in all countries at the same time, that would be great. Had we released "Signs of Life" first, we would be one album behind schedule, that would not have been good timing.
Marko: Actually, it isn't that uncommon to handle it like that when a band first has national success. Sunrise Avenue started from Germany and had a great success, we started in Finland, so Germany is our second step which is very good, because it could hav been that we have success only with our fourth or fifth album and couldn't come to Germany until then.

inn-joy: You have written more than 100 songs already. Does that mean we can expect the third Poets-album soon?
Marko: We already started working on a new album, but it will only be released somewhen in 2008.

inn-joy: First in Finland?
Marko: Hopefully everywhere at the same time.

inn-joy: We have heard that your vidoe to "Carnival of Rust" is the best finnish music video of all time. Is that right?
Marko: (laughs) Yes, that's right.

inn-joy: Oh, then congratulations.
Marko: Thank you! (laughs) This is somehow strange...

inn-joy: And the video was your idea?
Marko: Yes, it was an idea we had together with the director. We were sitting together, drinking coffee and talking about the song and I told him what it is about, how I saw some things, how I did some things... He had some ideas, I had some ideas , he had even more ideas and made a script out of that, then we added some things and finally we had the "real" script.
He has already done three of our videos - "Lift", "Carnival of Rust" and now "Locking up the Sun". All in all working with him is quite procreative.

inn-joy: The "Carnival of Rust" video seems a bit gloomy...
Marko: Yes, I think dark fantasies are cool...

inn-joy: ...but it causes strong feelings and emotions.
Marko: Exactly. It just pushes the right buttons on many people. It obviously does, because after all they voted it the best finnish music video of all time. This is such a privilege...
In the next video I'd like to do something with black-and-white sketches.

inn-joy: Your music is often called "Alternative Rock". What genre would you yourself fit your music in?
Marko: Maybe "Melodic Rock" or something like that. Some people call it "Alternative Rock", "NuMetal" or "Neo-Grunge", others call it "Pop-Rock". We'd call it an intense emotional music that catches you and doesn't let you go anymore.

inn-joy: Maybe from an artist's point of view it is better to not be too fixed...
Marko: Well, for marketing purposes it's better if you can be related to one genre. But as artists we don't want that, because this would restrict our musical possibilities.
"Poets of the Fall" are simply "Poets of the Fall".

[...]
Interview: Thea Brenner, Marc-André Müller

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Last edited by Marvin on 30 Mar 2007, 22:17, edited 1 time in total.

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marvin, you are crazy :P

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Marvin, thanX for the translation! :roll:

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I bet a dollar you stayed home from school and din't sleep in order to do that translation :P

But thanks, it was kewl :)

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Thank you Marvin :) . Here was some new information which was nice.

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Good job Marvin :)

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In Finnish:

http://www.vuokatti.fi/index.php?id=7_32_234&la=fi

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Great job with the translation, Marvin! It must have taken a long time.
Thanks a million! :D


Edit:
Tiia wrote:
link


Aivan loistava Kylli-täti imitaatio! :D

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Last edited by angel. on 30 Mar 2007, 18:47, edited 1 time in total.

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Good work Marvin, thanks! :)

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MelancholiaOfDawn wrote:
marvin, you are crazy :P

But I think I told you so before :P
Vlad the Great wrote:
I bet a dollar you stayed home from school and din't sleep in order to do that translation :P

That's a bet you lost. I didn't have school today and I slept from 4 am to 11 am. Now where's my dollar? ^^
a lot of people wrote:
Well done

Thank you. I'm trying to give my best.
a lot of people also wrote:
Thank you

You're welcome.
Has anyone started translating that second interview yet? The one Kodachi referred to? If I get a negative answer (or no answer at all), there'll be a translation by tomorrow, I think.

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Last edited by Marvin on 31 Mar 2007, 02:18, edited 1 time in total.

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That was terrific! Thanks, Marv!

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Oh my... thanks a lot for the translation Marvin, I mean really, Thank you! :D

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Ok, here's my translation of the 2nd interview. Actually, it's quite strange to translate it back into English. I hope there are not too many things changed or lost in translation. Have fun with it!

Poets of the Fall at the Carnival of Vanities

After their big success in Finland it's about time for the Finnish Mega-Stars Poets of the Fall to conquer the German music market.

Bizarre Radio:First of all thanks for having some time for an interview with Bizarre Radio. We hope you did enjoy your tour in Germany so far.

Olli: Oh yeah, absolutely.
Marko: Yeah, we really enjoyed it so far. Today we had the chance to visit the Kurfürstendamm, the TV-Tower and the Alexanderplatz here in Berlin.
Olli: And then we've been to the Bahnhof...
Marko: Yeah, Zoogarten or what is it called?

BR: Bahnhof Zoo, Zoologischer Garten.

Marko: Exactly, Bahnhof Zoo. Well, and there was a guy coming to us and offering us some drugs. We must have had looked very dubious.
Olli: Oh yeah (laughing).
Marko: But we refused, of course.

BR: Let's get serious. Tell us something about the beginning of Poets of the Fall.

Marko: Almost exactly 4 years ago we were sitting in Olli's Car, watching at the ocean and talking about our music dreams, so about that what we are doing now. Then, we wrote down all our ideas and we thought about a name. Well, that might be the beginning of Poets of the Fall. But Olli and me, we had already got to know each other before, when we were playing in another band and we early realized that we had become really good friends who are sharing the same taste in music. At this time we were playing in another band and we knew from the beginning that we will never be successful with it. Well, what can you expect when you are meeting once in a month to rock. We decided to leave the band and start our own one.

BR: Which is quite successful. Last year, you've won a lot of Awards in Finland. Where do you think does all this success come from?


Marko: Good question. At the beginning,your are working for years and you are not believing in any success any more and when you are thinking of giving up and of other options what you could do, such as taxi drivingm there arouse some ideas for a song and you are trying again. That was the case with „Late Goodbye“, a song, which became known worldwide through a computer game. Suddenly, there were people calling us from all over the world and wanted to see us perform. And, suddenly, whole Finnland got also enthusiastic about our music. It has been hard work for us and we spent our last money on the production of the album. But now we are here.

BR: I really would like to know what you have done before your music career.

Marko: We were playing music.
Olli: Oh yeah, we played in very different bands.
Marko:...we studied...
Olli:...and we were part-time musicians. Actually, all of us.
Marko: I used to work for an advertising agency, but I hated it.
Olli: And I had my own company. I created ringtones. Well, I'm still doing it today when I got time.
Marko: Yeah, Olli is creating all the Poets of the Fall ringtones. But today his company is run by a mobile company and they are making a good profit on it and we come away empty-handed.
Olli: Yeah, that's true.

BR: Now, that we are talking about your music. „Carnival of Rust“, actually your second album, will be released in Germany on the 20th of April. In Finnland it already sold platinum. Could you already tell us something about the album?

Marko: Hmm, that's a difficult question. Each time when you answer it the story changes a bit. Somehow the theme is connected with our first album „Signs of Life“. We went on tour with it and only then got to know the hard music business and the tour-life. „Carnival of Rust“ is exactly about the ups and downs of this life. You meet all those extravagant and famous people and you realize that some of them are simply just burnt-out Junkies. Well, it's all bringing you down to earth again. But we also give hope and try to help people imroving their lifes. Who knows, maybe we are kind of healers.

BR: Why are you releasing „Carnival of Rust“ in Germany only now?

Marko: Well, we are an Indie-Label, which means that we have our own little Label with some very good support from our management. Unfortunately, we don't have the money to advertize on a large scale. So, we have to do everything step by step, which also takes more time. But the good thing is that we ourself can decide where to go.

BR: How would you describe your style of music?

Marko: Yeah,...
Olli: Melodic Rock.
Marko: Hmm yeah, Melodic Rock, full of feeling, emotions and passion. It's kind of music you cannot get enough of.

BR: Have you been influenced by any other bands?


Olli: Oh yeah, by a lot of bands.
Marko: Yeah, also by so- called elevator-music, Metal...
Olli:...definetely by Grunge music from the 90s...
Marko: ...yeah and even by Hard Rock, Britpop and , of couse, classical music...

BR: On your album there's also the „Carnival of Rust“ video. The song itself is the most played song on the Finnish radio. Please, tell me something about the song and the video.

Marko: Actually, the song is reflecting the theme of the album. „Carnival of Rust“ is about the strenght you need to get through all the things experienced. It's about this dark valley we are walking through, such as Lordi's victory in the last European Song Contest.

(everybody's laughing)

Marko: The video itself is taking place on a carnival, where a young girl wearing a gas mask is trying to resist the evil, represented by me. The gas mask represents a protection against the thick, stuffy atmosphere that doesn't leave you any air to breath. I'm trying to sqeeze money out of her by enthusiasting about the success and the fame connected with it. People say that it is a beautiful but also very sad video. Somehow, I have to agree with that. We are very happy about the release and also proud. It has been voted the best Finnish music video of all time by experts, which is a great honour for us.

BR: Is there something influencing your songwriting?

Marko: Everyday-life offers a lot of stories one might tell. I used to write songs in the tourbus, but today I can't find the time due to the many requests of autographs. Once, for example, I observed a man standing in the backyard, smocking. The sky was orange-red, it was dawn. Only these 10 seconds when I was observing this inspired me to write a song. Maybe it will be released one day. I hope so. But often its also some sounds coming from the neighbour's flat. You might know that. You are sitting in the living room and you are hearing fragments of your neighbour's TV- programme, such as film music. Well, and I'm trying to put them together on the piano and that's how ideas for a new song are born. The best time for that is late in the night.

(Olli is leaving to go to the sound-check)

BR: What are you plans for the future? What can we expect from you here in Germany?

Marko: Hopefully, we will be able to do another tour through Germany. We have 4 shows with Sunrise Ave and then we are going back to Finland, have a tour through Sweden and Denmark and will hopefully be back again. And when the album is selling well we would like to have a tour of our own as headliner in fall.

BR: At the moment, your are the support of Sunrise Ave. How do you like that?

Marko: So far it is very good and it seems that they are much more famous here than we are. First, it was strange because in Finnland we are more famous. But it is a good opportunity for us to gain some ground here. Yesterday, I've seen the show of Sunrise Ave for the first time and I have to say that they were very good. Besides, we really have fun in warming up the growd.

BR: What about the audience? Here we have a lot of young girls in the audience. Is it different from the Finnish one?

Marko: No, not really. We have a broad fanbase. We have seen a lot of people on our shows who must have been around 60. The age of audience is from 20 to open end.

BR: What do you like most in going on tour?


Marko: Sleeping (grinning)

BR: Oh, you can sleep long then? (also grinning)

Marko: Unfortunately not. I like most the singing on the stage. However, as a singer, you have the longest waiting time everywhere and you have to shut up. Me, for example, I can't talk so much as I have to save my voice. Besides, there are a lot of guys in our band who are talking a lot and I'm sitting there observing how everybody is behaving. But what I like in Germany is that the shows are all starting so early, so you get regular sleep. In Finland, concerts are starting very late and rarely you are in bed before 4am and you have to get up at 8 again.

BR: How do you feel shortly before going on the stage and how when you can finally rock?

Marko: Shortly before the show I'm trying gather my energy, so that I can give everything on stage. And on some specific point you are stopping all the thinking and only try to heat up the audience. But we have this rite, shortly before the show, of wishing us all a good gig.

BR: Ok, I have to talk about HIM now. Since the guys are in the business there is a big request of Finnish bands on the German music market. What do you think about that?

Marko: That's great for us. It has taken Finnish bands a lot of time to get that far. In the 80s or 90s there were no famous bands from Finland, except Hanoi Rocks. HIM, Nightwish and The Rasmus made the music known far beyond the Finnish borders. And we got a lot of talents. In 1996/7, for example, I called a lot of Finnish record labels to get a contract there and the first thing I was asked was: „In which language are you going to sing?“ and I replied that I wanted to sing in English. They told me: „Thanx, but we are not interested.“ It has been very hard for every musician to gain ground, but that was the business. But HIM did a lot of pioneer-work.

BR: Surely, you are having a lot of interviews. What question do you hate the most?

Marko: Hey, that's a difficult question. Often, we are asked about our favorite – whatever. I personally don't like answering that. I like a lot of things, but I don't want to compare them or even judge them according to the best, most beautiful or whatever.

BR: Hmm, I might have a question here that you won't like. When you could be someone else for one day, who would that be and why?

Marko: Someone you know singing better than me (my comment:???????) and who doesn't suffer from migraine. That would be cool. It might sound crazy (my comment: yes it does:)) 'cause everbody is telling me how great my voice is. Maybe I have to learn to like my voice. I'm a perfectionist, that's all.

BR: Okay, unfortunately, we have to finnish now. Do you want to say something to your German fans?

Marko: Yeah, sure. I got a motto: Get to know and understand yourself, so that you know who you are before the world tells you who you have to be!

BR: Kiitos!

Marko: Thanks to you!

After having finnished this extremely nice interview also Poets of the Fall singer Marko had to do a little soundcheck. The following concert made the crowd rocking. The band convinced with a mixture of songs from „Carnival of Rust“ and their first album „Signs of Life“. I'm sure that the gigs here in Germany weren't the last ones where we had the pleasure to see the Poets of the Fall.


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Well done, Lori

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Good job, Lori! 8)

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Good job, Lori! Thank you so much! :)

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a lot of thanks to those who translated all the interviews.they were thoroughly enjoyable to read :) :wink:


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Arrgh, damn I wanted to translate the interviews (translating is fun :D ) but you two did a good job, thank you. :)

I love POTF-interviews. The guys always have interesting things to say in contrast to most other msicians. They also seem to be very nice. :)

Yeah I learned that they aren't arrogant by now :D


Last edited by nuhr on 01 Apr 2007, 21:23, edited 1 time in total.

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Thanks Marvin and Lori, you did a great job! These interviews were really interesting :)


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I enjoyed reading the interview! :D
Thanks a lot for the translation ^^

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Thank you guys! :) You´re welcome! I also found the interviews very interesting. There are some things I`d never heard before, f.e. that Marko doesn`t like his voice :? , unbelievable :D

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