{"id":4761,"date":"2025-06-12T16:00:49","date_gmt":"2025-06-12T16:00:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.nichesitetool.com\/?p=4761"},"modified":"2025-06-17T06:42:08","modified_gmt":"2025-06-17T06:42:08","slug":"smerz-is-living-their-big-city-life","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.nichesitetool.com\/index.php\/2025\/06\/12\/smerz-is-living-their-big-city-life\/","title":{"rendered":"Smerz Is Living Their 'Big City Life'"},"content":{"rendered":"
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\u201cMy face is stuck, please, how to use\/ My IQ low and my shoe heels high\/ The day goes by, don\u2019t have much to say,\u201d Norwegian pop duo Smerz<\/u><\/a> sing on album opener and title track \u201cBig city life.\u201d<\/p>\n Declaring that they don’t have \u201cmuch to say\u201d at the onset of a sprawling 13-track exploration of urban life is a quintessential wink by Smerz (Catharina Stoltenberg and Henriette Motzfeldt) whose lyrics tend to dabble in both plainspokenness and sarcasm. <\/p>\n Album single \u201cYou got time and I got money<\/u><\/a>,\u201d for example, is a stunningly literal ballad about a relationship Stoltenberg formed just after she got a day job. Her new lover, though, was in between employment. \u201cHe had a lot of time. And I suddenly had some income in my bank account. And that was it. Nothing more and nothing less,\u201d Stoltenberg shares, laughing alongside Motzfeldt from a sun-filled apartment in Oslo. The song, though, is much more moving than a mere readout of reality. Stoltenberg\u2019s unfussy words and the track\u2019s lush instrumentation creates a space to consider the hugeness of the small, the complexity of the simple.<\/p>\n Big city life<\/em><\/em> is a continued conversation between the Smerz duo, who have already created a thematically and musically varied set of works since 2017 via a debut EP, a full-length album, and a number of collaborations and compositional projects. On this new album, they’ve pared down the scale of their artistic wanderings, choosing to create a poignant portrait of life in their (relatively small) home city of Oslo. <\/p>\n Highlights include \u201cRoll the dice<\/u><\/a>,\u201d which finds the duo delivering a self-affirmation before a night out on the town. \u201cYou\u2019re a girl in the city and you shouldn\u2019t think twice\/ You take two steps forward, keep your eyes on the prize,\u201d they hum over a beat that features an almost slapstick piano line, atonal and coy. Or look at the smashing fun of \u201cFeisty<\/u><\/a>,\u201d which is the album at its most uptempo. A clanging 707 hi hat melds with a set of strings that could be ripped from a <\/em>Vanessa Cartlon cut. Meanwhile the duo hum about the small, innocuous details of a night of drinking and flirting (\u201cHe likes to seem mysterious but really he’s just dumb\/ It’s crowded at the toilet, I check my makeup and my bum\u201d).<\/p>\n Smerz\u2019s renewed focus on local tedium was spurred by a major move. They started their career in Copenhagen, a central part of its alt pop scene, which includes fellow artists Erika de Casier<\/u><\/a>, ML Buch<\/u><\/a>, Astrid Sonne<\/u><\/a> and Fine Glindvad<\/u><\/a> (Motzfeldt went to school with many of them at the important Rhythmic Music Conservatory in Copenhagen).<\/p>\n \u201cWe developed our whole musical life in Copenhagen. Everyone we know and everywhere we go has some connection to music,\u201d says Stoltenberg. Collectively, their crew of Copenhagen colleagues became a global musical force, receiving an upsurge of interest in 2023 when Smerz, de Casier and Glindvad all contributed to K-pop stars NewJeans\u2019 EP Get Up <\/em><\/em>(Smerz produced EP closer \u201cASAP<\/u><\/a>\u201d). <\/p>\n <\/p>\n It was time, though, for a change. They moved back to their hometown during COVID. Both were coming out of relationships and thus re-entering single life just as the world was fluctuating between various levels of lockdowns and reopenings. There, in Oslo, they could linger in the specificities of home: its culture, its rhythm, its \u201cgrey and green\u201d landscape. And there, they could document their everyday experience in Oslo through surprising, instinctual works of pop reportage.<\/p>\n<\/h3>\n
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