eMusic Review 0
Centuries ago, the Vikings spilled forth from Norway and conquered much of Europe. I Was A King, one of Norway's newer musical exports, seems intent on similarly aggressive foreign policy. Their self-titled album — the band's sophomore release, recorded in Norway and Brooklyn with an assist from the Ladybug Transistor's Gary Olson and Sufjan Stevens — annexes several decades of British alt-rock, running grungy Teenage Fanclub riffs through a dream-landscape charted by My Bloody Valentine. With such monumental bands as touchstones, some of the songs seem so familiar you can almost predict the swooping chordal shifts and melodic overlays. But the group — frontman Frode Stromstrad, Emil Nikolaisen of Serena Maneesh on bass and drums, and guitarist/vocalist Anne Lise Frokedal — gives each song a lovingly applied fresh coat of paint, such that the Ride-inspired "Golden Years" and a cover of Larry Norman (AKA the "grandfather of Christian Rock")'s 1982 psych-rock weeper "Hard Luck Bad News" feel like they could've been minted in the same year and the same place. And King squeezes 15 tracks into 31 minutes, unusual for songs that generally move at a nu-gaze pace, which keeps the mix exciting and fresh.