Pocket Size (Stockholm), Sweden


Retro prog; Space rock

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Latest: Att G​ö​ra Kompisar (2022)

Pocket Size is still performing live as of this past summer.

Immortality: Cleaning the Mirror Volume 2 (2018)

Pocket Size is a band that I got in on the ground floor with and dutifully documented their first two albums enthusiastically. My initial reaction to this album wasn't as positive as the other two, and I didn't take any notes. So now some five plus years later, let's dive in. The album was recorded live in 2016 in front of what sounds like three people. As with their other albums, this isn't a solo endeavor but rather a full band effort. And early 70s instrumental prog mixed some space rock jamming is what you can expect here. There's a touch of the jazz rock style as well. I think this may have been one too many cleaning the mirrors for me. Not getting the same vibe as I did out of the other two. Also not very Swedish, more generic in terms of region. A fine album, but I have enough of this kind of style from the 70s.

---11/24/24

Vemood: Cleaning the Mirror Volume 1 (2016)

Pocket Size have perfectly captured the essence of being alive in 1973 Sweden. Cigarette and marijuana compete for your olfactory senses, but your eyes water no matter the substance. You, of course, recite the Manifesto of the Communist Party verbatim, but only because you think you might get laid if you do. Otherwise King and Country works too, whatever. Progg, hell yea! Or not... who cares? Images of perfectly formed naked breasts shine ever so perfectly as you gaze blindly from your flat. Vemood is your soundtrack to your dream night in Stockholm. Long track Hammond organ jams that battle with saxophone, flute, and loud electric guitar. And even a melody to whistle to while waltzing down Drottninggatan. Ahhh.

---6/30/17 

Exposed Undercurrents (2014)

Contemporary 2014 Sweden is loaded - and I mean loaded - with rock bands emulating the sounds of the early 1970s. Most are of the US/UK hard rock variety, or they go for that "turn the amps to 11" stoner pseudo-metal sound. There are fewer bands that are making a try for the true progressive rock era sound of the early 70s era. I don't mean the all-in-proggy-prog Anglagard type either, but rather the more common sound of the day coming from Sweden like November, Saga, Flasket Brinner, and Trettioariga Kriget. There's a real psychedelic element to Pocket Size's sound as well, and that can only be considered a plus to the UTR's world.

The band themselves seem to possess a confused identity. In effect, the group is the vision of guitarist Peter Pedersen. Depending on which site you are reading (including their own), you're likely to see the band listed as Pocket Size, Pocket Size Sthlm, or Pocket Size Stockholm. No matter, as what's most important is that Pedersen brings in no less than 9 participants for his creative work. So this isn't a solo work with a monolithic viewpoint - or worse - a sterile digital sound. Not even close. What you get here is exactly what you would expect from a studio effort circa 1972, complete with all the requisite analog instruments and a certain je ne sais quoi attitude. Hammond organ, saxophone, electric guitar with a multitude of effects, spacey vocals (much of it in glorious Swedish), theremin, vibraphone, and flute give one an idea of what to expect. Put that together with a planned structure and a few melodies, a handful of complicated breaks, and some solo sections. This was the way music was presented years ago, when the last thought on Earth was obtaining a radio hit or falling in line with whatever scene a band was perceived to be associated with. A knowledge of jazz, classical, blues, and early rock and roll was all that was needed - and a strange desire to actually progress from there. Give me more of this.

---11/21/14

11/21/14 (new entry)

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