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	| MSJ: While I thought very highly          of Keyholder, I feel the new album, Mindrevolutions, is the best one yet.          What are you doing differently in this album?
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	| This time I wanted to focus          more on writing strong melodies, both vocal and instrumental. I wanted          the songs to be more homogenous and I tried to avoid having all these          parts just dropping by once and never return later in the song. This didn't          mean any drastic changes. I think all the songs on the album have my significant          stamp and I only relied on my ability as a composer and musician when          I wrote the songs. | 
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	| MSJ: Are there any plans to play          this music live in the near future? | 
	
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	| The 2000 line-up of          Kaipa has never played live. We've considered this to be strictly a recording          project. For all the other musicians, this is a side project as they all          have their regular bands and careers. | 
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	| MSJ: I'm quite curious. How          did you come up with the name Mindrevolution? What does this mean? | 
	
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	| Our lives are filled          with small or large revolutions. Every day of our lives they're going          on even if we're not always aware of them. Many people, including myself,          want to change the world and make it a better place for all people living          on this planet. But I believe that if we want to make this possible we          must start to change ourselves, our way of living and our attitudes. We          must be prepared to be truly honest to ourselves. If so, it's time for          our mindrevolutions.
As a musician          I try to be honest to myself when I write and perform music. I'm always          searching for a connection between the music and my inner feelings. This          is important when I write the songs, when I play, and when I listen to          the final result. 
 One evening,          I think it was in 1999, I thought like this: I have a lot of songs that          I've written and that I like, but what's the meaning if I can't share          them with other people and get their feedback. So I decided to record          an album. I thought that if I like this music there must be other people          somewhere out there that share my opinions and feelings about the music.          At that moment, I didn't know any details for the recording process; I          just came to this decision. I wanted to do it just because I enjoy it          so much and not because I wanted to earn a lot of money, go out touring,          or become famous. I considered the music to be a modern folk-music-orientated          pop music with some prog rock elements and I had no idea at that moment          that it later should be regarded as a vintage seventies trip. This idea          later became the album "Kaipa: Notes from the Past".
 
 After the          release of the album I realized to my surprise that I was considered to          be a prog rocker and that people had a lot of anticipations. So which          way should I go?
 
 Pick up          all the traditional prog attributes, playing with all these standard "prog-          sounds," doing all these things people expect from a prog band and          probably sell more albums? No, I didn't want to go that way; I didn't          want to betray myself. I'm happy that I've reached all these people I          wanted to reach when I once started this journey in 1999. I don't care          about those who are complaining and don't like what I'm doing. I know          there are others waiting somewhere out there that will discover my music          in the future.
 
 
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	| MSJ: All the pieces seem to be uplifting          to some degree. Does the album follow a theme? | 
	
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	| It's ten separate          songs, but sometimes a melody from one song returns later as a small part          in another arrangement in another song on the album. | 
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	| MSJ: The one piece that eludes me          is "Last Free Indian". I really like this song musically, but          I don't quite understand the message. Can you clarify what this one is          about? | 
	
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	| The lyrics about the          Native Americans are written by Roine Stolt so you have to ask him. When          I asked him about this he told me that he is convinced that he was one          of them in an earlier life. | 
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	| MSJ: How did you come up with the          name Kaipa? I assume it's Swedish. If so, to let our non-Swedish-speaking          fans in on the secret, what does it translate to? | 
	
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	| It's just a          name, you can't translate it.
First the          band was called Ura-Kaipa. It referred to a Swedish Stone Age chieftain          and came from the book "Svenskarna och deras hövdingar"          by Werner von Heidenstam. Later we shortened the name to just Kaipa. 
 
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	| MSJ: I really like the title track          off the new album. It's ambitious and it's quite enchanting. I think it's          your best composition ever. Out of all the songs you've created with Kaipa,          what's your favorite? Which one makes you the most proud? | 
	
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	| On the new album I like all          of the songs, that's one of the reasons why we recorded the album, but          I agree with you about the title track. It incorporates so many different          parts and styles, but in a most natural way, so this is a favorite. | 
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	| MSJ: It is hard to draw comparisons.          I can certainly hear a connection between Kaipa and The Flower Kings,          but it is difficult coming up with others. I guess I can hear Frank Zappa          in there as well. For the most part, Kaipa's music is in a league of its          own, so I'm wondering, what music has influenced you? | 
	
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	| I react on music when it's          touching me deep inside. Then it doesn't matter who's the composer. A          lot of the Swedish folk music melodies are traditional melodies and no          one knows who has written them. I suppose my influences are a mix of everything          I've appreciated in music during all the years of my life since my childhood. | 
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	| MSJ: I'd be interested in knowing          how you put these songs together. Can you give me an idea of how your          songwriting process works? How did you come up with all these lush melodies          and quirky little passages? | 
	
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	| I never sit down and decide          to write music in a specific direction. Most songs start with some notes          going around inside of me. I don't know where they're coming from, but          if I like them I think it's my duty to take care of them. That's the normal          starting point for my writing and usually it ends up with a journey filled          with unexpected ideas and inspiration leading to the final result. | 
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	| MSJ:           What's planned next for Kaipa          as far as what we can expect from the studio? | 
	
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	| I am now working          with the 30th anniversary 5-CD Kaipa box that will be released later this          year. It will include remastered versions of the three first albums from          the seventies plus two CD's with early demo recordings and live recordings.          I think this is a perfect side job, investigating and listening to all          these old tapes. 
We have          recorded three albums with the 2000 lineup of Kaipa during four years          so I'm not in a hurry to produce a new album. It's important to take a          break and find new inspiration. 
 
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	| MSJ: What else are you doing at          this time aside from Kaipa? | 
	
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	| In 1978 I stared a record shop          together with the seventies Kaipa drummer Ingemar Bergman. I still work          with this beside my writing and playing. | 
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	| MSJ: Is there anybody in particular          that you would like to work with who you haven't worked with already? | 
	
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	| Maybe some real folk musicians.          More real instruments. | 
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	| MSJ: When did your involvement in          music begin? | 
	
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	| I started playing in my first          band in 1964. Like most bands at that time we were playing mostly covers,          but started gradually to write our own songs. In a way it was like a long          education in music. In 1965 we recorded our first single, in 1971 the          first LP, and in the autumn of 1973 I wanted to form a new band based          on my experiences and my interest in writing melodies with roots in the          Swedish folk music tradition, and so Kaipa was born. | 
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	| MSJ: How did you decide you wanted          to be a keyboardist? | 
	
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	| My parents put me in a piano          school when I was seven. I didn't like it at all, but it was an input          to start playing by ear. Later, I discovered the organ and when a schoolmate          asked me if I wanted to play in a band there was no way back. | 
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	| MSJ: How did you meet the other          members of Kaipa? | 
	
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	| The original lineup was the          natural way. We were musicians living in the same town and with the same          interest in music. The 2000 lineup is in a way like my all-time favorite          band. I asked them to participate in the "Notes from the Past"          project and after this record we've continued more as a band. | 
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	| MSJ:           I'd like to find out about          your current musical tastes. What's the last CD that you purchased? | 
	
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	| Todd Rundgren's Utopia | 
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	| MSJ: Along the same lines, what's          the last concert that you attended as a fan? | 
	
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	| Fleshquartet (a Swedish band          with two cellos, violin and drums) | 
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	| MSJ: Who is your favorite band? | 
	
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	| Beatles | 
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	| MSJ: What's your favorite TV show?What's your favorite TV show? | 
	
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	| I try to avoid looking at all          this "modern TV" entertainment. It only makes me angry. I prefer          watching serious programs with the intention to expose corruption, cheating          and lies and unmask all these dirty politicians, companies, and their          related and friends. That is real entertainment. | 
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	| MSJ: Before we wrap up, is there          anything you'd like to say to your fans at this time? | 
	
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	| We're the key to the hidden          tomorrow, we are many, we're proud, we're as one. | 
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