From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Skebokvarnsv. 209
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 16, 2005
GenreRock
Length49:16
LanguageSwedish
Label Sonet, Universal
Producer Niklas Hellberg
Thåström chronology
Mannen som blev en gris
(2002)
Skebokvarnsv. 209
(2005)
Kärlek är för dom
(2009)

Skebokvarnsv. 209 is the fourth solo album of Swedish rock musician Joakim Thåström. It was released on November 16, 2005, by Sonet and Universal.

Skebokvarnsvägen is a street in the Stockholm suburb Högdalen, and the address Skebokvarnsvägen 209 is the house where Thåström grew up in. Niklas Hellberg produced the entire record except "619 Kilometer", which was produced by Joakim Thåström and Per Hägglund. The album was also released on LP. The song "The Haters" is about Thåström's old punk band Ebba Grön, which was called The Haters from the beginning.

Critical reception

"Fanfanfan", the record's fourth track, became Thåström's first number one single. "Om Black Jim", about the author Dan Andersson, and "Sönder Boulevard" were also released as singles, and reached second and twelfth on the chart respectively.[ citation needed]

The album topped the chart in Sweden, and won a Grammis in the category "Year's rock album (solo)".[ citation needed] In June 2013, Sonic Magazine [ sv] rated it as the 50th best Swedish album ever. [1]

The Luxembourgish music act Rome covered "Fanfanfan" on the 2016 album The Hyperion Machine. [2]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Brev till 10:e våningen"Joakim Thåström, Per Hägglund5:01
2."Söndagmåndagsång"Thåström, Hägglund4:14
3."Ingen sjunger blues som Jeffrey Lee Pierce"Thåström4:42
4."Fanfanfan"Thåström4:25
5."Främling överallt"Thåström6:16
6."The Haters"Thåström3:43
7."Sønder Boulevard"Thåström4:33
8."När muren föll"Thåström, Hägglund4:18
9."Stjärna som är din"Thåström3:59
10."619 Kilometer"Thåström, Hägglund4:03
11."Om Black Jim"Thåström, Hägglund4:02

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Sonic #69, summer 2013[ full citation needed]
  2. ^ De Baptistis, Marco (25 November 2016). "Rome: The Hyperion Machine". Ondarock [ it] (in Italian). Retrieved 9 July 2021.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Skebokvarnsv. 209
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 16, 2005
GenreRock
Length49:16
LanguageSwedish
Label Sonet, Universal
Producer Niklas Hellberg
Thåström chronology
Mannen som blev en gris
(2002)
Skebokvarnsv. 209
(2005)
Kärlek är för dom
(2009)

Skebokvarnsv. 209 is the fourth solo album of Swedish rock musician Joakim Thåström. It was released on November 16, 2005, by Sonet and Universal.

Skebokvarnsvägen is a street in the Stockholm suburb Högdalen, and the address Skebokvarnsvägen 209 is the house where Thåström grew up in. Niklas Hellberg produced the entire record except "619 Kilometer", which was produced by Joakim Thåström and Per Hägglund. The album was also released on LP. The song "The Haters" is about Thåström's old punk band Ebba Grön, which was called The Haters from the beginning.

Critical reception

"Fanfanfan", the record's fourth track, became Thåström's first number one single. "Om Black Jim", about the author Dan Andersson, and "Sönder Boulevard" were also released as singles, and reached second and twelfth on the chart respectively.[ citation needed]

The album topped the chart in Sweden, and won a Grammis in the category "Year's rock album (solo)".[ citation needed] In June 2013, Sonic Magazine [ sv] rated it as the 50th best Swedish album ever. [1]

The Luxembourgish music act Rome covered "Fanfanfan" on the 2016 album The Hyperion Machine. [2]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Brev till 10:e våningen"Joakim Thåström, Per Hägglund5:01
2."Söndagmåndagsång"Thåström, Hägglund4:14
3."Ingen sjunger blues som Jeffrey Lee Pierce"Thåström4:42
4."Fanfanfan"Thåström4:25
5."Främling överallt"Thåström6:16
6."The Haters"Thåström3:43
7."Sønder Boulevard"Thåström4:33
8."När muren föll"Thåström, Hägglund4:18
9."Stjärna som är din"Thåström3:59
10."619 Kilometer"Thåström, Hägglund4:03
11."Om Black Jim"Thåström, Hägglund4:02

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Sonic #69, summer 2013[ full citation needed]
  2. ^ De Baptistis, Marco (25 November 2016). "Rome: The Hyperion Machine". Ondarock [ it] (in Italian). Retrieved 9 July 2021.

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