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The almost all-consuming project this year was the production of Movements I. It took up most of the space in both the calendar and in the headspace, as well as acted as the rhythm-stick for the year.

In mid-February we started recording. Heðin Ziska Davidsen, who produced the album, came to Denmark and we lived and worked together for three intense weeks. By the time he arrived, we’d already been working on the music for quite a while. I had made a series of demos, building the overall timeline of the album and recording parts with the band to get closer to how the final production might sound. And Heðin had been working on these pre-productions. I’d also had several sessions with Ulrik focused specifically on the drum parts, which was hugely helpful when shaping the material.

So we started with a solid batch of demos and a fairly clear structure. The A-side was close to finished. The B-side still had some gaps. I hadn’t had time to complete everything before recording started. As it turned out, that was a good thing: some of my favourite moments on the album came out of that unfinished space. (Emberlin being the most clear example)

Heðin arrived with a healthy amount of equipment and we set up shop in my home studio and got to work. We’d start in the morning and work most of the day, trying (with varying success) to maintain a steady rhythm with breaks, meals, and some sense of structure.

After dinner, Heðin would usually keep going for hours into the night refining details, editing, listening again, making small decisions that slowly accumulated into the music that’s on the album. I’m more of an early sleeper and an early riser, so my contribution to the night shift was mostly psychological. Instead, I’d get up very early and work on parts that still needed attention as the album took shape: arranging, last-minute composing, and small changes that suddenly felt important. Then I’d rejoin the sessions once the day properly started. Coffee for Heðin, tea for me and GO!

Those weeks were extremely productive in a slightly exhausting way. Most of the album was recorded there, with a few additional sessions taking place on the Faroe Islands shortly after. It was one of those periods where days blur together and the only clear markers are meals, coffee or tea breaks, occasional sleep, and the moments when something finally clicks musically and the production moves to another level. Really good memories from that time.

Through spring, the album slowly came together. Editing, listening, revising, listening again. In late April I travelled to the Faroe Islands for the final mixing. By that point, the album had really started to have a clear direction, which is always a relief. There’s usually a moment where you realise you’re no longer forcing things in a particular direction, but mostly stepping aside and letting decisions happen more intuitively and with less internal judgement.

Over the summer, the singles were released one by one. Although Movements I is conceived as a long-form, continuous album, where each part grows out of the previous one and gains meaning from its placement, we decided to extract four singles and cut them into bite-sized pieces. Each release felt like sending a small fragment of the project out into the world, while the larger whole was still quietly forming behind the scenes.

On August 1st we travelled to Belgium to play at the beautiful Dranouter Festival. That was a real highlight. The last time we played there was nineteen years ago, so it felt like a genuine return rather than just another gig. We also performed Taktstok (the closing track on Movements I) live for the first time ever. That’s always an exciting and slightly nerve-wracking, but also satisfying moment: finding out whether a piece that has lived “quietly” in a studio can actually carry its own weight on stage.

In mid-September the album was finally released. Leading up to that, we rehearsed extensively for the release tour, working on how to translate the music into what became one of our larger live productions to date. We’ve done large-scale productions before, often involving extra musicians or choirs, but this one was challenging in a different way. It took some time to settle, but once it did, it worked remarkably well. We played a series of concerts in Denmark and Germany, and it was genuinely rewarding to go deeper into the material with each show.

Right now, the focus has shifted forward. 2026 is already taking shape, with concerts in the pipeline that I’m really looking forward to. Later this spring I’ll start working more intensively on Movements II. I have a growing pile of drafts, sketches, and half-ideas that have been quietly accumulating. From March onwards I’ll begin sorting them, shaping them, making demos, and seeing what holds up, and what else might emerge.

That work will include regular sessions with Heðin in both Denmark and the Faroe Islands, as well as bringing the band together to develop the music collectively. At this point I have a fairly clear sense of the general direction the music might take, and I also know from experience that it will change significantly once we actually start working on it in earnest. I’m very much looking forward to that part.

If everything falls into place, Movements II should be ready for release in early 2027. For now, the work continues. Slowly Methodically. And with a healthy dose of uncertainty.

We have two more shows this week on the Movements Tour, before taking a break until spring. It's been really fun and rewarding to be out playing this music live. We've found good ways transforming it from album to live and I'm looking forward to the last couple of shows.

Catch us here:

2.oct: Nordsø Records, Copenhagen (free show in the vinyl pressing plant!) - FB link

3.oct: Gimle, Føllenslev - FB link

Here's a video with me speaking about this in some sort of Danish:

Hope to see you!!

Love, Kim

www.afenginn.net

It’s a big day today! The newest Afenginn album in the world is out!
It’s called Movements I and is the first in a trilogy. Together, the three albums will form one long continuous piece of music, divided into five larger sections, or “movements” in the classical sense. Also, this music is composed and produced with the intention that it can be used for movement (even dancing, I guess), hence the title.

I grew up in a small town in Finland in the previous century. Back then, dancing was something you might do awkwardly, and not entirely sober, as a way to get in touch with the girls. It was full of self-awareness and discomfort. Growing older, I’ve stopped caring so much about what others think. Moving my body to rhythm in public doesn’t bother me as much anymore, although teenage-Kim still lives in there somewhere.

So I wanted to make music that I would enjoy moving to.
The album is loosely framed around the 5Rhythms dance practice (look it up if you’re curious, but I’ll share more about it soon). Each “movement” reflects a different state or mode. On this first album, we explore two: one for each side of the vinyl. One more feminine, circular, grounded, flowing... and one more masculine, angular, fiery, brassy…

It’s been six years since Klingra, and it feels both exciting and strangely surreal to release something new again. This music has been a long time coming and we’re still slowly discovering what it is, how it behaves live, and how we want to inhabit it.

Movements I is available on vinyl and streaming.

As well as on Bandcamp:

I truly hope it can find a place in your day, whether in your headphones while walking, commuting, or cooking… or blasted out during some obscure, sweaty dance session.

I’m very proud of this record, and full of gratitude for having the privilege to make music with the wonderful musicians in Afenginn, year after year.
And a big thank you to Heðin Ziska Davidsen, who produced the album and left a deep mark on the process.

Thanks for listening. I hope this music becomes part of your world in some small or significant way.

Let me know how it lands, and if it moves anything in you.

With love,
Kim

Movements I
6 tracks38:16 minutes
Album art

Release

Movements I is Afenginn’s first new album in six years and the first of a 120-minute trilogy that begins here. The music moves from meditative circles into pulsing rhythms and expansive waves, where clarinet, strings, brass, electronics, drums and much more melt into this new Afenginn music anno 2025.

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Dear all!

We’ve been playing music as Afenginn since 2002. That’s more than 23 years of touring, making albums and large-scale projects, sitting through endless meetings, writing applications, throwing parties, watching the band members’ kids grow up, and of course dealing with the online presence of having a band.

In the early days, before social media and streaming, almost everything happened on our website. The news section was updated a few times a week, and we had a lively guestbook where we could respond directly. Our newsletter was another backbone of this whole enterprise. We used to bring an old typewriter to shows so people could sign up on the spot. The list grew steadily, until I, to my eternal regret, deleted the whole thing from Mailchimp in a moment of idiocy. But that’s another story.

The point is: for many years, direct contact with fans and supporters was a big part of Afenginn. Over time, life got busier, more kids arrived, and social media both helped and killed some of that magic. I also felt that I was becoming a bit more private as the internet grew noisier. Social media has always felt both strangely appealing and repelling. But I really miss being in that mindspace of sharing what’s going on and being in closer contact with all of you. After the pandemic, it’s been hard to regain momentum, and I’d like to change that.

In less than three weeks we’re releasing our eighth album. It’s called Movements I and I’m truly proud of it. I’m also one of those people who always thinks the most recent work is the best, which is a blessing, even if it isn’t always objectively true. What is true is that we pour an enormous amount of effort into these albums. They’re big productions, meticulously crafted. Over the years they’ve received recognition, awards, and praise both nationally and internationally, but this isn’t really reflected in the streaming numbers.

People still buy vinyl and CDs at shows and online, which is a vital source of income. But from streaming, we make very little. All our albums have been released on the Faroese label TUTL Records (with a few licensed to Westpark Music in Germany or Tiger Music). When it’s time to record, I usually ask if there’s any money left on our label account, and often there’s a little bag that's been collected since last time, to help with production. But with CD income down, touring has become more expensive. And to be honest, we’re not as eager to sleep seven in a German backstage room anymore. We have families, responsibilities, and slightly higher standards now. I think, we’re also less driven by the constant validation of being on the road. At least a bit.

I’m not writing this to complain about the good old days, but rather to get back into the habit of sharing with those of you who are genuinely interested. I often meet people who ask how the band is doing, but social media only shows posts to a tiny fraction of our audience. Sometimes as low as 1-2% unless we pay to boost them. And it feels wrong on so many levels to hand money to Facebook just to send people to Spotify, where we essentially give the music away for free to a very questionable enterprise.

That’s why I’m excited about Sleeve.fm. It feels like a much better match: closer to you, more authentic and personal, and I’ll be focusing on posting more here. There will be different membership levels: some free, some paid - with early access to music and other small perks. Already next week, I’ll be sharing the full Movements I album with our paid subscribers.

So, I encourage you to hop along and get into this boat together!

Are there any of you that has been with us since the early days? And any of you wanting to jump in now?

With love, Kim

Emberlin
1 track03:59 minutes
Album art

Release

Emberlin is one of the calmer tracks on the album, and personally, it’s one of my favourite moments on the whole musical arc. Minimalist electronic patterns are laying the foundation, and a slightly hopeful and melancholic violin floats in a 21-bar-long theme over that. There’s a subtle four-on-the-floor beat, and fire crackles on the off-beats. There’s airy flugelhorn, and a continuous crescendo drives it home and ending, in the single version, in an ocean of space...

Dear friends! TODAY the 3rd single from our upcoming album "Movements I" is out! It's called UNDERTRYK.

I actually wanted to go on about it throughout the week, to post pre-save links and build anticipation and this and that, because I'd really like you to hear this one. But still being uplifted by the wonderful trip to Festival Dranouter last weekend followed by a short visit to Finland, it seemed like a better idea to go swimming in lakes, go walking in woods and hanging with loved ones and just yoloing around, rather than staring at screens making digital posts on the computer. And then just get up before the Finnish late-summer sun on this release-Friday to share the news. There's plenty of noise in the world anyway, to be honest...Anyway - UNDERTRYK is out!

Built on a hypnotic pizzicato groove, it slowly gathers its layers: "Greek"-style clarinet, African percussion and wordless vocals. It sits in the final spot on the A-side marking the transition from the more circular A-side to the more angular B-side. Somehow intimate, textured, and - hopefully - quietly addictive. Undertryk!

Check it out: https://sleeve.fm/artists/afenginn/a/undertryk

Other streamning: https://bfan.link/undertryk

Undertryk
1 track04:37 minutes
Album art

Release

Built on a hypnotic pizzicato groove, it slowly gathers its layers: "Greek"-style clarinet, African percussion and wordless vocals. It sits in the final spot on the A-side marking the transition from the more circular A-side to the more angular B-side. Somehow intimate, textured, and - hopefully - quietly addictive.

Taktstok
1 track06:54 minutes
Album art

Release

Taktstok is a bold, danceable instrumental from Afenginn’s eighth album, Movements I. Driven by clarinet, violin, brass, and heavy drums, it carries strong pathos and klezmer-inspired melodies, fusing Eastern European dance traditions with bombastic Nordic flair.