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 basics
   
Name:
Paul Josef Olsson
Birthday: July 13
Birthplace: Michigan
Home: Los Angeles, CA.
Music Background: Father was an orchestra conductor/composer, Mother was trained in vocal performance, and two brothers which makes their "5-Part Harmony Family."
Influences: Loggins, Messina, The Beatles, Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Steely Dan, Peter Gabriel, and more.
 
 official bio 2002
   
"Music is the most underrated power in the world. It's more powerful than any other art form, including movies, including television, including a canvas and paint," claims P.J. Olsson, an artist whose music is so powerful, it takes listeners on an aural journey beyond their wildest dreams. With a mélange of funky folk melodies and swirling, psychedelic soundscapes, Beautifully Insane, Olsson's latest release on Columbia Records, jettisons listeners into the intoxicating world inside his head, a place where the beauty of outer space, the serene depths of the ocean and the driving pulse of modern-day life merge.

Words For Living, Olsson's debut album, was a post-modern mix of '60s folk-rock and frenetic rave scene rhythms layered over experimental found sounds. The groundbreaking CD created a palpable buzz in both the industry and among critics who generated rave reviews in local and national press. The San Francisco Examiner proclaimed: "Star of the future is here, now." Rolling Stone, Newsweek, USA Today, The Los Angeles Times, Vanity Fair and Bazaar all lauded the CD, while The Chicago Sun-Times hailed it as "an indelible treat from start to finish."

Words For Living catapulted the eclectic singer-songwriter into the national spotlight with an appearance on the David Letterman show and a song on the wildly popular "Dawson's Creek" soundtrack album. After audiences went crazy for his showcase at Austin's South By Southwest festival, big-name acts clamored to entice the sensual, mop-haired Olsson to join them on the road. The rising star eventually hit the stage with the likes of Rufus Wainwright, Beth Orton, DJ Spooky, Placebo and The The, mesmerizing audiences with his electrifying live show. But nothing on the road was quite as mind-blowing as Olsson's legendary record release party, where the mystical Angel Orensanz Foundation of the Arts Center (a neo-gothic cathedral-like building originally designed as a synagogue in 1849) in New York City was transformed into "P.J.-land" with a trippy 3-D laser light show and bean bag chairs, Russian rugs and Moroccan pillows strewn about the floor. "Unbelievably crazy," recalls Olsson.

Following the intense frenzy surrounding Words For Living, Olsson needed a quiet space to conceptualize his next musical canvas. Before hunkering down to write songs for Beautifully Insane, Olsson holed up at home with albums by Cat Stevens, Bill Withers, Carole King and James Taylor. Perhaps it was their influence that inspired Olsson to temper some of the techno sequences that laced Words For Living and opt instead for more natural sounds and organic instruments.

Striving for simplicity in a noisy and complicated world, Olsson initially recorded virtually every song on Beautifully Insane with only an acoustic guitar and vocals. But from there, the techno troubadour took over, concocting a fresh blend of electronic and natural sounds, including everything from cell phone ringer tones to songs of whales. Percolating beneath his infectious hooks and pop melodies, these found sounds are anything but random to the artist.

For this complex individual, each textural sound resonates with meaning. "I have this palette of sounds and I figure out that this one will go with that word and the context of this song, so nothing's out of place. I'm not throwing outlandish sounds underneath something just for the sake of it," explains Olsson, who started layering the sounds of Indian tribes over drum loops at the age of 12 in his parents' basement in a small town in Michigan near the Canadian border.

You could say that musical genius runs in the family. His father has a Ph.D. in music and was an avant-garde 12-tone composer and an A&R executive for Motown Records while his mother was a music and voice major. Olsson studied classical violin for 12 years and in his teens, became obsessed with studio production. Olsson's father quickly recognized his son's unique talent and encouraged him to run with it instead of taking the ordinary college route. Olsson, who is anything but ordinary, admits, "My Dad told me, 'There's no way on God's green earth I'm letting you go to college. What you're supposed to do is write songs and touch people. Now go do it.'" Not long after, Olsson released a techno album under the name "Dust" on the indie label Hit It Recordings before landing a deal with Columbia Records.

Famous for trippy, surreal lyrics that spring from his limitless imagination, Olsson searched for clarity in the wordplay on Beautifully Insane. "There are some really simple words on this CD that aren't surreal but become way deeper to me than any surreal lyrics I've written because of their simplicity," he explains. Legions of fans will also notice that the lyrics are a lot more positive than on his last effort. This once-tortured soul -- who fought bouts of despair as a teen -- is in a whole new headspace, in large part thanks to the fact that he's shed himself of some oppressive relationships.

That newfound levity breathed life into the radio-friendly "Three Light Years & a Day," a loopy, effervescent love song that showcases an amazingly heartfelt voice amid a collage of earthy and spacey sounds. "It's about me being so high out there in outer space and all I want to do is call my girl on my space phone and sing my songs to her," says Olsson.

"Wheels" -- an uptempo, feel-good burst of energy about a guy who's happy with nothing more than his own two legs and his soul -- gets you pumping with its driving chorus ("My feet are my wheels / My mojo my motor / My friends are the ticket / To the love that I found").

The blissed-out ballad "Perfect" ("Perfect, yeah, you and I / There's something about us girl makes me realize / Perfect, perfect") is an ode to having the perfect relationship and being content with it. On the buoyant, cosmic crunch rocker "Brand New Day," his outlook is equally sunny ("One look in your eyes and I find a brand new day / And if the sun won't shine you'll light the way").

Of course, the emotionally conflicted Olsson still battles with his demons. On "Medicated," a hazy, hallucinatory trip that floats and swirls through the air, he sings about being on the edge of utter darkness, being in the worst place you can imagine: "Gotta tell you that I've gone to South Compton in my mind / Gotta tell you that I've gone to the breakers in my mind / Hey there baby, I am lost on a traveling cloud."

For the first time in his career, Olsson worked in collaboration with other producer/writers on some tracks including the quirky, neo-hippie chant "The Whistle Song." "I'd been reluctant to work with other people before, but this time around I was really open to it and I think that's because I'm so happy with my life now," admits Olsson. "I went in and told each collaborator that I'm happy with my music but if there's anything they can do to make it better, then great. And it ended up being a really great experience."

Songwriting comes so naturally to Olsson that he penned some 50 songs during the year he worked on Beautifully Insane, with only the best of the very best finding their way onto the album. We can only hope this prolific writer will continue to follow his father's advice and continue to "write songs and touch people."
 
 official bio 2000
 

 
He's a futuristic folkie, a techno troubadour, a music man-machine for the new millennium, equally adept at a stark heart-wrenching ballad, a shimmering soundscape or a crunchy, industrial rocker. With Columbia Records debut, Words For Living, post-modern renaissance man P.J. Olsson takes us on an aural journey through the world inside his head, an intoxicating blend of classic-rock and electronic pop splashed onto a canvas that mixes experimental found sounds with memorable melodies, catchy choruses and surrealistic wordplay.

There's Olsson's homage to hemp, Visine," the musical equivalent of a bong hit, with its pot-fueled sensual imagery ("The ozone/Like a clit/Dripping sunshine/On my lips now"), pro-pot-paganda and hilarious lyrics about "Joseph Stalin's son hauling out of Moscow in a jellybean with wheels, " topped by Olsson's operatic falsetto nod to the joys of innocence. "Ready For A Fall," featured on Columbia's best-selling Songs From Dawson's Creek, shows the other side of the singer-songwriter, with its acoustic plaint about a relationship that's too good to be true. The psychedelic "Dandelion" -- co-penned with Forest For The Trees' Carl Stephenson (who co-wrote "Loser" with Beck) -- takes a trip-hop, post-industrial blues approach as it looks through the eyes of a child, with an eerie, hymn-like orchestral backdrop that hints at the ecclesiastical as it stimulates in the senses.

P.J. Olsson is one conflicted dude and Words For Living allows his contrasting emotions full sway. "I can really escape into my music," he says. "And that's pretty much what I want to do with my life. I feel like it allows me to know myself better. It's like therapy."

Growing up in a small northern Michigan town on Lake Superior near the Canadian border, P.J. Olsson was surrounded by musical creativity. His father was an avant-garde composer in the experimental 12-tone method and an A&R executive for Motown Records while his mother majored in music and voice. "I was brought up with a sense of morals," he recalls. "Respect for my mother was the utmost and highest ideal. And then respect for everyone else. The second thing was developing your mind."

Olsson studied classical violin from the time he was five until he was 17, when his father took the family to live in Germany. While there, P.J. wrote and recorded an album (that never came out) for a small German label. In his late teens and early 20s, he became obsessed with studio production, creating tapes of hip-hop beats mixed with Middle Eastern and Native American sounds he'd sing over. After moving to Los Angeles six years ago, he released an album under the name "Dust" on the tiny Chicago Hit It Recordings label, then began recording an album for the influential German techno label Eye Q. His name began to get around in electronic/techno circles, but Olsson admits it wasn't until he picked up an acoustic guitar four years ago that he began to write real songs. "I wasn't a real good guitar player, so it forced me to keep the songs simple, which turned out to be really good for my music," says P.J.

Playing out solo and with a few trusted musicians, Olsson began to attract the interest of record companies. His gut told him to sign with Columbia Records. Olsson began a year of touring with the likes of Rufus Wainwright, Beth Orton, DJ Spooky and Placebo, pressing the flesh with radio and press and honing his music in the studio alongside collaborators like Jaime Canidiloro (Daniel Lanois' engineer on Luscious Jackson) and Keith Forsey, who co-produced the new record's title track. An eight-song mini-album, including original versions of "Visine," "Pray I Don't Die," and "Thorazine," came out in 1998 on the Red Ink label through Columbia's sister distributor RED. Critical raves from press including the Boston Phoenix (who called Olsson's songs "among the finest examples of new millennial pop") and alternative airplay set the stage for P.J. Olsson's major label debut.

"The experience was great. I was left alone for the most part," says Olsson. "There was a pretty lively give-and-take. I trust the marketing instincts of record people because I think they know how to do it way better than any artist."

Words For Living is more than just music, it is about the world around us. "Pray I Don't Die" is a dance-rocker that takes the classical dilemma of "to be or not to be" and answers in the affirmative, with crunchy rock & roll guitars set against scratchy drum loops. "Thorazine" is a wasted, technopop, love-hate ode to L.A. ("Love is my Thorazine/Lithium hell and handcream") in which Olsson wonders about his own sexual identity. "I Am The Sun" is a buoyant Who-like anthem about egomania and paranoia in the City of Angels while "Good Dream," opens the album with a frenetic and ebullient electro-acoustic roller coaster ride through the kaleidoscopic psyche of the singer.

If you can imagine Beck, Tom Waits, Pink Floyd, the "Strawberry Fields Forever" Beatles, Trans-era Neil Young and Al Green doing "Tech Me To The River," then you begin to get a handle where P.J. Olsson is coming from. Or maybe not, as the case may be.

"When people start loving something so much they live it and become a part of it... that's what I'm enamored of," says P.J. Olsson. "I'd love to make that kind of connection with an audience." With Words For Living, he's well on his way.
 

 q&a like.com
   
MUSIC:

Classic albums you like?: Peter Gabriel: So, Pink Floyd:The Wall,
Eagles: The Long Run, King Crimson: Discipline
Soundtracks you like?: Last Temptation of Christ
Your biggest musical influences?: Beatles, Eagles, Howard Jones, and Peter Gabriel.
Best concert you ever saw?: Kid Rock in Atlanta
First concert you ever saw?: Huey Lewis & the News
Musical equiptment you like?: Earsonic Samplers, Waldorf Four Pole Filter

BOOKS:
Books you like?: The Adventures of Remi, Celestine Prophecy: James Redfield,
Joy of Cooking
Magazines you like?: High Times

FILM:
Movies you like?: A Clockwork Orange, American Beauty, Beastmaster, The Wall
Last movie you rented?: Life Is Beautiful
Movie director you like?: Francis Ford Coppola
Actor you like?: Tom Hanks
Actress you like?: Diane Keaton

TV/RADIO:
Current TV show you like?: X-Files
Classic TV show you like?: Friends
Talk show or host you like?: Leeza Gibbons
Talk radio host you like?: Howard Stern
Host on MTV you like?: Tom Green
Radio station you like?: 97.1 in Los Angeles
Show on MTV you like?: The Tom Green Show
Show on VH1 you like?: Behind The Music
Super-hero you like?: Batman
Cartoon character you like?: Kipper

SPORTS:
Sport you like to watch?: Skiing
Sport you like to play?: Skiing
Extreme sport you like?: Skiing
Favorite sports team?: Chicago Bulls
Your all-time favorite athlete?: Michael Jordan

FOOD:
Favorite fast food restaurant?: In & Out Burger
Favorite food to have delivered to your house?: Pizza
Favorite 24-hour convenience store?: Ralph's
Your favorite thing to drink?: Anchor Steam
What is your favorite thing to eat?: Steak
Favorite food to throw at people?: Wet pasta

LIFESTYLE:
Artist you like?: Albrecht Dürer
Favorite museum?: All
Your favorite city?: New York
Your favorite hotel/casino in Las Vegas?: Vienna
Your first job?: Mounted bindings on skis
Best advice your parents gave you?: Don't go to music school
Car you like?: Cobra
What is your favorite thing to do when you're home?: Watch tv.
What is your favorite pet?: English Sheep dog
What was your favorite subject in school?: Music
Who was your favorite teacher? What grade and what subject? Mr. Kaurala - 12th grade English teacher

PEOPLE:
Comedian the you like?: Richard Pryor
A person you were excited to meet?: Howard Jones
A person you would like to meet?: Annie Lennox
A supermodel you like?: Christy Turlington
Favorite person to interview for Like.com?: Peter Gabriel

CLOTHING:
A new clothing company you like?: Prada
An old school classic clothing company you like?: Patagonia
Your favorite brand of sneakers?: Nike
Favorite mall store?: Kaybee Toys

TECHNOLOGY:
A website you like?: www.electricmusician.com
What modern product can you not live without?: Nokia cell phone
Do you prefer PC or Macintosh computers?: Both
Do you prefer cordless phones or traditional phones?: Cordless
 
 q&a ubl.com
   
Name:
Paul-Josef Olsson
What is your hometown?: Los Angeles, CA
What was the first instrument you played and how old were you?:
Violin - Age 5
Name the three records you've listened to the most in the last year: None
Which rock-n-roll figure (living or dead) would you most like to be on tour with and why?: Peter Gabriel - ultimate honesty.
What are your favorite websites?: None (none)
Who will you call first if your record goes gold?: My Mom
What is your favorite vacation spot?: What does "vacation" mean?
What is the first concert you attended?: Huey Lewis
What is your #1 pet peeve?: Body odor.
What's your favorite Sunday morning ritual?: Bong hits
What albums would go with you if you were stuck on a desert island?:
Abbey Road, Revolver (Beatles), and Discipline (King Krimson)
What's your favorite tour story/show experience?: I can't tell
Name one song that gets stuck in your head: "Let's Hear It For The Boy"
Who would you come back as in another life?: 
I don't know who. Who is in the future?
 

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