Classic Rock

Thundermot­her

A new approach (and a new line-up) has taken these Swedish rockers to the next level.

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Filippa Nässil is hungry. The guitarist founded Thundermot­her in 2009, after studying music production, and has made it her mission ever since. To date there have been three incarnatio­ns of the band, with Nässil as its sole constant. It’s been a full-blast ride of beer, broken bones and the sort of commitment to straight-shooting classic rock of which Airbourne would approve.

It’s taken them well beyond their homeland, including a festival in a jungle in India. “It was raining, it was almost flooded,” Nässil recalls, laughing. “Backstage before the gig, everything was wet. We were sitting in, like, socks and underwear drinking beer, and this camera girl comes in and says: ‘Can we do an interview? I’m from the BBC.’ That was strange.”

The simplistic (but effective) elevator pitch for Thundermot­her would be: ‘If AC/DC had daughters and raised them on Iron Maiden.’ Over 10 years they’ve capitalise­d on these foundation­s, touring as headliners and supporting the likes of Rose Tattoo and Backyard Babies.

While their new album Heatwave isn’t exactly a radical shift, a few things have changed: tunes are sharper, riffs and progressio­ns are tighter and groovier, and for the first time it was a proper team effort. “It’s the best line-up by far for me,” Nässil says, of the decision to fully co-write songs as a band. “I wanted it to happen now. They’re hungry too, so it was like, let’s write together and see what comes up, we need to hit the next level. I’m very proud of the outcome.”

Three years ago it all looked less promising. In one stroke, four of the five members quit to pursue different projects. What happened?

“I felt just… lack of commitment,” Nässil says matter-of-factly. “I think they were a bit angry with me. I had to ask did I feel any hunger from them any more? And I’m very hungry for this band.”

Did you part on good terms? “Well, we don’t hang out any more! But the last thing we said to each other was ‘good luck.’”

Nässil herself was a relative latecomer to AC/DC-esque rock. Born in the city of Växjö, at 13 she was playing the key-harp, a 20-stringed Swedish folk instrument, touring with adults and performing at “weddings and stuff like that”. It was an older band in school playing Rage Against The Machine’s Killing In The Name that turned her on to rock. Inspired, she swapped the key-harp for a guitar, initially focusing on Van Halen and Yngwie Malmsteens­tyle shredding. AC/DC’s Powerage subsequent­ly changed that, but the fire lit by that RATM cover never went out.

“I was blown away that you could play an instrument and be crazy and say what you want with aggression,” she says. “I thought: ‘I’m gonna be that crazy guitar player, I don’t want to ever be bound to sit still.’”

Heatwave is out on July 31 via AFM Records.

“When I found AC/DC I realised the easy stuff is the best stuff.”

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“I love Powerage,” says Filippa Nässil. “I was pretty old when I first heard it – when I got the salvation of AC/DC. I was listening to Ozzy Osbourne at first, from the age of fifteen; Randy Rhoads and Zakk Wylde were the inspiratio­n for me. And Jimi Hendrix. But when I found AC/DC I realised the easy stuff is the best stuff.”
FOR FANS OF... “I love Powerage,” says Filippa Nässil. “I was pretty old when I first heard it – when I got the salvation of AC/DC. I was listening to Ozzy Osbourne at first, from the age of fifteen; Randy Rhoads and Zakk Wylde were the inspiratio­n for me. And Jimi Hendrix. But when I found AC/DC I realised the easy stuff is the best stuff.”

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