Portsmouth News

Time for miracles

- STEVE’N’SEAGULLS

J amppa is the new boy in bluegrass mavericks Steve’n’Seagulls, but his musical background is a little different from the current day job. Before he joined the Finnish five-piece, famous for their distinctiv­e rock and heavy metal covers, he was studying for a master of music degree in jazz at the prestigiou­s Sibelius Academy. But as the replacemen­t for original bassist Pukki, since mid-2019 he’s swapped Mingus for Iron Maiden and Pastorious for Pantera. ‘The former bass player actually asked me to join,’ Jamppa explains. ‘They had been talking with each other, and I knew some of the guys before, and what kind of person I am and the style I play in. ‘I hesitated like one or two minutes and then I said: “Yes”, he laughs. ‘Jazz music is one of my passions, and I ended up studying that, but of course it doesn't mean I wouldn't listen to or play other kinds of music.’ The band released its fourth album, Another Miracle, in November last year. As with previous releases, it mixes their revved up cover versions with original material. This time out they blitz through The Knack’s My Sharona, Deep Purple’s Perfect Strangers and AC/DC’s Moneytalks among others. But it’s the album’s opener which is the real showstoppe­r – Metallica’s Master of Puppets – the title track from an opus often voted the best heavy metal album of all time. The Seagulls’ version opens with the sound of a chainsaw and takes off from there… Explaining their choice of covers, Jamppa says: ‘We play songs, of course, that we like and our point is to honour the songs and the bands we are covering. ‘When we're making our covers, everyone is involved and plays their own part. It can go anywhere you can imagine. ‘We started planning it as a little more minimalist­ic version, but when we started recording, it was: “Okay, let's add this”, and “maybe we need that”, and “we need the strings there...” It escalated!’ Since joining the hard-touring act, Jamppa had already racked up about 100 gigs with the band, touring America, Australia and Europe before the pandemic hit. They had recorded the album back at the start of 2020 and after a break were planning to hit the road again in spring, which obviously never happened. ‘The album was supposed to come out a few months earlier than it did, but it still went great. ‘We had one release concert in Finland, and then we haven't played any gigs again. We were supposed to have these 30-plus gigs around Europe from the UK, France and Germany, Austria, Denmark – all these places, but we've postponed all those dates maybe three times already!’ It has, naturally, been frustratin­g for the guys. ‘We all love to play, and that's what we love the most – to go on tour, to be together and have these magical moments when we get to play with the audience there. ‘I think we are definitely a live band. It feels like everything is better live.’ And he still gets to keep his improvisat­ional chops from his jazz days. ‘Every time we play, nothing is settled – you don't have to play a certain way every time. There's a lot of improvisin­g and communicat­ing, as there is in jazz, and that makes it more exciting for me.’

Our point is to honour the songs and the bands we are covering

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