
Simon Lynge has been to the future, and he likes what he saw, “I
saw the mountains and the rivers and the beauty of us all”.
With those lines, Simon sums up his outlook on life and a basis for
his music. His debut album, The Future, (just named
Album of the Week by MDR – radio and TV in Germany) introduces Simon
as a fully–formed contender for major success.
It was recorded at Bright Orange Studios in Los Angeles with co–
producers Matt Forger (Michael Jackson, Paul McCartney) and Jon
Mattox (The Young Dubliners). The Future is a musical beauty worthy
of the wide audience it is finding after entering the BBC UK charts
at #22 one day after the June 7 release. It also hit #1 on the
Amazon.com UK Rock charts. German Rolling Stone just did a two page
feature on this new artist and The Koelner in Cologne said Simon's
music is “Full of fresh craftwork, positive energy and original
ideas... This is so beautiful it makes you want to listen to it very
loudly and again and again.”
The forces that shaped Simon for this moment are elemental gifts –
a receptive mind and heart, a musical family, opportunity and bone–
sure drive. Simon's music roots are Inuit–Scandinavian. Raised in
the beautiful steppes of Greenland, Simon's early years were spent
outside of school, at play, often helping to tend his neighbor's
sheep. He was constantly exposed to music and storytelling by his
multitalented father Karl, who played accordion with the “Greenlandic
Bob Dylan” Rasmus Lyberth, and also worked with Eskimo folklore in
the Tukak Theatre Group. Simon later enrolled in the Holstebro Music
Conservatory in Denmark, where he immersed himself in the study of
drums, piano and opera. His musical hunger led him to the guitar
and songwriting, and he quickly found himself co–writing and
performing with exceptional talents in the Copenhagen
songwriter scene. Invitations followed to perform at Kashmir Club in
London, to write and perform on Nashville's Music Row and in Los
Angeles. To complete the circle, Simon recently returned to the
Danish capitol to perform to 25,000 fans at the famed Tivoli Gardens.
He writes and performs mostly on guitar with a style that produces
bell–like harmonies that splinter in gorgeous patterns around superb
melodies. It's there his spirit moves best. Never too clever or
self conscious, Simon's music wraps round you like a new hug from an
old friend. When the word got out about Simon's talents, it worked
like a magnet attracting world–renowned talents like bass–player Lee
Sklar (James Taylor, Jackson Browne), guitarist Shane Fontayne (Bruce
Springsteen, Paul Simon), drummer Jay Bellerose (Marc Cohen,
Madeliene Peyroux), and bassist Freebo (Bonnie Raitt, John Mayall,
CSN).
In rather prestigious circles the brilliance of Simons work on his
debut album The Future is already being compared to the likes of Paul
McCartney, Paul Simon, Elliot Smith, Nick Drake and other uncommonly
gifted artists.