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HISTORY

1988-89: the early days

The Fools started when Björn Roth and Jens Månsson were allowed to borrow the keys to "Musicum" on Friday evenings in the autumn of 1988. Musicum was a former chapel used for rehearsal and teaching by the music school in Sölvesborg. Among other musical gadgets there was a four-track cassette "portastudio" (Tascam PortaTwo) and some microphones, as well as drums, guitars and amplifiers, and the recording sessions started instantly.

The first evening produced the garage sound of BOP's chokladsaft, and soon more followed. The portastudio allowed the duo to record drums, bass guitar, synth, and vocals all by themselves. Sometimes, they were joined by guitar ace Staffan Johansson for an occasional overdub or two.

Jens Björn
The first promo photos, each taken by the other.
Jens shows off his new Roland Alpha-Juno I, while Björn plays some attack bass.

Studio
The "studio", at Musikskolan

The songs recorded during these early sessions were mostly simple 12-bar blues run-throughs, with vocals and overdubs added afterwards. Lyrics were written on the spot, with mixed results.

AKAI Tandberg
Björn's AKAI reel-to-reel, used as mix machine, and Tandberg series 12, used for home demos

Notes
Notes for BOP's chokladsaft. The first session was well prepared,
but the score was wrong. The holes were punched to remove extraoneus bars.
No Tipp-Ex at hand, obviously.

The talented long-time BOP '73 collaborator Henrik Persson was encouraged to write lyrics for new Fools songs. Björn had written some western-sounding material he felt would be suitable as backing. The result was however not what was expected, but all new songs were welcome anyway. The lyrics were instead written to familiar Swedish tunes, and with Henrik as guest vocalist these ripoffs of Evert Taube and Cornelis Vreeswijk became quite hilarious. The pitch setting on the portastudio was used to get the "Cornelis voice".

Lyrics
The lyrics to "John och Pärs fest", to the tune of "Elvira Madigan"

The comedy was taken to its logical conclusion with the recording of a 6-minute spoof of a radio show where stupid "children" called in to talk to the cynical host "Jerker". The music numbers were performed live during the "program" (and all seemed to be based on the Beatles' Let it be!).

Other highlights from the spring '89 sessions are the "Hunted to death"-trilogy recorded as soundtrack for the BOP '73-made short film, and the Eldkvarn imitation Bara elände i Stockholm, featuring the guitar and drums ace Staffan Johansson.

Sessions continued almost every week until about May. Then, the new manager of Musikskolan's facilities suddenly didn't approve of these unscheduled activities anymore. One of the last songs recorded also pointed to the future Fools sound, Jens's dreamy Ocean of synth which was recorded entirely with sounds from his new Roland D-10.


Björn jumps for the camera!


"The Fools still rocks on", with guitar and LM Ericsson amplifier

In the autumn of 1989 both Björn and Jens entered gymnasiet (high school). The Fools made their first gig, sort-of anyway, at the school Christmas show under the name of "T-sump". Some covers were performed featuring Per "Pepps" Persson as solo vocalist. The line-up also included Magnus Robertsson on keyboard (and a total of two amps for all instruments and vocals). Soon, they would both be members of the new Fools called the Foolz. The amps, however, belonged to the school and did not join the line-up.


As "T-sump", with a future Fools line-up

A few more (mercy?) visits to Musicum during late '89 with Patrik Sonestad yielded some more songs, including the last "classic" Fools song, Patrik's Piano break.


Late 1989 sessions

1990: the Fools becomes the Foolz

In 1990 things began to change. The Fools line-up now included Patrik Sonestad, who had arrived in Sölvesborg some years earlier, and keyboard whiz Magnus Robertsson. The influence of the new members led the band towards mostly sequenced synthesizer-based pop, with Magnus as a prolific songwriter. Lyrics still remained a constant problem, as well as the lack of recording equipment and facilities.


Proposed cassette cover shot.
From left: Björn, Jens, Magnus and Patrik.

The Fools' first gig (under that name) was at "Bokelundsskolans dag" 1990, where the members of the Fools helped out Patrik with some musical equipment demonstrations (the Ensoniq Mirage-DSK sampler, for instance).

This was done with the promise of getting to perform during the afternoon's show. However, when the band was finally let onto the stage after mostly dismal performances by the other assembled acts, the stage hands started to dismantle the stage.

The gig was quite uninspired anyway, with songs relying heavily on Magnus's sequenced backings - a favorite being the theme from the C=64 classic "The Last Ninja". Samples made on the Mirage earlier in the day was featured prominently, leaving the group member who "sang" this particular snippet not very happy...

In the summer of 1990 the Musicum sessions were briefly resumed. They produced a very varied collection of songs, from the ambient wind noise of Deep forest green to the space rock spoof Läjzer. The final song to be recorded at Musicum was Mirage theme, an unfinished song idea built around a sequenced Mirage electric piano ostinato.


The last Musicum sessions, summer 1990

During the year some full band rehearsals were held in Hörvik, and preparations were made for the Christmas show of 1990. Per "Pepps" Persson was now also a member, on bass guitar and vocals. The band renamed themselves the Foolz, the name became a parody of typical names of dance bands in Sweden.


Björn's guitar, customized for maximum show-off effect

The Christmas show finally came around, and the Foolz played a troubled set, with faulty cables, arguments over the number of songs to be played, and a guitar player with knife-injured fingers. While not a total catastrophe, it wasn't among the best of experiences. With precious little gig experience together, it should have been no surprise.


Magnus busy painting a poster + FoolZ onstage at Christmas show


Magnus rehearsing at Björn's before the show. Note SQ-1 with Alesis MIDI floppy unit, and LME tube amp for guitar.


Goodbye Old Kawai from the Christmas show - video unfortunately cuts before end

1991: A new life?

As 1991 came around the Fools now was the Foolz, a five-piece band ready for live gigs as well as recordings. However, the grand plans always seemed to come to nothing.


These promo photos were taken by Henrik Persson during a cold day in the winter of 1990-91.

The main goal was to make a cassette of all-original material, called "New Life" after the song Life, by Robertsson (there might have been some Depeche Mode influence as well). A 45 rpm single was also considered, but ultimately deemed too expensive.

Most of the songs were written by Magnus, who also programmed the synth backings on his new Ensoniq SQ-1. However, to record vocals and guitar a multitrack recorder was still needed.


The "freak" cover. A draft cover printout decorated mostly by H.P.

Using Musikskolan's facilities was still out of the question, but eventually another Portastudio was borrowed for a weekend or two. The backing tracks were quickly recorded, but there was no time to finish more than Goodbye old Kawai, which was the catchy supposed hit record. Björn had worked on lyrics for most of the songs, but only some were finished and many proved too hard to sing.


Typical rehearsals, with Patrik and Jens totally occupied with MIDI problems


Some lazy riffing at home, caught by Jens

Ultimately, the management at Musikskolan changed again and during the summer of 1991 the last sessions were recorded, but at this point the interest in the group had disappeared. The "New Life" tracks were never finished.

In 1992 all group members graduated from gymnasiet and were quickly scattered. They have not performed or recorded together again as a group since.


Music-X tracking at Magnus's... or do I see a joystick? Notice Kawai K-1 in the background


This might have been a good cover image?

1998-: Internet

The first Fools site appeared on infundo.com in about 1998, but contained no images or music.

The music was transferred from the original mix tapes, or remixed where needed, in two batches: 2001 and 2003.

The transfer was done using the same AKAI tape machine, to an ProTools/MBox setup. Unmixed 4-track cassette tapes were transferred (using an ordinary stereo NAD deck) two tracks at a time and pieced together and mixed in ProTools. The dBx decoding was emulated using a compressor plugin, not perfectly but better than no decoding at all!

A full-featured site appeared in about 2002.

In 2007, we were featured on the "Nasty Nets internet surfing club". No idea how they found out!

In 2014, The Fools music became available from streaming sites and digital media stores! It only took 25 years, but it's finally ready for mass consumption.

In 2026, the site was redesigned using a W3School responsive template, so it now works better for mobile (only 15 years too late).

RECORDINGS

The Fools recorded a lot of material during about four years. Some of this was more of less finished and mixed, some was recorded but not mixed, and some is incomplete, with only backing tracks.

This page contains all known recorded material. The mixed and released songs are divided into three sections, due to the fact that there are three main mixdown tapes: The Complete Fools, Fools Rarities, Fools Demos. The final sections lists the non-finished New Life session tracks.

The Complete Fools

These are the classic Fools recordings, made on a Tascam PortaTwo and mixed to 1/4" tape on an AKAI GX-4000D.
  1. B.O.P's chokladsaft
  2. (B. Roth)
  3. Polythene Pam
  4. (Lennon/McCartney)
    Guitar solo: Staffan Johansson
  5. Hans-Ola jazz
  6. (B. Roth/J. Månsson/S. Johansson)
    Drums, jazz guitar: Staffan Johansson
  7. Staffe's theme
  8. (S. Johansson/B. Roth)
    Guitar, CZ-1000 organ: Staffan Johansson
  9. Jag tar hellre 16 bitar i synten än i kaffet (Bert's blues)
  10. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
  11. Mafuluba shobidamba
  12. (J. Månsson/B. Roth)
  13. The shop song
  14. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
  15. Noname blues
  16. (J. Månsson/B. Roth)
  17. The blind's blues
  18. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
  19. House of the rising sun
  20. (trad)
  21. Yeah! (Stratocaster theme)
  22. (B. Roth/J. Månsson/S. Johansson)
    Guitar solo: Staffan Johansson
  23. Saxophonium
  24. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
  25. Theme from "Crossroads"
  26. (?)
    Drums, bass and guitar solo: Staffan Johansson
  27. Hunted to death jazz
  28. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
  29. Hunted to death blues
  30. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
  31. Hunted to death theme
  32. (B. Roth/H. Persson)
  33. Bara elände i Stockholm
  34. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
    Drums, guitar solo: Staffan Johansson
    Cabasa: Peter Palvén
  35. Annorlunda blues
  36. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
    Drums: Fredrik Dahl
  37. Antonssons ande
  38. (H. Persson/B. Roth)
    Vocals: Henrik Persson
  39. Pärs visa
  40. (H. Persson/trad)
  41. John och Pärs fest
  42. (H. Persson/trad)
  43. Kämparnas smock'n'roll
  44. (H. Persson/B. Roth/J. Månsson)
    Backing vocals: Henrik Persson
  45. Jerkers godnatthörna
  46. (H. Persson/J. Månsson/B. Roth)
    Speech: Henrik Persson
  47. Noname blues II
  48. (B. Roth/J. Månsson)
  49. Balladen om herr Oscar rökare och den söta fröken Cecilia Blend
  50. (B. Roth/H. Persson/C. Vreeswijk)
    Vocals: Henrik Persson
  51. Eddie in space
  52. (E. Meduza?)
  53. Radio Bollnäs
  54. (B. Roth/J. Månsson/P. Sonestad)
  55. Synthe break
  56. (J. Månsson/B. Roth)
  57. Go home!
  58. (B. Roth)
  59. VZ theme
  60. (B. Roth/D. Södergren)
    Synth: David Södergren
  61. Ocean of synth
  62. (J. Månsson)
  63. Thank you girl
  64. (Lennon/McCartney)
  65. Pianobreak (Bollman's theme)
  66. (P. Sonestad)
On the same tape are these demos by Magnus Robertsson from before he joined the Fools. As he was going to sell his Kawai K-1, we wanted to preserve these songs. Many of them would re-appear in new arrangements during the "New Life" sessions.
  1. Life
  2. (M. Robertsson)
  3. Goodbye old Kawai
  4. Discovery man
  5. Forget me
  6. Lazer-dance
  7. Emotion

Mix sheet for one of the 4-track master tapes


Original tracklist of the Maxell UD master tape

Fools Rarities

Tape image

The "rarities" are some remixed or previously unused material (1-4), and the last Musicum sessions (5-8).
  1. Staffe's theme II
  2. Mafuluba shobidamba II (segment)
  3. Hunted to death (remix)
  4. Antonssons ande (remix)
  5. Deep forest green
  6. (J. Månsson/P. Sonestad/B. Roth)
  7. Tio dagar (instrumental version)
  8. (B. Roth)
  9. Läjzer
  10. (P. Sonestad/B. Roth)
  11. Mirage theme
  12. (P. Sonestad/B. Roth/J. Månsson)
On the same tape are these tracks from the same Musicum sessions as 5-8 above. They were first mixed or remixed in the summer of 2003.
  1. Stand by me
  2. (Ben E. King)
  3. Ocean of synth (alternative version)
  4. (J. Månsson)
  5. Läjzer (remix with new bass dub)
  6. (P. Sonestad/B. Roth)

Fools Demos

Tape image

The demos are mostly recorded using the mono sound-on-sound feature on the AKAI reel-to-reel, occasionally with a second track overdub done on a 1968 Tandberg Series 12.

Lots of silly stuff on this tape, only actual "songs" are presented here.

  1. "Ozzy"
  2. (J. Månsson/B. Roth)
  3. Ocean of synth
  4. (J. Månsson)
  5. Square wave lead
  6. (J. Månsson)
  7. House of the rising sun
  8. (trad)
  9. Running for tomorrow (I)
  10. (B. Roth)
  11. Yamaha PSS-680
  12. (P. Sonestad)
  13. Hunted to death theme (Live)
  14. (B. Roth/H. Persson)
  15. Brandenburger tor
  16. (K. Stokkan)
  17. Roland D-10 song
  18. (Roland Corp.?)
  19. Woke up this morning
  20. (B. Roth)
  21. Running for tomorrow (II)
  22. (B. Roth)
  23. There's nothing you can't do
  24. (B. Roth)

The "New Life" sessions

These sessions were recorded but never mixed, because the songs weren't finished and also due to problems getting hold of a portastudio for long enough. One of the session tapes also suffer from bad azimuth adjustment while recorded.

New mixes were made in the summer of 2003 using ProTools (dBx decoding emulated in software, unfortunately not perfect).

  1. Running away
  2. (M. Robertsson)
  3. Nothing (Outtake)
  4. (M. Robertsson)
  5. Life
  6. (M. Robertsson)
  7. Living in a computer world
  8. (B. Roth)
  9. Turn on, tune in, drop out
  10. (M. Robertsson)
  11. Goodbye old Kawai
  12. (M. Robertsson/B. Roth)
  13. Discovery man
  14. (M. Robertsson/B. Roth)
  15. Classical hiphop
  16. (M. Robertsson)
  17. The detective
  18. (M. Robertsson)
  19. Music Passion
  20. (M. Robertsson)
  21. Emotion
  22. (M. Robertsson)

FAQ

Who were the Fools?

Q: Who were the Fools? I can't keep track.
A: The Fools were initially Jens Månsson and Björn Roth. Later Patrik Sonestad joined, then Magnus Robertsson and finally Per "Pepps" Persson.

Where from?

Q: Where did the Fools come from?
A: The Fools were based in Sölvesborg, in the south of Sweden.

What instruments?

Q: What instruments did they play?
A: Björn was the lead singer, and Jens sang backup on many songs. After "Pepps" had joined, he sang lead vocals on several numbers. Unfortunately no good recordings exist of this.

Guest artists?

Q: Who were guest artists on the Fools' recordings?
A:
  • Staffan Johansson guested on guitar, drums, and keyboard
  • Henrik Persson guested on vocals
  • Fredrik Dahl guested on drums
  • Peter Palven guested on rhythm instruments

Equipment

Q: What recording equipment did the Fools use?
A: Tape recorders: Tascam PortaTwo 4-track cassette, AKAI GX-4000D and Tandberg series 12 stereo reel-to-reels, Alpage FL-2100 cassette deck. Some microphones, the most used one being Björn's 200SEK "Champion" electret condenser.

Effects

Q: Did the Fools use any external effects (reverb, distortion, etc)?
A: Generally, no effects were used on the recordings, purely because no one could afford any! For guitar there was Jens's "Eltronik" (correct spelling!) cassette recorder which had a line input that could be switched to phono, yielding a nasty-sounding distortion when used with an electric guitar (as heard on Go home!). Another was the (borrowed) Ibanez Flanger heard on Hunted to death jazz.

Fools or Foolz?

Q: What was the group's name, The Fools or The Foolz?
A: The name was changed around december 1990. The group felt the commercial future of the group would be enhanced if the name was spelt with a Z. It's hard to say if that judgement was correct. On this site we generally refer to the group as "The Fools".

The Fools SBG?

Q: What's with "The Fools SBG"?
A: There seems to be quite a few Fools and Foolz bands out there. To differentiate us on digital media stores the name is "The Fools SBG" there - SBG for Sölvesborg, of course.

Records

Q: Did the group ever release any records?
A: No. Some cassette copies were made for friends. However, the music is available on this site, and on streaming services and media sites, for instance:

Gigs

Q: How many gigs did the Fools/Foolz play?
A: Two. Four if you count the "T-sump" and "Javisst" gigs.