Alter Me - Biography The five-man band popped up l… Read Full Bio ↴A propos de Alter Me
Alter Me - Biography The five-man band popped up like a jack-in-the-box with their high-octane, energy-driven single “You Can’t” A good riff and sharp hooks make the group’s calling card and the Danish Broadcasting Corp’s P3 immediately named the song Pick of the Week. Other radio stations quickly followed suit and amplified mounting expectations for Alter Me and their debut album. The band has found the right title for the album: The Fall, and even thought Alter Me is the collective platform for the ambitions, musical appetite and longings of five young musicians, 25-year-old Hans Mortensen carries the most weight on the album – he is the group’s vocalist, guitarist, pianist, composer and song writer. Hans is an unwritten chapter in Danish rock. In actual fact, he is all but unknown, and not just in the realm of rock. Two-thirds of his life was spent about as far away from the modern world as you can get. He was one of 3,000 inhabitants of Qaqortoq, a town in southern Greenland, an anonymous splinter of the world where even the electricity to power local radio towers had a hard time finding its way there. But the story begins in 1982, when Hans entered the world in a village outside Ålborg. When he was just four years old, his parents – both of them schoolteachers – decided to pull up stakes and move to Greenland for a year. However, the opportunity to start and build up a high school in Qaqortoq proved to be too great a temptation. One year stretched into two, and then three, and after a while the idea about moving back to Denmark faded more and more into the background. It wasn’t until 15 years later, when a change of scenery was needed, that 19-year-old Hans and his family headed south, for good. He returned with a trunk-full of cultural and mental experiences, something most people never attain. Up in Greenland, music quickly became the hub of Hans’ life, after his sister just happened to open the doors to a hard-hitting electronic universe. He started writing songs, and at a frantic pace that almost reached Wagnerian proportions he continued to do so. Hans never skipped a beat and developed the ability to create songs at will. He puts a couple of chords together without effort, and the words just seem to flow. It would be something of an exaggeration to say that you can hear the Greenland in his songs. Greenland, the picture we have in our minds of vast, snow-covered expanses, tiny hamlets, ice and more ice, seals, kayaks, exists in tales and reality, but not really on Hans Mortensen’s first album. On the other hand, 15 years in Greenland touched the young songwriter’s soul. He confronts loneliness, angst, doubts and belief in love on the set’s 14 tracks. These are admittedly heavy subjects, but Hans always looks for a way out of the blue moods. So it’s appropriate, and not pure coincidence, that “escape” is the very first word he sings on the album. His intro to the vibrant opener, “Problems,” reveals the track of his life: “Escape is my destiny / And that can’t be changed.” Just as he is a captive, but grapples with boundaries, in the related song, “You Can’t,” the lead single from the album. But it’s also about believing in yourself, to the point of being self-centred, which is the theme in the slightly sarcastic, “Me And Myself.” Even though a sense of restlessness is evident in several songs, love is also at the core of a couple of songs: the painful in “Why It Hurts,” and the joyous in, “Love.” You could call it equal portions of fire and water, but the album—which is like a cycle of songs—ends on a positive note with, “Ghost”: “I’m gonna live this life / Till it’s worth dying from / I won’t be afraid / And I will not complain / The sea and the sun / Has got me on my knees /I won’t be a ghost no more.” The lyrics are rooted to the many years in Greenland, where you can only survive 15 years of isolation if you have the courage, desire and strength to try to find light in the darkness, to find a way out. It breaks many people, sometimes with fateful results. During Hans’ school years in Qaqortoq, he was confronted by 10 suicides, two of them close to home. Things like that scar the soul, but the emptiness that filled him when he returned to Denmark, and the divorce of his parents, hit harder. That’s when he realized that the secure framework that had always surrounded him and was taken for granted—partly the tight little community in Qaqortoq and partly family life—had been broken and he would need to find solid ground once again. He found himself free-falling into a void, but slowly—by putting his experiences into words—he began to ascend. He succeeded, for Hans is a fighter, a survivor. He knows what he wants, and when he puts his mind to something, nothing can stop him. Now he is ready to go the distance with his music. Alter Me is his baby, the outlet for his thoughts and talents. This where he gives his songs wings and lets them fly. Hans Mortensen fills a lot of space in Alter Me, but it is a band consisting of: Kasper Rasmussen (guitar, organ); Nicolai Westh (guitar, organ); Jesper Van (bass); and, Adam Winberg (drums). Kasper Rasmussen has played with Claus Hempler, but the rest of them are new faces on the Danish rock scene. New single Love and album The Fall out now!
Problems
Alter Me Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
So I'll just stay put an drink
The moonlight is coming now, i feel a bit crazy
Crazy is fine with me
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
Running away from my problems
Fear is my destiny, it'll come to me slowly
Show me the kid i am
The shadows are stronger now, i feel a bit crazy
Crazy is fine with me
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
Keep it cool, keep it down
Keep it cool, keep it down
Keep it cool, keep it down
Keep it cool, keep it down
Death is my destiny and time is my witness
The truth is quite meaningless
My head is so heavy now, i feel a bit crazy
Crazy is fine with me
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
The lyrics of "Problems" by Alter Me reflect the singer's desire to escape from their problems and the sense of fear that overwhelms them. The repeated line, "Running away from my problems/ Again, once again," highlights the recurring cycle of avoidance and the inability to confront or resolve the issues at hand. The use of the word "destiny" suggests a fatalistic outlook on life that implies the singer is resigned to their fate rather than actively making choices to change it.
The mention of moonlight and shadows adds a sense of mystery and illusion to the song, suggesting that the issues at hand may not be clear or easily defined. The repeated line, "Crazy is fine with me," can be interpreted as a coping mechanism or a way of rationalizing the avoidance of problems.
Overall, the lyrics convey a sense of powerlessness and resignation, with the constant repetition reinforcing the cycle of running away rather than facing problems head-on. The use of vivid imagery and strong emotions helps to capture the sense of fear, confusion, and desperation that can come with confronting difficult issues.
Line by Line Meaning
Escape is my destiny and that can't be changed
I feel like I am meant to run away from my problems, and there's nothing that can change that.
So I'll just stay put an drink
Instead of running away right now, I'll just stay here and drink.
The moonlight is coming now, i feel a bit crazy
The nighttime is making me feel a little wild and erratic.
Crazy is fine with me
I'm okay with feeling crazy right now.
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
I'm consistently avoiding my problems by running away from them.
Fear is my destiny, it'll come to me slowly
I know deep down that fear will always be a part of my life, and it will slowly show up in different ways.
Show me the kid i am
My fear might make me feel small and vulnerable, like I'm a kid again.
The shadows are stronger now, i feel a bit crazy
I'm feeling even more wild and erratic now that the shadows are getting darker.
Keep it cool, keep it down
I'm telling myself to stay calm and composed, even though I'm feeling a little crazy.
Death is my destiny and time is my witness
The truth is quite meaningless
I believe that I am destined to eventually die, and time proves that to be true. But the truth of life and existence feels meaningless to me.
My head is so heavy now, i feel a bit crazy
Crazy is fine with me
My thoughts are weighing heavy on me and making me feel even more wild and erratic. But again, I'm okay with feeling that way.
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
Running away from my problems
Again, once again
Like before, I'm continuing to avoid my problems and run away from them.
Contributed by Adrian I. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
katakis1
Banger.
Isabella Skifte
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