Strict joy for Glen Hansard

BY JULE SCHERER
Last updated 09:27 11/03/2010
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THE BOYS FROM VENEZUELA: Los Amigos Invisibles, from left, Juan M Roura, Julio Briceno, Maurigo Arcas, Armando Figueredo, and Jose R Torres.
Glen Hansard
BIG CHANGE: Irish musician Glen Hansard knows full well how an Oscar can change your life.

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The last time Glen Hansard visited New Zealand one of his wishes came true. Music legend Bob Dylan asked Hansard's band The Frames to open his 2007 Australian and New Zealand concerts. But what happened after that was the stuff of dreams for the Irish musician.

Initially Hansard just wanted to help out a friend by writing the music for a movie project, but he ended up playing the lead in John Carney's surprise hit Once.

The low-budget film won the audience award at the Sundance Movie Festival, scored at the Independent Spirit Award for best foreign film, the soundtrack was nominated for a Grammy and Hansard won the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 2008 Oscars (together with co-star Marketa Irglova).

"Personally, playing with Bob Dylan was the more important thing," he says. "But professionally, winning the Oscar did more for me. Opening for Dylan does nothing for your career, it's more something you enjoy doing, but winning an Oscar does a lot for you."

The huge success of Once opened a lot of doors for the 39-year-old musician from Dublin.

"It changed everything. It was almost like somebody came and said you've been on a long and tough road and now we take all of that away and give you a fresh start and this time you are going to start at the top.

"It's a fascinating thing. It basically was a complete levelling of everything I had known. Suddenly we were given an audience on a platter and then, what we did with our audience was where the work really comes into it."

After the success of the movie, he formed The Swell Season with co- star and Czech instrumentalist Irglova. They have just released the follow-up album to Once, called Strict Joy.

The musical partnership between Hansard and Irglova began about 10 years ago in the Czech Republic. "She was 13, I met her because her father was a concert promoter and I was doing some solo gigs in the Czech Republic and Mar played piano and I would ask her up on stage to play a song or two with me, and she would do it.

"And it was great, and it just developed in that whenever I would do gigs she would come and play with me and sing. But it never became an official project."

WHEN Carney worked on the script for Once, a story about a Dublin busker falling for a young East European immigrant, he picked Hansard's brain on his experiences playing on street corners from the age of 13.

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And when Carney asked if Hansard knew an eastern European piano player, he introduced the film- maker to Irglova.

The male lead was supposed to be played by Irish actor Cillian Murphy, who was an almost-signed rock musician before turning to acting. But weeks before the filming was set to start, Murphy pulled out and Carney asked Hansard to step in.

"It was an incredible opportunity for me, although I didn't really recognise it at the time, because I was reluctant to do it but I felt like I didn't want to let John down.

"I didn't want to do the part for a couple of reasons. One, because the character in the film was so closely related to me anyway - it was almost based entirely on my experience . . . so I thought maybe it was a bit of an ego trip for me to do the part. But John kept assuring me that it was a film role, that it was not me."

Once was not Hansard's first brush with acting. He played the guitarist in the 1991 movie The Commitments, but decided afterwards to concentrate fully on his band The Frames.

He has said he regretted having been in the movie, as it took away too much attention from his music.

But now he says he would happily take a part in another movie. Since Once "there have been a few things that have been really fantastic which we've done and we've enjoyed. Like doing The Simpsons; it was just an incredible experience." He and Irglova reprised their film roles in The Simpsons. They also contributed a song to the Dylan movie I Am Not There.

For now the duo concentrates on The Swell Season.

"The Once music was much more folky and kind of more delicate but the Strict Joy record has more meat, it's more of a band record."

The two musicians are joined by Hansard's mates from The Frames.

"There will be songs that the audience will recognise from the film and there will also be a few new songs, and there will also be a few Frames songs."

The Swell Season Pacific Blue Festival Club March 21

- NZPA

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