THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2019 // 7 SOUNDS OF HOME AND THE ROAD Swedish singer, songwriter performs in Cannon Beach By KATHERINE LACAZE FOR COAST WEEKEND W hen Swedish singer and song- writer Sofi a Talvik began tak- ing her music on the road eight years ago, her long tours of the United States and other countries sparked musings about home, as both a tangible place and an idea. “Because of all the touring, I started think- ing more about home and where is home,” Talvik said. “When you grow older, you can appreciate it more. You can see the beauty that was lost on a teenager.” As Talvik prepares to bring her Amer- icana folk-fl avored music to the Cannon Beach History Center and Museum on Thurs- day, June 13, as part of her 2019 World Tour, guests can anticipate joining her on a remi- niscent journey of her small hometown island off the Swedish west coast and her experi- ences being on the road. As a soloist, Talvik seeks opportunities to play at smaller, more intimate venues that incorporate “that ’70s coffee-house feel” and where she can make genuine connections with the audience. Liz Johnson, the Cannon Beach Muse- Swedish singer and songwriter Sofi a Talvik makes a stop in Cannon Beach Thursday, June 13, on her World Tour and will sing from her new album “Paws of a Bear.” Photo courtesy Jonas Westin um’s outreach coordinator, said they look forward to hosting Talvik. The museum works to create programs that are “differ- ent from what else is going on around town,” Johnson said, and also seek quality musicians that will appeal to a wide age group. Bittersweet memories are also encapsulated in her single “Take Me Home,” which made the Top 10 Folk Radio Charts when it was released in the U.S. in April. Makaki Music Talvik learned to play piano Sofi a Talvik performs during her youth. As a teenager, at 7 p.m. Thursday, she began writing songs to help Infl uence of home June 13, at the Cannon teach herself how to play guitar. Beach History Center Talvik remembers being a She put together a demo tape and Museum. teenager in a small, coastal town that was played by a local radio feeling restless and longing for station, sparking her venture into excitement. music as a profession. She and her friends would hop on the Talvik organized a backing band in Swe- car ferry that traveled from the island to the den and produced her fi rst album, “Blue mainland and knock on the side of car doors Moon,” in 2005. She started a record label to hitch a ride into the city. with her husband Jonas Westin in 2006 Visiting as an adult, she views it as a treat and began touring as a soloist at home and to return to a place that feels familiar and abroad. safe, but as “a restless soul,” she wouldn’t In 2011, she and Westin headed to the want to move back permanently, she said. states on a two-year visa. They were on the “If I’m at home for too long, I appreciate road a year and a half, traveling in a 1989 having all the different impressions I get from Winnebago Warrior. going to different countries,” she added. “It’s “In the beginning, we had no idea what the contrast, I guess, that I like.” we were doing,” she said. “We played any- Talvik’s sixth full-length album, “Big thing we could fi nd.” Sky Country,” released in 2015, was heav- Touring and new music ily inspired by her experiences on the road Now, she consistently spends six months and how it infl uenced her perspective of her each year in Europe and six months in the hometown, causing her to refl ect on it with “different eyes,” she said. United States. IF YOU GO What: Sofi a Talvik Folk Concert When: 7 p.m. Thursday, June 13 Where: Cannon Beach History Center and Museum, 1387 S Spruce St. Details: $15. Tickets can be purchased online at cbhistory.org/product-category/ concert-tickets or by calling 503-436-9301. She has played concerts in large cities, like Los Angeles, Chicago and New York City. Although she has produced sev- eral albums and been on multiple tours, the experience is still both exciting and nerve-wracking. “It’s really like magic to see [the albums] come to life with instruments,” she said. “But then of course you always kind of sec- ond-guess yourself and question everything. It kind of goes into different stages.” The studio album she is releasing this year, “Paws of a Bear,” has taken “quite a bit of time to produce,” she said, adding in between writing songs, she let them “rest for a little bit” before reviewing and revis- ing them. “Once it’s out there, it’s just out there, and then hopefully you’ll be really proud of it,” she said. CW