JOEY TEMPEST of EUROPE Reflects On New Single “Hold Your Head Up”: ‘We Always Like to Take Fans On an Adventure’
Description
Europe has recently released its new single, “Hold Your Head Up,” ahead of a 2024 documentary film about the band’s meteoric rise to becoming one of the greatest rock bands in history.
The song is a vibrant rocker reminiscent of their early hits and captures Joey Tempest [vocals], John Norum [guitars], John Levén [bass], Mic Michaeli [keyboards], and Ian Haugland [drums] continuing to be one of the most influential forces in rock music today. It was produced by Klas Åhlund (Ghost) and mixed by Stefan Glaumann (Rammstein, Def Leppard), who also mixed Europe‘s “Secret Society” album. To purchase “Hold Your Head Up” head over here.
Europe plans to head to the studio this winter to pull their song ideas and riffs together for a new album due out in late 2024 / early 2025. It will be their 12th and first studio album in five years since “Walk the Earth.”
The brand-new documentary entitled “Europe – The Movie” will tell the story of the band, from formation until the present day, telling of their rise to success in the mid-’80s, through hard times and heartache, to coming back in the millennium and the current successes the band has achieved.
Correspondent Robert Cavuoto spoke with Joey Tempest moments before they hit the stage at The Palladium in London last month for their second to last show of their Time Capsule, 40th Anniversary Tour. Joey shared how the band has been compiling song ideas and plans to go into the studio this winter. He also discusses content fans can expect to see in the documentary and reminisces on their heyday of the 80s when they were besieged in the street and the on-stage mishap that led to enlisting Mic Michaeli to handle the keyboard duties in 1984. Listen or read the transcript of their conversation below.
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INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT
You are playing at The Palladium tonight in London, a show for your Time Capsule 40th Anniversary tour. It must be close to show time.
It is only an hour and a half from showtime, so it’s getting exciting. We are on this 40th-anniversary tour of 21 shows. It’s going so well, and I’m excited about playing in London. It’s a hometown gig for me, as well as Stockholm. I have two hometown gigs!
We spoke in 2017 for “Walk the Earth”, so getting some new music from the band has been long overdue. It’s a great song, and we are excited about it.
Thank you, we are pleased about it. We made it in the studio this summer before the tour kicked off. Since we weren’t touring during the pandemic, I was collecting ideas, and this is the one I felt strongly about. I sent it to the guys, and they all liked it and wanted to work on it. We managed to quickly get it done in a few days.
I read you will be putting out a documentary in 2024. I wondered if the new song “Hold Your Head Up” is a retrospective tribute to the band’s career that will be used in the film?
We are featuring the song in the documentary. It just came together that way, and it’s a good observation! It was luck that the song tied it all together. Early in the documentary, you see us in the studio today, but then you get transported to the suburbs of Väsby when we were teenagers dreaming of becoming a touring band and coming up with the band’s name. We also found old footage on VHS tape from hotel rooms and recording studios. We had more material than we initially thought. It all formed into a really good story at the end of the day. We are in the final stages of completing it, and it’s almost there. It will probably come out in early 2024.
Will it be available on a streaming platform or for a theatrical release?
We are involving people to get that together to find the most interesting scenario for it. It could be all of those aspects you mentioned. It will be a serious thing that we want fans to be able to see it. It’s a great story about the era.
There’s also a new album in the works for late 2024 / early 2025. How deep are you into writing and recording it?
We talked about that last week. We have some ideas. One was “Hold Your Head Up,” so we are not entirely starting from scratch. We think this winter, we will pull all the ideas together and send them to each other. If we are lucky, we can get it out, like you said, later next year or early 2025. We are looking forward to recording it. It’s been a while since Walk the Earth in 2017, which was recorded in Abbey Road Studios.
When you go into the studio, do you have all the songs fleshed out, or do you prefer to be more spontaneous in creating songs as a band?
We like to be very well prepared! We like to leave a few things in the air, like breaks, intros, or maybe a song that is less than 100%. We want to be rehearsed on 10 to 15 songs before we enter the studio. That’s the kind of band we are! Sometimes, we can be a bit lazy and write in the studio, depending on the producer. When we have worked with Dave Cobb, he is a good writer; he can join in on a bridge or intro, which works well because we know him. Sometimes, we can write one song in the studio.
I know you are still working on the songs, but will the album have any unexpected moments that Europe is famous for and fans can look forward to?
You sound familiar with the band, and we always like to take fans on an adventure. “Hold Your Head Up” has some punch to it with some old Europe metal edge to it while feeling modern. I have a few ideas that are a bit different to share with the band yet, so there will be some exciting stuff.
Will you be coming to the US to tour in support of the album when it does come out?
Yeah, I hope so! Our management company is in California, so we have an agent who is always looking. As you know, we were supposed to go to the US in 2020 on a major two-and-a-half-month tour, and it didn’t happen because of everything that went on in the world. We have been looking ever since, and it’s about finding the right scenario, band to go with, or package tour. We could look into going back to all the House of Blues venues again. It’s really important for us to get back to the US, and I hope it’s soon!
You’re an expressive lyrist who can paint pictures in people’s minds and a terrific storyteller writing about positivity and hope. What do you think is your biggest strength as a songwriter?
That’s an interesting question. I don’t know where it comes from, but I know my Mom has always been a very positive soul! I have some of her thinking on that aspect; there is always hope, and there is always light! That sentiment always creeps in even when we write about a tragic event in the world. It’s just the way I am, I suppose. That doesn’t stop us from finding issues that are more serious. At the end of the day, it’s music, and it’s Rock & Roll. I have never gone down the road to do a serious album about a theme. We started in that direction for the “Walk the Earth” about where democracy went [laughing], but halfway through, we realized we are a rock band! There are a few things in there that make you think a bit more.
With that thought in mind, what inspired you lyrically when you first started Europe, and what inspires you now?
You get older, and you start thinking about everything that you have experienced. You have a late-career and an early career, so you can look at things in relation to each other with more depth. You read more and write more music as you evolve. I like to anchor lyrics in reality more than the first album when we were 18 years old. It was cool when it sounded cool, and that was it [laughing]! My Dad passed away, and when I wrote the lyrics to “Hold Your Head Up,” I remember him telling me, “Get up; I know you can do this!” That was the thought behind that song, but I’m sure the album will have new songs anchored around the band, my life, or what is happening around the world. I think that is how you evolve; you tend to write about things that are important to you.
Are you always inspired to create music?
Yes, I think about music every day and listen to music every day. I play guitar and keyboard almost every day, depending on what I’m doing or if I’m traveling. It’s been part of my life since I was 6 or 7. There was always an instrument at home. My sister had a guitar and piano, and she didn’t continue, but I did. I like to express myself musically, and it makes me feel good to write and think of new ideas. I collect lyrics and melody lines all the time.
Keeping the documentary in mind with the history of your career, what are one or two key attributes that you feel have carried Europe through all the ups and downs



