A Complaint Free World

Rev. Will Bowen of Christ Church Unity, Orlando had the vision of creating a world free of complaints. To help achieve this, he created the 'complaint free bracelet' (discovered by the Kalleinens whilst in Chicago), which you wear and swap to the other wrist whenever you complain. The aim is to break the habit of complaining by being complaint free for 21 consecutive days. It's not to try to stop people from being dissatisfied or saying what they want to change, but rather help people to see beyond the problem instead of focussing on it. To back this up, he explains that Martin Luther King's 'I Have a Dream' speech is remembered for its potential positive solutions to bad situations, rather than the moment where it describes a metaphorical bounced cheque. 




The media caught on to this idea and it quickly became a worldwide phenomenon. People everywhere have used this simple act of moving a bracelet to transform their lives. One example is of a man who was reduced to a wheelchair after being shot. He used the bracelet as part of a process spanning a number of years of his life, when he reestablished his attitude as one of forgiveness. Instead of complaining, he prays for the best in the man's life who shot him no less than he prays for other people, and for good to come out of the situation.

Founders

Finnish born Tellervo Kalleinen and German born Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen live and work in Helsinki, Finland. They have collaborated on projects since 2003, and they won the largest art award of Finland, Ars Fennica, in 2014. When they first met in 1998, Tellervo immediately knew 'he was the man', but it took Oliver 3 years to agree! They are very different people, and Oliver explains that she has taught him more about himself, relationships, and how to communicate his feelings better.




It is this care for people and relationships that provides the base for Tellervo's aesthetic concerns. When she was part of a girl's choir in her early art school years, they featured in an advertisement in the newspaper which said that they were willing to go to anyone's house to perform for them, so long as they were able to document the performance for potential future use. Their one invitation led them to a man's house, where they sang the Finnish national anthem, and after their performance he showed them some holiday photos. This man, however, made the situation uncomfortable by being naked throughout their visit. Tellervo later concluded that it was partly uncomfortable because it wasn't truly participatory - both sides were doing things at each other rather than with each other, so she decided to start working together with people in their homes to develop ideas.

Oliver also doesn't like working on his own. There is one project that he considers having initiated on his own, but it still involved working with people. Since him and Tellervo collaborated, any project they do is participatory and starts with the assumption that there might be a need for it. They then send out an invitation for participants to see whether they are right or wrong (more on that here). Throughout the Complaints Choir project, they made  particular care to ensure that people were only there because they wanted to be; it was okay for people to leave the project if they weren't having fun, though people had a range of motivations for staying.

The Choir Project

Inspired by Complaints Choir of Cairo, this project was born in May 2010 in Egypt to invite people from a range of backgrounds to create a song in a week-long workshop, based on their hopes and concerns, thoughts and feelings, and jokes and woes. Similar to the Complaints Choirs, the workshop consists of writing lyrics, except it also involves communal improvisation and composition, rather than the responsibility for composition resting mainly on one person's shoulders. Unique results occur every time; the only constant is the collaboration of the community in active participation in order to express themselves, with no prejudice towards anyone in the choir. The choir provides a short performance of their song at the end of the week of workshopping, and one performed at the Music Freedom Day in March 2011.

Collaborated Projects

The First Summit of Micronations
This was held in August 2003 in Helsinki. Micronations are entities that persistently claim to be an independent nation or state, yet are not officially recognised by other world governments or major international organisations. This convention was a three-day event where representatives from six micronations held a closed, round table discussion, a gala evening and temporary embassies. It was produced together with the artists' association MUU in the context of the Amorph!03 festival, which Tellervo and Oliver curated that year.



YKON
Based in Helsinki and Berlin, YKON was founded in 2005 in order to continue working on the topic of micronations, through advocating unrepresented nations, experimental countries and utopian thinkers. As part of the field of contemporary art, YKON's aim is to help the dissemination of knowledge in these unrepresented nations through a cooperation between the approaches of all fields of study, such as education, architecture and the economy. The Summit of Practical Utopias was also born out of the Micronations Summit.



Speech Karaoke Action Group
Together with 11 other artists in 2010, Tellervo and Oliver developed a karaoke system for speeches. This works in the same way as normal karaoke, except with speeches instead of songs, ranging from famous dictator speeches, lines from films or private wedding speeches. They can be performed and spoken in any desired style, and in workshops people may add a speech of their choice to the system to be performed at a karaoke club evening. The project was developed in the context of the exhibition: 'I am a socialist-anarchist-individual-collectivist-individual-communist-cooperative-aristocrat-democrat.' - produced by the Helsinki Academy of Fine Arts and curated by Oliver and Tellervo.



What I Wish I Had Learned In School
Founded in 2012, this project invited people to create a 45 minute lesson about what they wish they had learned in school, that would have considerably helped them and prepared them better for life. Of those who replied to the invitation with a topic, 10 people prepared a lesson about their chosen subject in workshops facilitated by the Kalleinens. The lessons ranged from practical skills such as drilling holes to personal life lessons such as dealing with death and disease. They were delivered in a classroom style environment with 15 minute breaks between each one. Like the Complaints Choirs, this project was open for anyone to participate.



People in White
They have also worked on a number of short films together. One of them is 'People in White', a film created between 2011-2012 that explores the complicated relationship between doctor and patient in mental health care, with 10 patients sharing their experiences. It was chosen as the best feature film at 'Lo Spiraglio Film Fest', an Italian film festival about mental health. The trailer can be viewed here.



I Love My Job
Another similar film project with 3 episodes covers 3 real employees of Gothenburg and Helsinki (a puppet theatre actress, a storage worker and a chef), and the unbearable situations and unresolved conflicts at their workplaces. Each one shows fantasies of how these employees wish to bring an end to their situations, giving the chance for them to act out their wishes from their darkest moments. Here is the trailer. A theatrical version of this project was performed at HAU in Berlin, 2008, the same location for the Berlin complaints choir 5 years later.




Information about other projects and films, including their current project 101 for all, can be found on Tellervo's website or their joint website

Effects, Outcomes, and The Future

One interesting effect of the project is the humour it can bring to those who participate. When the Kalleinens started out, they did not know if it would be overly depressing, but in the very act of taking the two activities of complaining and singing seriously, it became clear during the first Birmingham rehearsal that combining them makes for a very funny project. These activities are not inherently related, but both are ones that people enjoy doing.

Though it is difficult to truly evaluate how much each specific complaint brought about a positive change in the lives of people involved or their country (and this is not something the founders wanted to evaluate), the media frequently reported on the project, which would have increased its impact. There are also some choirs that continued updating their songs. For example, one of the DIY choirs in Hong Kong got in the habit of composing a song related to whatever demonstration was taking place, so it could they could sing it at the demonstration. In Cairo, the DIY choir then formed into a 'utopia choir' as the reverse of the complaints choir concept, and inspired The Choir Project, which sets up community-based choirs that can cover any theme relevant to a particular group of people (other than just complaints - more on them here). This 'utopia choir' was born just before the uprising of 2011.


The Choir Project.

There are some potential personal results that may well ring true for some of the choir members, too. The opportunity to share complaints that may not have been shared before, in a setting where everyone is accepting and doing the same thing, can give strength to an individual. Being able to create nice sounds together with other people, when an individual may not be a good singer, can give them confidence and satisfaction. People enjoy listening and especially working together to achieve something that is good, which can be therapeutic. For other people, it provided an opportunity to do something a bit different or strange. The diversity of issues sung in such a range of ordinary, real voices, 'in all their colour and individuality' (in contrast to the blandness of the pop music industry), ensures each voice is heard and made to feel accepted and included. As with the blues, it has brought music into daily experience of suffering, and as with what blogging has done to mass media, it has put the voice of the individual into the limelight. From a historical viewpoint, it has also created important records of human experience.

Therefore, there is a wide variety of possible outcomes, either on an individual or collective level, and it is important to the Kalleinens that they don't dictate the outcome. The idea of it being an 'open source' project allows it to be transferred to an array of different contexts, where it can work equally well in different ways. People can use it as a tool and modify it to fulfil their needs. 



After the unexpected success and widespread continuation of the project, with choirs in over 20 countries, the founders hope to develop their website into a platform where people can showcase their own video material. Besides that, they see their role as becoming increasingly to help people use and develop the project in a way they find appropriate, as well as take a back seat and observe.

Values, Ideals, and Political Involvement

Though the concept helps to represent people by making their private problems public, it is important that people aren't labelled as representative of particular groups such as age or class, or made to feel stereotyped; each person is an individual representing themselves. Effort was taken by the Kalleinens to ensure that invitations to their choirs were distributed across a range of neighbourhoods and media, so that they could get as mixed a group as possible and get people to interact with others they wouldn't have otherwise met. The inclusion of eating food in the steps to create your own choir is there as an additional way to invest in the community experience created by the choir, especially since there is such a lot of work to do in a limited time frame. Usually the choirs were diverse, though after taking the project worldwide, the founders saw some general trends regarding types of people that took part: often more women than men would join, aged between 40-60, as well as more educated people interested in culture. 


Complaints Choir of Helsinki organising complaints.

Hong Kong roadside exhibition to collect complaints from the public.

Leading on from this, it is seen as especially important that any complaints choir is approached with an empathetic and non-judgemental attitude. Every complaint should be taken seriously, whether big or small. This creates a solidarity and a better understanding of different points of view, and when someone in the choir doesn't agree with a particular complaint, everyone will be singing their complaint too, which creates a powerful effect even if other people don't care about it. It also helps to put things in perspective and provide the sense of humour mentioned above; it is possible to care about small things as well as global injustice, and okay to do so, especially since those things that are closer to home form part of our identities. Equally, complaining about the bigger things alongside the smaller things can help people feel better about the smaller things.

As can be seen here, only 7.5% of complaints in the first 8 Kalleinen choirs were politically related, and the founders have stated that the project is not intended to primarily be a form of political protest, unless a community wants to use it in that way (why should important issues such as broken underpants be ignored?!). The idea is to provide a free space where people can choose to address various issues. However, they have noted that personal complaints could still be interpreted as political, since they can imply the nature of a capitalist society (or otherwise), which would increase the above percentage. Additionally, the unfortunate situation in Singapore meant that the choir was banned from public performance and thus politics was more heavily involved, despite the few expressly political complaints in the song.

Aims, Roles, and Participation

Tellervo is convinced that keeping complaints inside and not dealing with them will cause people health problems. She was particularly surprised, when visiting LA, of the attitude of always answering 'How are you?' with 'I'm fine', since people in Finland are always honest, and the Complaints Choir Documentary records a complainer from the Chicago choir* offering the same view that complaints should be expressed with a view to making the situation better. 


A crucial vision of the project was to help people not only express their complaints and channel that energy in a different, creative way, but to examine and view the complaints in a more positive light, and maybe start to occasionally 'smile at their neighbours'. People are challenged by their frequent tendency to negatively complain through taking part. The powerful act of people coming together to sing about and share their complaints in unison, whether everyone in the choir can relate to them or not, brings a sense of mutual understanding to be able to move forward and do something about it, rather than just remain static. Complaining becomes not just a purpose in itself, but 'a fun way to share your annoyance[s], laugh about them, discuss [them] and in some cases also take action'. This also extends to the audiences of the choirs. 

Though complaining is often defined as 'dissatisfaction without action', it is often the starting point and has the potential to bring about change, particularly when enough people complain about the same thing. Sometimes the complaints are directed at things that cannot be changed or controlled, such as the weather, in which case the role of the complaints choir is to build a communal feeling to remind people that they are not alone in a lot of their struggles, which improves the situation. 

Using the universal act of complaining as an art to bring people together means that one of the main principles of the choirs is that anyone can start one and join, whether or not they can sing. On a practical level, this means that the created songs should not be too complicated (though it is still a challenge to put together and perform a song with many people in a short space of time). The song should also be uplifting to some degree, in order to help people feel more energised and positive about their complaints. 



Tellervo and Oliver see their role as 'party hosts' for the choirs. They want to make a nice invitation, make people feel welcome and like they want to be there, but create a space for the people who actually make the party and not take up too much space themselves. It is also important that people are able to connect and make friends.

Having said all this, the Kalleinens explain that when setting out the project, they tried to keep free of any straightforward goals, and rather approach it as just being active members of society. All of their projects are open invitations for anyone to take part, so if people join in, then that indicates a need and shows the concept can work. The idea is that the collaborative experience is provided.

*this complainer also produced the following quote, which I believe sums up the idea behind the project quite nicely: 
'You can't complain about your bonsai tree. You can only work on it.'

How Did it All Start?

When Finnish couple Tellervo Kalleinen and Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen, who have collaborated on a number of projects (see here), were taking a walk together one (cold) winter's day in Helsinki, they ended up discussing the possibility of creating a new medium for releasing the unending energy normally put into complaining. They admitted to complaining at lot themselves, Oliver being an 'expert', but not any more than other people. Everyone complains all the time, no matter what their life situation, and they wondered: why, and how can this change into something more positive?

One particular Finnish word, 'valituskuoro' meaning 'complaints choir', sprung to ming. In the language it is used to describe situations where a lot of people are complaining simultaneously. This led the couple to consider taking the term literally and organising a real choir for people to sing about their complaints, and so the concept was born.

With complaining being a universal human activity, the Kalleinens knew it was a concept that could be transferred to any city in the world (more on the 'open source' and participatory nature of the project), and so they offered it to various events where they were invited as artists, but it was only after Birmingham's Springhill Institute saw its potential that the first choir became a reality. This was a particularly appropriate city to start the project in, since it is known to some people as the 'arsehole of England'! Flyers and posters were distributed, and the concept was instinctively grasped by all those that joined and committed to the choir. Within two weeks, the so called 'non-singers' - perfect examples of how the project can be so inclusive - had got the song ready for performance. The surprise success of the Birmingham choir, especially as a result of YouTube, caused the couple to be invited to run the project in different cities around the globe. 




Meanwhile, it became apparent that the need for this musical outlet of complaining had grown large enough for the project to officially become 'open source'. In 2006, the Kalleinens published the '9 easy step method' for creating your own complaints choir. Since the first DIY complaints choir of Poikkilaakso was organised at a school in the outskirts of Helsinki (by a teacher who partook in the original Helsinki choir), an estimated 140 complaints choirs exist across the world as of February 2014, a number of which can be found out about here or on the official website

Performances of all choirs are documented by a video recording, and some have been presented together as a video installation at art exhibitions (more information on that here).

Other Kalleinen Choirs

Three other choirs were initiated by Oliver and Tellervo after Tokyo, but there is not sufficient information to blog about them individually. Here they are... 

Teutônia
In June 2011, the first Complaints Choir of South America began to form in Teutônia, Brazil as part of a travelling program for the 8th Biennial of Mercosul Visual Arts in Porto Alegre. The choir was conducted by musician Lucas Brolese. At their first meeting on 9th July, roughly 45 citizens of the small town produced around 500 complaints for their song, ranging from social injustice in Brazil to the fact that the fire engine of Teutônia (a present from Germany) can only travel at 40km per hour. (Teutônia has a large population of descendants of German immigrants.)



The first public performance of the Teutônia Complaints Choir, aka Coro de Queixas de Teutônia, took place on 23rd July at 2pm in the Administrative Town Centre (an interesting building mimicking German Fachwerk architecture). This was followed by performances in Montenegro and Porto Alegre on 24th July and 11th September respectively.

Dresden & Berlin
The Nordwind Festival invited the Kalleinens to coordinate two choirs simultaneously, one in Dresden and the other in Berlin. On 5th October 2013, online invitations went out to the cities for people to join the choirs for their first rehearsals on 2nd and 3rd November, which can be found here for Dresden and here for Berlin. Some people from Berlin also created a short animation for the Nordwind Festival, explaining the basics of the complaints choir project for beginners with the aim of encouraging citizens of Berlin and Dresden to sign up (in German).

After four additional rehearsals for each, the performances took place on 22nd and 23rd November for Dresden, and 27th and 30th November for Berlin. The Berlin choir was conducted by Miss Le Bomb (aka Catriona Shaw) at HAU, and one of the specific complaints for this choir was about the new developments in the local airport. Oliver notes how, after reading and listening to roughly 40,000 complaints for the project overall, it gets more difficult to find new complaints, and many of the complaints in Berlin were quite similar to previous big cities, such as noisy neighbours, dog sh*t and public transport. However, Berlin did come up with some unique complaints, such as 'soon I am dust'. 



Roughly 30 complainers joined each choir, and the songs contained (as always) a great snapshot of private and civic life in those cities. The choirs received good coverage in the German news.


Khurvaleti/Shavsvebi 
As of 1st April 2014, Tellervo and Oliver completed the Complaints Choir project with Artasfoundation in the above two settlements for Internally Displaced People (IDP) in Georgia. Artasfoundation had invited the Kalleinens to take their project into the country in the hope that their art of complaining could act as a mediator in the Georgian conflict. The aim or diplomatic mission of this NGO (non-governmental organisation) is to use art as a foundation for processes of peace or change.



This crisis situation in Georgia had meant that people had to move out of the state of South Ossetia into the above camps with very difficult living conditions. Being mostly farmers, these people also had very little, and were stuck waiting in these villages. This new context for the Complaints Choir project brought a welcome challenge.


How to DIY (Make Your Own Complaints Choir)

Step 1: Invite People (ANYONE) to Complain*
- Distribute flyers, spread posters and write a press release to get people from your city, organisation or other community of interest to submit a complaint (or more!) and sign up to the choir.
- The more diverse the participants, the better! No singing skills required.


Part of the online invitation to find Dresden choir participants.

Step 2: Find the Right Musician
- Since the song has to be composed within only a few days, and is subject to amendments in rehearsals, make sure you find a proficient musician who can create a solid song!
- Ideally, the musician should also lead the rehearsals and be able to help any amateur members sing loud with enthusiasm and confidence, or otherwise work closely with a conductor.

Step 3: Group the Complaints
- Group all submitted complaints into appropriate categories (such as technology, money, things that can't be changed etc.) and print them on separate papers.


Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg

Step 4: The First Choir Meeting: Making the Lyrics
- Start with a warm-up complaining session (that's why people have come!), which may produce useful extra material.
- Show them the chosen categories and read out the best ones from each.
- Ask each member of the choir to choose any category they feel most excited about and divide them into 'expert teams' based on their favourite categories.
- Have these teams go through all the complaints within their category to reformulate and combine them. They should then glue their results to cardboard.
- Come together at the end and get each team to share their suggestions with the other teams.




















Step 5: Making the Song
- A few volunteers from the choir then finalise the lyrics by combining the ideas of the expert teams with the musician, who then combines the lyrics with music.

Step 6: Rehearsing
- Organise rehearsal times.
- Between 3-5 rehearsals should be sufficient to learn the song.
- Be open to integrate new ideas that pop up during rehearsals.
- Encourage people to enjoy themselves!
- Serve food and drinks at the end of each rehearsal.





Stretching and drinks break at Budapest!


Gabriola Island

Step 7: Preparing the Grand Performances
- Decide the locations of your performances together with the choir. You can either advertise the performance and invite an audience or surprise people with a spontaneous performance at a public place, similar to a flash mob.
- Ensure there is a video recording of each performance and one quiet location where you can make an audio recording.




















Hong Kong

Step 8: Go Out and Sing Your Complaints Together!
- Make sure the choir have food if there are many performances on the same day (hungry complainers won't sing well!).


Florence

Step 9: The Video
- Sync up the audio recording with clips of the various performances.
- Share the video and spread the word!
- Give each participant a DVD of the performance.






Promotional Image for the Complaints Choir Documentary
DVD


*Tellervo and Oliver ask that you credit them appropriately by placing a link to their site (complaints choir.org) when the video is shared. It would also be good to let them know if you are planning to organise a choir (via their email: kochta@nexgo.de) so they can document it.

What About The Music?


Each choir has a definite, distinct musical character of its own, showing the instruments and styles of different cultures as well as commenting on the specific complaints within the choir. Some common characteristics can still be found, however, such as the use of separating male and female voices, spoken elements and contrasting moods. It also seems that accommodating for the variety and amount of complaints has caused even the simpler, more regular verse-chorus structures of Birmingham, Copenhagen and Hamburg to be broken up by spoken sections or repeated lines. All songs last between 6:15-9:30, showing the extent to which people like to complain!

Birmingham
Though the monotonous verses in Birmingham's complaint song suggest the participants had weaker musical abilities than in the other choirs, they certainly do reflect the dull nature of complaining. There is not a strong sense of musical direction or contrast compared to most of the other choirs, but the lyrics have been made to rhyme almost throughout the whole song, and similarly to Singapore, there is an inclusion of a rap and some other spoken elements, which breaks up the simple verse-chorus structure. The lyrics have a strong focus on the changed city and its transport, so the song's lack of musical contrast and direction is perhaps an ironic comment on this. 



A piano accompanies the choir throughout the song, and its gentle accompaniment figure in the verses adds colour to the monotonous melody. 

Chicago
Not only do Chicago use an unconventional structure, they use strong harmonies throughout their song and include percussion as well as piano. It is perhaps the most advanced song of all of the cities. 




In section 5, a second line is sung underneath the main melody, which is an augmented repetition of the start of the song, showing unity as well as contrast. There is a wide variety of complaints relating to other people, so the song's constant contrast and juxtaposition of different moods, themes and tempi in the music reflects this. Chicago are the only choir not to include any spoken elements.

Copenhagen
Copenhagen's main accompaniment instrument of choice is the double bass, which introduces the song with a melodic theme from the chorus. The piano introductions for Chicago and Helsinki also play a melodic theme, but from the upcoming verse instead of the chorus. Some simple percussion maintains a beat for the choir, and the ring of a bike bell can be heard intermittently, first sounding after the line 'Christiania bikes fill the whole bicycle lane'. 




One of the choir members mimics the sound of a seagull at the complaint about seagulls making noise, and there are often spoken sounds of agreement after the lines in the verses, adding a communal and authentic feel to the song and making up for the lack of harmonies and strength in numbers. The range of the bridge spans a minor third and hangs on an unresolved chord until the start of the next verse, adding weight to their complaint about their government refusing to lift any bans. This is then extended in the section before the last repeats of the chorus, which the choir claps along to, adding to the sense of community.

St. Petersburg
This is the only city that welcomes the audience into the song in the introduction, which extends the communal feel of Copenhagen's song into a wider field of people and reflects their fundamental complaints about humanity, since many people will be able to relate to them. The sombre mood of this introduction is contrasted with an upbeat accordion pattern to lead in to the verse, and this more positive mood is then maintained throughout the rest of the song, despite the negativity of complaining. Perhaps this is to highlight the final line in the chorus: 'Why are we always dissatisfied with something?'. The rap is preceded by whoops, claps and stomps, and incorporates the use of a megaphone, all of which further help to invite the audience in and keep them involved. 




There is also frequent use of interaction between the men and women in the choir, such as in verses 4-7 with their very fast-paced lyrics. Though the choir makes no use of vocal harmonies, the hearty, well-rounded melodies still create a sense of musicality within the group. 

Hamburg




The sinister, minor organ melody (played on an electric piano) in the introduction and verses to this song is perhaps the most accurate reflection of the negativity of complaining in all the Kalleinen choirs, and it is juxtaposed with the opposite mood in the chorus, which the choir consistently clap along to. Though not fully monotonous, the verses can be likened to the verses in the Birmingham choir. Ghost-like vocal noises are sung underneath verses 4 and 5, adding to the sinister organ sounds, and in between these verses is an extended spoken solo section, which can also be found in Tokyo and Singapore.




Helsinki




The introduction to this song features hummed harmonies in a descending line, anticipating the upcoming melody. Each verse gradually builds up the harmonies towards the chorus, which uses overlapping lines and a contrasting dynamic level and theme for its last line 'it's not fair'. These features, as well as the use of the last chorus line at the end of verse 5, signal a strength of musicality and composition not unlike the Chicago choir. Its use of humming at the start is also similar to the start of Tokyo's song. With the choir being predominantly female, some of them take quite a low alto line to contrast with the higher female voices, and these two groups often alternate, similarly to the male-female interaction in St. Petersburg. One particularly impressive and witty feature of this song is the incorporation of the Nokia ringtone as part of the melody on the line 'ringtones are all annoying', especially considering how it is repeated to emphasise its annoyance!

Singapore



Despite all the problems this choir faced with not being able to perform in public, the song is very upbeat (apart from the calmer contrasting section), with a punchy piano accompaniment and a jazz inflection in the chorus melody. A few harmonies can be found, such as underneath the rap, in the overlapping lines in the contrasting section and most notably in the unaccompanied section about languages just before the final verse. The contrasting section also alternates between male and female voices, again like St. Petersburg and Helsinki. A new key with unresolved chords is played in the piano accompaniment throughout the spoken section, perhaps to signify how people will always find something to complain about, and a key change also features in the last repeat of the chorus - the only use of this cliché!



Tokyo




After the calm, muffled, wordless harmonies in the introduction, the double bass, percussion and eventually the accordion lead in to a more upbeat two-part verse. These two parts are separated between the men and women, who then swap halfway through the verse. These features show particular similarities with St. Petersburg and Helsinki, and the use of a double bass shows a similarity with Copenhagen. Tokyo have the largest spoken section compared to Hamburg and Singapore, which is effectively played like a game of musical statues: the improvised accordion music stops at the ringing of a bell to allow for an unaccompanied spoken solo. 




The song ends after an eerie chord is sung, leaving the finality of the last line hanging on something much more uncertain.