Archive for the ‘Sigur Rós’ Category

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Frederick Foxtrott Top 10 of 2008

December 30, 2008

Obama Time

There is no denying that 2008 has passed with breathtaking speed. Frederick Foxtrott comes to you this year with our list of top ten releases just a few days shy of 2009. Rather than spend New Year’s celebration in New York City, we are going upstate to spend time in the out doors, at the base of the Adirondacks. There is something poignant about spending what is typically observed by thousands of people crammed together with bright lights and loud sounds in the isolated cold with small but extraordinary company.

There is also no denying that this year proved to be an interesting time for music. The industry as a whole is largely tending to homogenize, with publications as banal as the Florida Times Union regularly looking to Pitchfork top ten lists to inspire their own critical hierarchies. The style generated over the last decade that has dominated the genre of independent music has become standard fare. It is blandly ubiquitous and overly diffuse. Nonetheless, while we got nothing perfect, there was plenty to listen to—plenty to listen to other than Vampire Weekend or Fleet Foxes, both of whom received the latest dose of sickeningly strange love from most indie media. Seemingly lost in the midst of the hollow recordings that dominate the suggestion pages of the taste-making press are truly great releases. So here they are—known and unknown—loved and loathed.

Top Ten 2008

1. M83- Saturdays = Youth

M83- Saturdays = YouthExpanding from shoegaze to stargaze, as his name implies, Gonzalez managed to not merely replicate a style modeled by Tears for Fears, Echo & the Bunnymen, and Flock of Seagulls, but he has retroactively contributed to the bleak genre of gothic pop in a way that is insertive rather than derivative. With modern instruments and production, Gonzalez (re)vitalized a style, giving color and texture to a genre that many feel has been muted by twenty years of impersonation and distillation, killed by retro themed knockoffs and karaoke bars alike (Read Review).

2. Conor Oberst- Conor Oberst

Conor OberstEven as he releases a self-titled record, suggesting biography, Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band offer a personal narrative that is reflexive and acutely aware of where his lyrical perspective is anchored. Released on Merge Records rather than our beloved Saddle Creek, Conor Oberst is a record that disconnects from the iconic figure that the songwriter has become, allowing for the reclamation of personhood (Read Review).

3. Eagle Seagull- I Hate EPs (EP)

Eagle Seagull- I Hate EPsWith its self-degrading title, I Hate EPs gives us a most vivid taste of what Eagle Seagull is up to. It is worthwhile to listen to every word on this EP. The lyrics are most certainly still emitted from the more noir recesses of our thought processes. They embody the violence that we inflict on one another with our thoughts, our lies, our manipulations, and the perfect memories that have since been pickled in the acerbic tension of current conditions (Read Review).

4. Sigur Rós- með suð…

Med SudIcelandic for “with a buzz in our ears we play endlessly,” með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust belies Sigur Rós’ self awareness that rejects the accumulation of star-power, instead favoring the humble roles of music makers with intimate attention to detail and an endless commitment to the art rather than constructed personae that sadly distract many once great contemporaries (Read Review).

5. Shugo Tokumaru- Exit

ExitI am quite sick of the tendency for any musician who employs a whistle in their song structure to be labeled the next “Insert Nationality” Sufjan Stevens. Shugo seems to get shellacked with this honor quite often. His instrumentality relies on a menagerie of distinct sounds that have the sole intent of forming an effervescent ambience. I don’t imagine such a project can be said to be unique to Mr. Stevens. Indeed, Shugo Tokumaru’s Exit is one of the most original records released this year, and it is certain to endear many who listen. If you get the chance to see this guy upon his North American return, be sure to catch him at an appropriate venue, so that all the glorious array of whips and bobs don’t just float away (Read Review).

6. Hypatia Lake- Angels and Demon, Space and Time

Hypatia LakeThere is the band and then there is the music. It is immediately understood when listening to Angels and Demons, Space and Time that Hypatia Lake has put together a record of enormous depth. The band itself is much less a physical entity, as it is a concept. The record is diffuse and eclectic, a psychedelic feast of beautiful noise and exquisite ambiances (Read Review).

7. Peasant- On the Ground

Peasant- On the GroundI have said previously that Damien DeRose’s voice is flawless, but his ability to bottle that beauty is remarkable. Usually such criticism is approached from the opposite angle. People rarely question what can be recorded after seeing such satisfying live performances. I have written at some length about Peasant’s talent and couldn’t be happier with this release. On the Ground offers 13 tracks without sounding repetitive or exhausting my patience and tolerance for sensitivity, which is rare these days. Peasant accomplishes this in part by keeping his songs under 3 minutes, making sure that the bitter moments do not overstay their welcome. I am happy to announce that Peasant will be re-issuing On the Ground in 2009 with the help of Team Love Records. If there is anyone out their with a modicum of taste, Peasant will make many more 2009 best release lists than he did this year (Read Review).

8. The Octopus Project- Hello, Avalanche

The Octopus ProjectFor those of you who are tired of bands that seek to reproduce the melodies of Tortoise, the sequence execution of The Album Leaf, or the gravity of Explosions in the Sky, know that Hello, Avalanche is a contribution to the modern music soundscape of unique and particular character. The Octopus Project allows the audience to dance as they marvel at a functioning collection of flesh and blood, rather simply to listen with a dissatisfied and disinterested ear. This is the balance they strike; they have a defined structure without sounding sterile or methodical. Who knew Austin…who knew (Read Review)?

9. Portishead- Third

Portishead- ThirdNo where on this record will you find the turntable scratching of Western Eyes or Only You. Clearly Portishead is not trying to recapture elements of their past. The lyrics are depressed and relaxed, sexy and sad, and in true form this relaxation is not brought on by contentment or happiness, rather it sounds opiate induced. It conjures the image of a dim room with the yellow haze of a poppy parlor (Read Review).

10. Magnetic Fields- Distortion

The Magnetic Fields- Distortion The Magnetic Fields…are extremely self-reflexively aware of Distortion’s influences and have taken steps to ensure that they do not appear to take themselves too seriously. This awareness not only saves the record from obsolescence, but it is exactly what makes it so relevant to how the music industry navigates itself forward, sometimes stopping to reflect on the nostalgic moments of its past (Read Review).

Other bands have blissfully welted the ears of the interested in 2008. Delta Spirit, released their debut, Ode to Sunshine. It was soulful and courageous. I usually prefer that bands keep their “gods” and “lords” out of my CD/MP3 player, but I’ll gladly make an exception for these impassioned song writers. Look for them on Jimmy Kimmel Live on January 16th. They split the rest of winter between Europe and North America, gracing the Bowery Ballroom stage on February 21st.

Canadian melody makers Wintersleep released Welcome to the Night Sky, an incredible record that offers exceptional lyrics and noisy pop riffs. Frederick Foxtrott reviewed their debut and recommends them with complete confidence. Welcome to the Night Sky is lyric driven record themed with violence and sickness. The guitars are distorted and heavy, accompanied by a barrage of cymbal crashes, but Wintersleep never fail to ebb back, allowing the listener to hear the calm after the storm, in addition to the silence before (Read Review).

Frederick Foxtrott thanks all of you for reading and visiting over the past year. We have expanded our readership greatly and only hope to continue in growth and reviews. We have some interesting things planned in the coming months so stay tuned. If you would like your record reviewed, give us an email and we will arrange something. We aim to keep you informed of not just what is happening in the world of independent music, but what should be happening.

Happy New Year,

Frederick Foxtrott

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Sigur Rós- með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust

July 1, 2008

Med Sud

Sigur Rós
með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust
June 24th 2008
X L

Perhaps inspired by the success of their last effort Heima / Hvarf-Heim, Sigur Rós recorded með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust with a heightened sense of pop-thought and melody. Gone seem to be the days of brooding overtures spilling over walls of thick harmonic noise. Med Sud is not offering a correction to some flawed formula; it has not shed what is superfluously unnecessary, rather it is the leg contour as seen through a summer dress happily worn after the glacier’s recession. Icelandic for “with a buzz in our ears we play endlessly,” með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust belies Sigur Rós’ self awareness that rejects the accumulation of star-power, instead favoring the humble roles of music makers with intimate attention to detail and an endless commitment to the art rather than constructed personae that sadly distract many once great contemporaries.

The spiritedly named Gobbledigook begins Med Sud with an overwhelming punch. Tribal drums drive Jónsi Birgisson‘s falsetto, while the bass’ melodic structure abandons its typical role as a rhythmic supplement, mimicking instead the vocal notes, which contrast the low register of the bass and Jónsi’s high pitch voice. Complete with hand claps and sampled sequences of spritely lalalalalala’s, Gobbledigook is an intensely elevating track. Sigur Rós chose wisely to open their much anticipated release with such a masterful conceptualization.

Med Sud descends from its initial burst with grace. The record can be largely, even if simplistically, seen to be divided into two sections. The first maintains a pulsating optimism, replete with bright tones and splendor, the second half, beginning with Festival, softens to a spectrum of pastels; still emotionally above board, yet subdued with a calm and reflective contemplation. The album approaches its end as day approaches dusk. Med Sud is a great record, brought about by Sigur Rós’ sense of beauty, their reverence of humility, and their willingness to put their art form first.

-FF

8/9

http://www.sigurros.com
http://www.myspace.com/sigurros

Other Records
Von- 1997 (2004 US)
Von Brigði- 1998
Ágætis byrjun- 1999 (2001 US)
( ) – 2002
Takk… – 2005
Hvarf-Heim- 2007

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Silje nes- Ames Room

April 10, 2008

Silje nes
Ames Room
March 11th 2008
FatCat Records

Ames Room is not a complicated record, but it contains an elemental beauty and depth that is rarely ever captured by the deliberate and dogmatic procedures that often accompany music writing and production. Silje nes has assembled a broad spectrum of sounds with the sole purpose of creating soft and tender textures that evoke an ethereal space in which all who hear can exist for the short moments that each song lasts. The songs were meant to be listened to in your living room, in the Spring with the windows wide open and the Sun illuminating every particle in the room. With Silje nes, even the dust that floats in the Spring Sun becomes hovering orbs that accentuate the sprightly, feminine music.

Though released in America on March 11th 2008, Silje recorded Ames Room between the Autumn of 2004 and the Summer of 2007. She took the time to compile songs that reflected different moments during the evolution of her music. Before 2004 she sent tracks to FatCat to demo her work. The label began to recognize the possibilities and worked with her to compile Ames Room. The record is layered with guitars, synthesizers, drum machines, as well as the rich and organic tones of the cello and drum kit. The light percussive aspect of Ames Room gives the entire record a music box quality complete with tinks, bells, clicks, and chimes.

This Norwegian voice and textural style has a pure naturalistic sound that would fit nicely into a multi-disc CD player with Múm, Sigur Rós, and The Album Leaf’s In a Safe Place. While Múm and Silje nes are both signed to FatCat, I do not think that this is because of Múm’s long coat tails, rather because FatCat, XL, and others are beginning to delineate a mode of music production that is separate from the doldrums of that vast chasm that is the “post rock” genre. It just seems to be happening in Iceland and the Nordic North. I am sure that a catchy name will soon be circulated to describe the sound’s style and emphasis on the purity and innocence that music can achieve. Silje nesAmes Room is imperfect and has much room to improve, but we can only hope that more music comes our way from this grand artist.

6/9

-FF

http://www.myspace.com/siljenes

Other Music
Yellow EP- 2008

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Rise of the Noise: a year’s end review by Frederick Foxtrott

December 31, 2007

nebraska-winter.jpg

I have recently returned from the Midwest, where I spent Christmas with my family and my wife. It was great to see old friends and how my home town has changed in the years that I have been away. My favorite bar has been by some accounts blacklisted by those who disapprove of new ownership, the intrusion of a malformed elevator shaft into the stage space, and a shift in demographics. Hip kids perceive the fraternity types to be taking over and thus have moved elsewhere. This xenophobia has been transliterated onto the music scene itself. I visited a new venue in Nebraska called Box Awesome. Immediately upon entering, I knew that this joint had collected the cool juice that had spilled over from downtown’s once great music venues. Everything from the art on the wall to the position and quality of the stage and the people circulating the room left the impression that Box Awesome was attached to a scene. It was a happening place that I could easily imagine running into on the Lower East Side or in Williamsburg.

To some the energy that is derived from such a venue is coveted. The covetous nature of what I saw that night is a microcosm of what seems to be happening in independent music. When I entered Box Awesome a band called UUVVWWZ was slated to play. I had recognized Jim, the main guitar player and writer from Mr. 1986, and was expecting a great show. As the band completed their sound check, the lead singer Teal began to hum and moan into the mic. What ensued captivated the audience and had the house moving. The music was nicely awkward with solid riffs punctuated by the jammy interplay between the bass and guitar. But I could not help but scoff at the shrieks of Teal Gardner. UUVVWWZ sounded as if Veruca Salt bitched and screamed until her father bought her a band. They incorporated some of the more vocal forward elements of Sleater Kinney and the more mundane aspects of Deer Hoof. She mostly failed to utilized her words or proffer her utterances as anything other than the whiny shenanigans of a preschooler. When Ms. Gardner sang with a more tender tone it was evident that the band had promise. Even when she screamed there was a raw vociferousness that was pleasurable. But the fact remains that most of the time, she just sounded like a girl whose shtick was to sing by singing badly. UUVVWWZ then came off as noise. This describes a major trend in independent music that has culminated in 2007.

The quest to become the oddest of the odd is not one taken by fools alone. There have been many great and glorious records to come out of such attempts. Others however fail with attention too often placed on what is possible, or what can be done, rather than any consideration of what effect or aesthetic the music might have when it is listened to. Importantly, a premium has been placed on what is disconnected. Caché is derived from the anti-structured expletives that valiantly discourage mainstream attention. The Fiery Furnaces had their try and stumble with Widow City in 2007, while Battles succeeded with Mirrored to produce interesting rhythmic weirdness. Perhaps Battles did well because of the lack of worded vocals. Either way, the critics of 2007 loved any attempt to reformulate the way we listen to music, giving praise to records that if critiqued at another time would be recognized as trite and be doomed to be forgotten. Noise can only be new a few times.

Animal Collective rose to the occasion and released a record with intense creativity when times were fertile for their brand of music. They were not lazy just because it would have been easy to crank out a crap record and still have gotten recognition because of their “pioneer” status. They took it upon themselves to step it up when more people would be looking, although Animal Collective member Panda Bear released what some have erroneously called the best record of 2007. This record was possibly the least important release of the year, but alas, he cloned The Beach Boys in a way that Band of Horses did not. Kudos for that, but I’ll probably never intentionally listen to Panda Bear’s Person Pinch again. This year has been a year in which the discombobulated has thrived and the straightforward has succumbed to the rise of distracted glitchy antitheses.

In 2007 Wilco played us simple songs uncovered and bare of what otherwise might have been expected from a band that pushes their songs to the textural limit of pop. Bright Eyes recorded Cassadaga, leaving Lincoln Nebraska’s former recording landmark Presto Studios for the wider scope of pan-America. Similarly Bright Eyes’ music ranged from intimate to epic, teeming with themes of isolation, alienation, and the large scope of the American experience. Beirut has given 2007 an expanded and improved collection of tracks that out perform much of their previous catalog, proving to us that Zach Condon will be around for a very long time.

This year has acquainted me with bands such as Pela who have written and recorded one of the most undervalued American rock albums of this decade. Other bands like The National and The Twilight Sad have altered indie rock’s accumulated stigma as poorly recorded cock rock. Groups molded into the archetypal formulas of Jet and The Strokes are getting less and less attention. On the unsigned front, Yes, I Attempt (now named Boys Dance, Girls Die) from Montréal have recorded a few tracks that should be getting noticed any time now. Once they book shows, I know it will only be a matter of time. Immovable Objects and The Depreciation Guild have put together two very beautiful and encouraging records. They are delicate, tender, and dense. I am very curious to read what other critics make of these acts as they achieve greater prominence.

This year I have sat in disbelief at critical reactions to many albums. I have a place reserved in my heart for Rilo Kiley, but another release like Under the Blacklight will most certainly jeopardize the charge of my opinion. I almost mistook Spoon’s Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga for an Oasis record…and that is a bad thing. Stars have been noted for their retro nuanced pop, but they come off sounding like pretentious hacks, who are too self infatuated that they have over looked the fact that they are perhapes the most derivitive band I have heard in a while (Sorry Amy Millan, I’ll always love you). Another much loved artist to make new songs from dated styles is Jens Lekman, who is touted as the ultra euro-romantic. While he is by no means awful, Lekman’s mannerisms never quite have the pop appeal of Belle and Sebastian or the sassy nature of Morrissey, yet he tries to fuse the two into a seamless product. When I listen to him, I am reminded of what he is not, rather than what he has to offer. I know…too bad for me.

The internet has seen a few antics this year. The identity of The Tuss has fueled more controversy with people who usually wouldn’t care. Radiohead released an amazing record and distributed it themselves via the internet for a price to be named by the buyer. They caused a false scandal when it was discovered that In Rainbows would be initially downloadable at only160kbs. Idiots finally found Radiohead’s flaw… they are money grubbing leaches… hmmm. Au Revoir Simone has risen from a relatively little known band to an internet sensation. Based on the amount of internet buzz I expect these ladies to do well in the coming year. While I did not give them the most stellar review, after listening to Under the Blacklight, I am convinced that The Bird of Music has done more musically in 2007 than Rilo Kiley ever dreamed of or cared to try. In fact Rilo Kiley loaned everything cool about themselves to the Brooklyn trio.

After much consideration I have decided to include a Frederick Foxtrott Top 10. It is flawed and conflicted but it covers a good portion of what 2007 had to offer.

Top 10 of 2007
1 Iron & Wine- The Shepherd’s Dog
2 Radiohead- In Rainbows
3 Múm- Go Go Spread the Poison Ivy
4 Pela- Anytown Graffiti
5 Bright Eyes- Cassadaga
6 The National- Boxer
7 Band of Horses- Cease to Begin
8 Wilco- Sky, Blue Sky
9 Modest Mouse- We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank
10 The Tuss- Rushup Edge

*Elliot Smith’s New Moon and Sigur Rós’s Hvarf/Heim are respectfully excluded from consideration.

I am looking forward to 2008. It will be the year that Eagle Seagull tours across the nation with their new record, finding their name on many a critic’s top 10 list. Head of Femur will take this year to watch their hard work pay off with their new release Great Plains. Born Ruffians and Stardeath and White Dwarfs will release their debut LPs to audiences eagerly awaiting full lengths. Born Ruffians will be one of the best bands to hit the shelves in 2008 and if Stardeath’s shows are any indication of their abilities in the studio then I am afraid to hear how good they’ll sound next year. As Paper Garden increases its roster of notable artists, both past and present, they continue to impress me with their sensibilities and nose for great music. Peasant will no doubt have huge success in the coming year. Thanks for reading Frederick Foxtrott and we hope to make next year’s reviews more abundant and informative. While from my perspective 2007 was not a great year for independent music, I predict that 2008 will be an exceptional year, serving to define a most crucial time for the independent industry.

Bands Mentioned
Click to access more information

Animal Collective
Au Revoir Simone
Band of Horses
Battles
Beirut
Born Ruffians
Bright Eyes
The Depreciation Guild
Eagle Seagull
Elliot Smith
The Fiery Furnaces
Head of Femur
Immovable Objects
Jens Lekman
Modest Mouse
Múm
The National
Panda Bear
Peasant
Pela
Radiohead
Rilo Kiley
Sigur Rós
Spoon
Stardeath and White Dwarfs
Stars
The Tuss
The Twilight Sad
UUVVWWZ
Wilco
Boys Dance, Girls Die (Formerly Yes, I Attempt) Read the rest of this entry ?

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Múm- Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy

December 21, 2007

Múm- Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy

Múm
Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy
September 14th 2007
FatCat Records

To make a longish story shortish, twins Kristín Anna and Gyða Valtýsdóttir formed a band with Gunnar Örn Tynes and Örvar Þóreyjarson Smárason, two musicians who are heavily involved in the Icelandic music scene. They called themselves Múm and produced experimental electronic concoctions that received the attention of indie music scenes in Britain, Continental Europe, and The United States. Attention had been paid to Iceland largely due to a surge in creative output such as independent films like Nói Albínói in 2003, the notoriety of friends Sigur Rós on the international art-media scene, and of course the long sustained reverence of Björk in the music world. Iceland had produced artistic figures that succeeded across the media spectrum.

Icelandic bands like Múm began to appear in important CD players owned by important people, much the same as Sigur Rós had in the late 90’s and early 2000’s. Gyða left in 2002 and her sister Kristín Anna followed in 2006 apparently over stylistic differences, leaving few original members. Those who remained decided to keep the moniker Múm but they recorded an album that broke away from their heavily electronic style, emphasizing a large selection of acoustic and traditional instruments fused with drum sequences and synthesized textures. The result of this decision was Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy. Whatever provoked the change in style led to a nicely contoured and improved experience of the music. Múm in all its incarnations by and large seeks to create music that is experiential. It is apparent that some in the band felt that the contrast between organic instruments and fabricated beats would give the band better control over the soundscape through which the listener would travel.

The album title and track names fit the stylistic change emphasizing the idea that Múm views Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy as a conceptually cogent work. Naturalistic elements such as brambles, frogs, berries, marmalade, rhubarb, and winter are used to construct a bucolic atmosphere and a dreamy mood. For the first time male vocals can be found on a Múm record. The beautiful instrumentation of Moon Pulls is tied to the grace and whimsy of Marmalade Fires by a masculine voice and sprightly melody. The childish nature of Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy is largely defined by its display of innocence, fantasy, excitement, and openness, rather than a childishness of conceit, immaturity, or irrelevancy.

Importantly, I should not understate the electronic presence throughout the record. It is not necessarily the lack of electronic sounds that delineates Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy from previous records, but its contrast with more traditional instruments. Dancing Behind My Eyelids is a perfect example of this juxtaposition. This track has become one of my all time favorite electronic pieces. It is a synthesized masterpiece with the brightest sequencing I have heard since Xiu Xiu’s 2006 release Air Force. It is followed by Schoolhouse Misfortune, which begins as a seaside ditty and then transforms into a flurry of melodic whistles, bells, and harp strings backed by a mechanized type-set. The record then eases into a cool and dark track called I Was Her Horse, which reminiscent of New Orleans slow jazz, perfectly fusing late night smoky horns with a dirge hollowly echoing in the streets of the French Quarter. When all is said and done, Múm has committed a feat of excellence and whoever among them had the instincts to revise their style saved the band from fading away due to redundancy; a fate they were fastly approaching.

7/9

http://mum.trinitystreetdirect1.com/mailinglist/
http://fat-cat.co.uk/fatcat/artistInfo.php?id=49
http://www.myspace.com/mumtheband

Other Music
Yesterday Was Dramatic – Today Is OK- 2000; reissued 2005
Finally We Are No One- 2002
Summer Make Good- 2004

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Sigur Rós- Hvarf-Heim

December 19, 2007

Sigur Rós- HvarfSigur Rós- Heim

Sigur Rós
Hvarf-Heim
November 5th 2007
Xl Recordings

Loosely defined as “Haven-Home” or “Disappeared Home” Hvarf-Heim accompanies the release of the Sigur Rós produced documentary Heima chronicling their spontaneous return to Iceland where they played shows at various locations both in the wilderness and in a factory long since abandoned. The duality of the title underscores two central themes throughout the film. The first is Sigur Rós’ desire to illustrate the qualities of Iceland and its people that they believe have contributed to their music. The second is the increasing presence of the mining industry in the natural and majestic Icelandic landscape, which they fear is having irrevocably adverse effects on the country’s pristine environs. Heima was an effort for Sigur Rós to explicate to their audience the role that their homeland has played in the production of their music. Iceland’s aesthetic beauty and artistic spirit are the muses from which the band has drawn its creativity. Iceland provides a sanctuary from the corporate worlds of Europe and The United States, worlds that question the humble and unimposing manner in which Sigur Rós have chosen to present themselves.

Hvarf-Heim contains both unreleased tracks as well as older songs that have been conceptualized in a manner more in tune with their present style. The rerecorded songs from Hvarf are new takes from the earliest Sigur Rós album Von, which is largely an album stranded in the ether and is seemingly unable to express intent, purpose, or meaning. The new versions restructure the songs in a way that maintains their experimental nature but allows the listener to better engage the music. As the band has progressed through the years their music has matured and found a stylistically unique voice. Hvarf represents a reflection on Sigur Rós’ past; it recognizes their growth and is an homage to their origins.

Heim on the other hand plays with tracks spanning throughout Sigur Rós’ catalogue. These songs are recorded acoustically and emphasize their organic foundation. There are few things I dislike more than bands repackaging old songs and selling them as new releases in order combat their diminished capabilities and the prospect of their obsolescence, but Hvarf-Heim is a work that successfully expands on what has already been offered, rather then simply reiterating what has already been said. Hvarf-Heim connects the listener to a band that is content in their obscurity and hermeticism; it increases the enjoyment of previous records because it contextualizes the music into a broader community. Sigur Rós are no longer experimental postrockers, they are a representation of a people and country and they replicate the spirit of that community through the depth and raw beauty of their music.

8/9

http://www.sigur-ros.co.uk/
http://www.myspace.com/sigurros

Other Music
Von- 1997
Von Brigði- 1998
Ágætis Byrjun- 1999
Rímur EP- 2001
( )- 2002
Ba Ba Ti Ki Di Do EP- 2004
Takk…- 2005

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