Both the title and the sleeve art for Björk’s second post-Sugarcubes album, released in 1995 on One Little Indian, are a love letter to the singer’s homeland. While Debut was written in Iceland, Po…
Welcome to planet Björk. Exhibit SPOILERS, obvi.
Björk en VR pour la vidéo de Notget réalisée par Warren du Preez et Nick Thornton-Jones
AAC-M4A download link: - https://www.mediafire.com/file/n402w9m5whkv464/ - Björk: Homogenic: Live @ The London Palladium, England, UK, (29-11-1998) [FULL] Source: [Audience Recording] Setlist: 01. Hunter 02. Come To Me 03. Venus As A Boy 04. All Neon Like 05. You've Been Flirting Again 06. Isobel 07. Possibly Maybe 08. Immature 09. I Go Humble 10. Five Years 11. Human Behaviour 12. Bachelorette 13. Hyperballad 14. Violently Happy 15. Pluto 16. The Anchor Song 17. Alarm Call 18. Jóga 19. Play Dead show info: That’s no way to treat a diva To the left, the six women and two men of the Icelandic String Octet sat down in front of music stands on a raised, L-shaped dais before a ragged backcloth. To the right stooped the solitary Mark Bell, ready to operate pre-programmed backing tracks from a neat flight-cased rack of matt black electronic modules. Then came Björk, dark-haired and in an expensive white party dress whose sleeves made Christmas snowangel shapes as she raised her arms. Björk is one of those artists who can do no wrong, invariably drawing anything from approving nods to wild adulation. She’s a dance act ; an indie trooper ; an avant-garde Shirley Bassey ; a fashion icon ; a pop idol ; and the quintessential video star for the Nineties. Whether she is swooning in expensive special effects, or flattened in unflattering monochrome, her girning features and jerky movements—at whatever point you press the play button—are screaming : “watch me, me, me !” But where many ideogenic frontpersons fail on stage, Björk has the trump card : she is a genuine, creative musician. And without any sense of compromise, she appears to view live performance both as an adventure and a chance to satisfy the fans with the familiar hits. On stage, the wonderful wayward instrument of her voice becomes more like a story-telling improvisation that can meld the histrionics of “Isobel” and the commentary of “Human Behaviour” into a bigger totality. She pointed out (in an interview with Louise Gray in The Wire) that only now—after three solo albums—does she have a sufficient quantity of “good enough” songs to draw from for a major live gig. The latest version of the Björk roadshow relies entirely on the singer’s performance skills to communicate. The lack of musical interplay between the twin “playback” poles of strings and machines meant that endings were often unsatisfactory, for example, but there were plenty of impressive moments : the skeletal drum pattern for “Possibly Maybe”, skipping go-go-ish beats and clever digital distortion woven into the overall collage of Björk’s set. The string arrangements provided musical drama and some surprising reinterpretations of the older hits—when you could hear them. You would think the Palladium’s scale and kitschy charm ideal for the intimate electro-chamber pop that is Björk’s forte. Unfortunately, the audience was punished by a cloth-eared sound mix better suited to a stadium rock gig or hangar-sized club, with low- end frequencies that would have been better spent demolishing chimneys. As well as losing arrangement details and string timbres, the live sound managed to obscure too much of the main attraction—Björk herself. We heard the full range of hits, from “Hunter” to “Violently Happy”, and we thrilled to the light show, but we didn’t really get to hear enough of the music which that unique voice possesses. John L Waters - The Independent A production of the Bjork hub: bjorkhub.no-ip.info http://bjorklossless.goudwater.nl photos @ https://www.bjork.com/ + https://www.bjork.fr/ + http://gudmundsdottirbjork.blogspot.com/ please buy her albums + support this superb and unique icelandic/nordic artist @ http://www.bjork.com/ https://www.facebook.com/bjork https://www.youtube.com/user/bjorkdotcom https://twitter.com/bjork https://soundcloud.com/bjork https://plus.google.com/+bjork http://www.indian.co.uk/ compiled together & re-encoded to AAC-M4A [superiour björklossless sound] by http://gudmundsdottirbjork.blogspot.com/
A history of Bjork’s untamed style in honor of next month’s exhibition at MoMA.