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enlarge | Artist: Sigur Ros Label: XL Recordings Category: Music
List Price: $11.98 Buy New: $7.45 You Save: $4.53 (38%)
New (51) Used (12) from $4.10
Rating: 64 reviews Sales Rank: 395
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 40364 UPC: 634904036423 EAN: 0634904036423 ASIN: B001ACY8D2
Release Date: June 24, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Love It! September 19, 2008 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
Well, you either love these guys or you don't.
I happen to love them, and I'm all over myself with this CD.
No, this isn't "Taak" or "()", but there's much to love and fall in love with this one.
Just listen to it, and enjoy!
Their most accessible yet!!! September 9, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
With their fifth album, Icelandic quartet Sigur Ros may have earned the dubious honour of "most un-pronouncable title" or "worst album cover" ever, but it's also their most accessible album, a strong contender for "best album of the year" honours.
If you've never listened to them, it is difficult to describe their sound. Their lead singer sings in an ethereal falsetto, usually in their made up language Hopelandic, against a dreamy melodic folk/quasi-symphonic backdrop.
Opening cut "Gobbledigook" is a clap filled Folky affair. "Vi spilum endalaust" took me by surprise, an upbeat Pop song that one could easily imagine on a Coldplay album.
Spare and cathedral sounding is "Festival" which builds to a towering climax. "Su i eyrum" is a delicate piano ballad with tumbling sounding percussion building in as the song progresses. "Ara batur" is an angelic sounding spare ballad one could imagine on some soundtrack to some epic. It features the 20 member London Oratory Boys Choir and the 67 piece London Sinfonietta.
"Illgresi" is a lovely acoustic ballad, and the absolutely stunning "Fljotavik" is a piano ballad that finds lead singer Jonsi Birgisson's falsetto soaring vocally to Heaven.
The brief "Straumnes" is an ominous sounding instrumental, and closing is "All alright", their first foray lyrically in the English language. A tender lullaby-like piano ballad with Birgisson singing in a frail lower register in the first half. He might as well be singing in their signature Hopelandic from his warbling. Still, a stirring and beautiful song. So many adjectives could be used to describe this album; ethereal, melodic, magical, hypnotic, hymnal, and they would still not be enough to describe the beauty of this stunning album.
More Joyous, Great Music from Sigur Ros September 8, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
One of my favorite albums of all time is Sigur Ros' Agaetis Byrjun, so naturally I pick up their other albums as they come out. Takk was good as was ( ) but I'm really enjoying this new 5th album which according to the Sigur Ros website translates as "with a buzz in our ears we play endlessly." The first song, "Gobbledigook" is quickly becoming another favorite, bouncing from one speaker to another. The second song, "Inni mer syngur vitlajsingur" is an awesome anthem, but the title which in English translates as "Within me a lunatic sings" just makes me laugh. The song fills me with joy too. "Festival" starts out slowly, but then powers into another classic Sigur Ros song. "Godan daginn" is sweet and soft, almost like a lullaby and I hope no one ever watches me listen to "Vid spilum endalaust" because I'm just bouncing around in my chair. lol It's a true pop song. Their music isn't like any other bands I know of. The clear, high vocals by Jonsi Birgisson are sung in either Icelandic or "Hopelandic", a made up language that he uses to first fill in songs without lyrics. For the first time, one song on the album is sung in English. The album is fun and cheerful and full of life. I have to admit, I was first taken aback by the naked bottoms on the album cover, as well as on the video of Gobbledigook with everyone running through the countryside naked. It's not sexy, it's just sans clothing. :) Listening to Sigur Ros taught me to listen to music differently. I don't know the lyrics and can't begin to know what some of the songs mean, (witness my totally favorite song Flugufrelsarinn which I just found out is sort of about saving a fly in a river!) but I love the beautiful sound of Jonsi's voice and the gorgeous and overlayed background instruments, the uncommon use of playing an electric guitar with a cello bow, the symphony and boys choir in the background of "Ara Batur". It's a lovely album and I can't recommend their music highly enough.
Sigur Ros - Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust September 5, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust (2008, XL) Sigur Ros's fifth studio album. ****
As any fan of Sigur Ros knows, they're fantastically strange. And anyone who does not like them would say the same, only changing that they're too strange, and that they're being different for the sake of being different. It's easy enough to say that the lyrical approach is pretentious; Sigur Ros sing in a Norwegian jibberish, encouraging their fans to make up their own words. No album better expresses their artsy tactfulness (or lack thereof, as some may say) than 2002's ( ), which had no titles, no lyrics, no acknowledgements, no nothing. The cover simply had the parenthesis and the band's name, and beyond that it was a mystery.
Now Sigur Ros have taken a new direction, and even the most devoted fan would have to say it is fairly different from anything they've done before. The opener, "Gobbledigook," is probably the most upbeat song the band has ever performed, and the whole album feels this way. While with Takk... and ( ) Sigur Ros explored the depths of moodiness, subtlety, and spaciness, Med Sud I Eyrum takes a turn for the spiritual, presenting itself in different fashions. The genres range from folk-stomp to church hymn to tribal beats, but no where does the album not feel as if it was made in the spirit of hope and the unknown. Sure, we've no idea what they might be saying (as the lyrics are again in a foreign mix of nonsense), but Sigur Ros have successfully demonstrated that they are only about music, and that their voices are merely tools for creating beautiful sounds and that the words are unimportant. Without saying anything, they have communicated a message purely through music, and that is a feat in and of itself. (Godan Daginn, Festival, Med Sud I Eyrum)
Ice-tastic! September 4, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is my first try with a foreign language CD. Sigur Ros is a great band from Iceland and their beautiful melodies are wonderful to listen to. I know that American music is popular all over the world, now I know what it feels like to get into the sound of a band, even if you do not understand the language they are singing in. It is very different, a very interesting sound.
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