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Sigur Rós - Hvarf/Heim (CD)

Hvarf/Heim
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Album Details: Hvarf/Heim

Release Date:11/06/2007
Label:Emi Europe Generic
UPC:5099950256624

Other Available Formats: Hvarf/Heim

Pro Reviews: Hvarf/Heim

  • All Music Guide

    After floating in the same cirrus clouds for a decade, it would seem that the time has come for a change. Not to say that the lulling orchestral swells or Jon Birgisson's schoolboy falsetto have lost any of their magic over time; it's just that after releasing 40some similarsounding songs with undecipherable lyrics, it becomes increasingly difficult to differentiate one from the next. However, Hvarf/Heim isn't the album to mark a musical departure for Sigur Rs. The bandmembers show no real sign of abandoning their style, so it seems understandable that they would want to show fans another side of themselves. Disc one, Hvarf, is a fivetrack collection of rarities from their vaults. The handful of tracks doesn't quite make for a fulfilling fulllength, but with two of the songs almost hitting the tenminute mark, the disc's entirety feels much longer than a mere EP. Consistently sprawling and lunar, the songs would feel right at home on Takk... or ( ). The standout track, "Hljmalind," is... one of the more concise and traditional songs crafted over their journey, with the traditional instrumentation of reversed chimes and bowed guitar delays sawing textures into the fabric of the song, just before giving way to a powerful rock chorus from the mouth of a gently meowing alien. The traditional slow build is ignored for dynamics, and an unusually tangible hook hits like an oldfashioned punch to the face. The second disc, Heim, is comprised of six acoustically performed versions of favorites from their back catalog. The most surprising aspect of these songs is that they don't sound remarkably different from the originals. Even without an electric guitar droning, the songs don't sound sparse or minimal in the least, due to an additional string quartet, Amiina, filling in the gaps to create a lush soundscape. The reworkings are subtle, but the versions of "Samskeyti" and "Starálfur" remain beautiful and are slightly warmer and even more fragile than the originals. Completists will find this doubledisc supplement of material appealing, and fans will probably enjoy it too, but the true excitement revolving around this promises to be in the accompanying release of the =Heima DVD, a documentary with gorgeous cinematography that follows Sigur Rós' 2006 tour of their homeland and features music from these discs, which is perfectly fitting for a slowmotion shot of an iceberg melting in a spring sunrise. - Jason Lymangrover, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Sigur Rós

Named in part after a sister of one of the bandmembers, Reykjavik, Iceland's Sigur Rós ("Victory Rose") was formed by guitarist and vocalist Jon Thor Birgisson, bassist Georg Holm, and drummer Agust. Formed while each of the members were teenagers in early 1994, the trio's first recorded song earned them a deal with Iceland's Bad Taste label. Their sprawling debut LP, ... Read more