Sigur Rós
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Sigur Rós is an Icelandic post-rock band with melodic, classical and minimalist elements. The name is Icelandic for "victory rose" and is pronounced "see oor roce", or Template:IPA in the International Phonetic Alphabet, although a more popular (and incorrect) variation in the English-speaking world is 'sigger ross' or 'sigger roy-ss'. The band is known for their ethereal sound and lead singer Jónsi's near flawless falsetto. Some of the bands contemporaries include Múm and Amiina; both of which hail from the same creative and vibrant Icelandic Post-rock music scene.
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History
Jón Þór (Jónsi) Birgisson, Georg Hólm and Ágúst Ævar Gunnarsson formed the group in Reykjavík in August 1994. Their name is taken from Jónsi's younger sister Sigurrós, who was born the same day. They soon won a record deal with a local record label, Bad Taste. In 1997, they released Von (Hope) and in 1998 a remix collection named Von brigði. The name is Icelandic wordplay: Vonbrigði means "disappointment", but Von brigði means "hope alteration". (In English, the album is sometimes known by the alternative name "Recycle Bin".)
International acclaim came with 1999's Ágætis Byrjun ("An alright start") for which the band were joined by Kjartan Sveinsson. The album's reputation slowly spread by word of mouth over the next two years. Soon many critics worldwide hailed it as one of the best albums of its time and the band was playing with Radiohead and other big names. Three songs, Ágætis Byrjun's title track, its first single "Svefn-g-englar", and a live take of the then-unreleased "Njósnavélin" (to become "Untitled #4") appeared in the Cameron Crowe film Vanilla Sky.
After the release of Ágætis Byrjun, the band became perhaps most well known for Birgisson's signature style of playing guitar with the bow from a cello, accentuated with reverb, creating a sweeping, fluid sound that is unique for an electric guitar.
Drummer Ágúst left the band after the recording of Ágætis Byrjun and was replaced by Orri Páll Dýrason. In 2002, their highly anticipated follow-up album ( ) was released. Upon release all tracks on the album were untitled, though the band later published song names on their website. All lyrics are sung entirely in "Hopelandic", a constructed language created by Jón Þór Birgisson which resembles the sound of the Icelandic language. It has also been said that the listener is supposed to interpret their own meanings of the lyrics which can then be written in the blank pages in the album booklet.
In October of 2003, Sigur Rós joined Radiohead in composing music for Merce Cunningham's dance piece Split Sides; Sigur Rós' three tracks were named Ba Ba Ti Ki Di Do and released in March of 2004. The band's 1997 debut album Von also finally found a U.S. and U.K. release in October of 2004. Their latest album, Takk... (Thanks...), falls between the styles of their first two albums, and was released on September 13, 2005, with a legal download of their first single, Glósóli, made available on August 15. For North American fans, Sæglópur was made available for download on August 16. Hoppípolla, the second official single from Takk..., was released on November 28 alongside a new studio remake of Hafssól, a song which was previously released on the band's 1997 debut, Von. Hoppípolla was used in the trailers for the BBC's natural life programme Planet Earth in 2006, and following this, demand for the single grew. It was made more widely available by EMI in consequence.
An extended Sæglópur EP has been pushed back from its original release date, May 8. This is likely due to Hoppípolla's sudden demand. The EP will likely see release some time this summer. Sigur Rós have recorded four songs to appear on the EP (Sæglópur, Refur, Ófriður, and Kafari).
The band has also scripted a video to Sæglópur, which they will direct themselves.
Sigur Rós has sold over 2 million albums worldwide.
Sigur Rós is currently on a major world tour with stops in throughout Europe, United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Japan.
Band members
- Jón Þór "Jónsi" Birgisson - Vocals, Guitar
- Georg "Goggi" Hólm - bass guitar
- Kjartan "Kjarri" Sveinsson - keyboard Piano, Organs, Guitar, Flute, Tin whistle, Oboe, Banjo (1999-present)
- Orri Páll Dýrason - drums (1999-present)
Former members
- Ágúst Ævar Gunnarsson - drums (1994-1999).
Discography
Albums
- Von (Hope) (1997)
- Von brigði (Hope alteration) (1998)
- Ágætis byrjun (An All Right Start) (1999) Voted best Icelandic album of the 20th century
- ( ) (2002) #51 US, two Grammy nominations, one for Best Alternative Music Album, the other for Best Recording Package
- Takk... (Thanks... or Thank you...) (2005) #16 UK, #27 US, #1 Iceland, #5 Portugal (Gold Album) #18 AUS
Singles and EPs
- Svefn-g-englar (1999)
- Ný batterí (2000)
- Hjartað hamast (2000)
- Viðrar vel til loftárasa (2000)
- Olsen olsen (2000)
- Starálfur (2000)
- Flugufrelsarinn (2000)
- Steindór Andersen / Rímur EP (2001)
- Untitled #1 (A.K.A. Vaka) (2003)
- Untitled #8 (A.K.A. Popplagið) (2003)
- Ba Ba Ti Ki Di Do (2004)
- Glósóli (2005) (Europe only)
- Sæglópur (2005) (US only)
- Hoppípolla (2005) #35 UK
- Gong (2005)
Other works
- Smekkleysa í hálfa öld (1994)
- Popp í Reykjavík (album) (1998)
- Popp í Reykjavík (film) (1998)
- Englar alheimsins (album) (2000)
- Englar alheimsins (film) (2002)
- Hlemmur Soundtrack (2002)
- Hrafnagaldur Óðins (2002)
External links
- Eighteen Seconds Before Sunrise - Official site, including many music and video resources.
- Sigur Rós popplagid.com Sigur Rós collectors site, including complete discography, live DVD, mp3,photo, postcards
- Sigur Rós Torrents Bit torrent site of Sigur Rós and Amiina concerts, videos and other downloadables
- Everythingrock: Sigur Rós
- Free Sigur Rós Downloads - Courtesy of Amazon.com
- sigur-ros.is - Mini-site dedicated to their new release, Takk...
- Guardian interview (26/08/05)
- Pitchfork interview (26/09/05)
- Sigur Rós pages at musicOMH.com
- SigurRós.de - German-language homepage including many collector items and an extensive discography.
- Sigur Rós Polish website
- Sigur Rós Czech werbsite
- Lyrics - lyrics for many of their songs, in their unaltered, Icelandic (or sometimes "hopelandic", see above) form. More details about the language used are in this official FAQ.
- French Message Board
- Sigur Rós on MySpaceda:Sigur Rós
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