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Icelandic singer and songwriter Björk has recorded more than two hundred songs for ten studio albums, two soundtrack albums, a compilation album, six remix albums and three collaboration albums. She is the sole writer and producer of most of the songs included in her albums. She also sometimes plays instruments during her recording sessions.
It should only contain pages that are Björk songs or lists of Björk songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories).
The Rock Song Index: The 7500 Most Important Songs of the Rock and Roll Era: 1944-2000 [28] 2005 * Pitchfork: Top 200 Tracks of the 1990s [citation needed] 2010 201 Spin: The 100 Best Alternative Rock Songs of 1994 [citation needed] 2014 69 WOXY.com: Modern Rock 500 Songs of All Time [citation needed] 1989–2009 510 Slant Magazine
"All My Life" by K-Ci & JoJo (1997) "Close to me you're like my father, Close to me you're like my sister, Close to me you're like my brother" Well, OK—that seems weird, but I'm still down with it.
Björk started her career after a recording of her rendition of Tina Charles' 1976 song "I Love to Love" became popular on Icelandic radio. Her first eponymous solo release, considered juvenilia, [b] was released under Fálkinn label in 1977.
[16] Diffuser.fm described the song as "lush, sweeping cinematic synth-pop." [17] "Hyperballad" received the most votes from Björk fans in the survey for her Greatest Hits album's tracklist. In September 2022, Pitchfork named the second-best track of the decade on their "Top 200 Tracks of the 90s" list, behind Mariah Carey's "Fantasy (Bad Boy ...
Björk Guðmundsdóttir was born on 21 November 1965 in Reykjavík. [12] She was raised by her mother, Hildur Rúna Hauksdóttir (7 October 1946 – 25 October 2018 [13]), an activist who protested against the development of Iceland's Kárahnjúkar Hydropower Plant, [14] having divorced from Björk's father, Guðmundur Gunnarsson, an electrician and union leader, after Björk was born.
"Hunter" is a song recorded by Icelandic singer Björk for her third studio album Homogenic (1997). The lyrics explore the pressure Björk felt to write music after realising the workforce that depended on her, following the success she found as a solo artist with her previous studio albums.