Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The video helped Björk to be known in North America where it received heavy rotation on MTV channels, with many noting that the video was more known in the country than the song: "Few people know how the melody for "Big Time Sensuality" starts, but anyone who watched MTV in the early '90s could cheerfully belt out the single measure when she ...
Name of song, performing artists, featured roles, originating albums, and year released. Song Artist(s) Role(s) Album Year Ref(s). "Sigur" Bergþóra Árnadóttir: Background vocals; Shaker; Bergmál: 1982 [208] "Við" "Þau Gengu Tvö" Johann Sebastian Bach's Matthäus-Passion: Pólýfónkórinn, Hamrahlíðarkórinn, Kór Öldutúnsskóla og ...
February 4, 2023 Máni I – Snjótungl/Storm Moon Smekkleysa record store Reykjavík, Iceland [207] May 6, 2023 Smekkleysa Flower Moon [208] June 3, 2023 Hvalir Kvalir – Strawberry Moon [209] June 7, 2023 [p] Fan exclusive and intimate DJ experience Höfuðstöðin [210] [211] June 11, 2023 [p] June 13, 2023 [p] July 8, 2023 Mánakvöld ...
An expanded Edition was released in 2023 as part of Record Store Day. [77] Country Creatures (with Fever Ray and The Knife) Type: EP; Release date: 1 November 2019; Formats: 12" vinyl; It features Fever Ray's remix of "Features Creatures", The Knife's remix of "Features Creatures" and Björk's remix of Fever Ray's song "This Country Makes It ...
The EP, totaling 41 minutes and 41 seconds in length, consists of six remixes of four different tracks from Björk's 1993 album Debut.The collection begins with the English electronic group Underworld's remix of "Human Behaviour", where, according to AllMusic's Neg Raggett, the swing "stutter" of the original recording's percussion is replaced by "crisp disco" beats and high tempo funk loops.
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.
Bjork Slams Spotify and Streaming as ‘Probably the Worst Thing That Has Happened to Musicians’
[1] "Hyperballad" was lauded by music critics, who considered it the best song of Björk's career at the time. It entered the charts in Finland, Australia, United States, Sweden and the United Kingdom (where it was the last of three top ten hits from Post, after "Army of Me" and "It's Oh So Quiet"). The music video features a digitised Björk ...