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Thread started 08/29/04 12:00pm

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Bjork Grabs the World by the Throat (Cool NYT article)

From the New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/20...39a238afe4

I pasted the article here in case you don't have a perscription. mr.green


Bjork Grabs the World by the Throat
By JON PARELES

Never underestimate the inspired perversity of artists. Consider a central paradox of 21st-century pop: at a time when musicians can instantly summon an infinitude of sounds, easily tune them into any melodic contour and digitally layer as many tracks as they want, austerity rules instead.

Maybe it's a premonition of making do with less in some coming era of scarcity; maybe it's an instinctive withdrawal, or a vacation, from too much information. But from Top 10 hits built on little more than a buzz, a thump and a hook, to the arty recesses of the most minimal techno, musicians have been vying to strip music down beyond the skeletal. What once were considered basics can now sound lush as producers become reducers, trading sounds for spaces. They know that nothing is final, because if necessary, a remix can fill in the blanks.

Bjork, whose seventh album, "Medulla" (Elektra), will be released this week, has made a career of subtraction. She recorded boisterous rock with the Icelandic new wave band the Sugarcubes, started a solo career with eccentric dance-floor hits and then followed through with a series of albums that have been unpredictably sumptuous or sparse. As early as her 1993 album "Debut" (Elektra), Bjork was poking holes in her music, and since then those holes have been widening into chasms. With "Medulla," she pushes to a new extreme: most of the music is made with voices alone. While the album might seem to be a conceptual stunt, it finds gorgeous and startling new ways to extend Bjork's longtime mission: merging the earthy and the ethereal.

Those aren't her only dualities. Bjork presents herself as child and woman, naïf and sophisticate, lone individual and elemental force. As on earlier albums, she encompasses multitudes; her persona can be as large as a planet or a galaxy. "Oceania," a song she wrote for the opening ceremony of the Olympics, imagines the perspective of the sea: "You show me continents — I see islands." And in "Desired Constellation," she imagines herself throwing stars like dice "repeatedly until the desired constellation appears."

Bjork's voice sounds perpetually guileless, an illusion that is helped along by her accented English. It allows her to get away with ideas that might seem absurdly pretentious coming from anyone more overbearing. She can be breathy and girlish, clear and sultry as she seizes a phrase, then almost shattering as her voice crests with a rasp. Her singing sounds impulsive and immediate, yet her voice is deployed as carefully as her backup, which deliberately juxtaposes more polarities: simple and elaborate, organic and synthetic, whimsical and profound.

On her solo albums, Bjork has frequently abandoned a straightforward beat, replacing it with sustained harmonies or electronic stutters and flickers (though thumping remixes have kept her songs in clubs). She has sung with string quartet, sitar, big band, shimmering keyboards or rough, blotchy distortion. Bjork and her producers often build a track from just two disparate elements that are somehow bridged by her voice, a method that comes across not as idle eclecticism but as improbable alchemy. Her previous album, "Vespertine" (Elektra) in 2001, cocooned her voice amid quiet, staticky electronics in some songs, full orchestra in others.

"Medulla" (Latin for marrow) finds nearly all of its contrasts in the spectrum of vocal sounds: percussive, sustained, crystalline, raw. It's not obsessively purist; Bjork does allow herself an occasional synthesizer line or piano chord, and often the voices are sampled and programmed like dance tracks. "Medulla" sidesteps rock's longstanding a cappella style, doo-wop, to reach a sonic realm only Bjork would concoct. She's gone globe-hopping to find very particular extensions of herself.

When there's a beat, it comes from a human beatbox (or one whose sounds have been rearranged by programmers). Classical choirs provide airborne harmonies that suggest composers like Penderecki or Arvo Pärt. Meanwhile, Bjork and guests like Mike Patton (from Faith No More), Robert Wyatt (the British art-rock songwriter) and Tanya Tagaq (an Inuit throat-singer) add mews, moans, counterpoint and guttural grunts.

The album includes vocal fantasias that lean toward chamber music, with many Bjorks looped and echoing, alongside songs that are obviously but distantly connected to hip-hop. There are also glimpses of Bulgarian women's choirs, the hooting polyphony of central African pgymies and the primal vocalisms of Meredith Monk. Throughout the album, the music is transparent, with each component distinctly audible, even when Bjork's melody is strung between a dissonant choir and a growled beat.

Bjork, who has lately been living in New York City, has said that "Medulla" is in part her response to the events of Sept. 11, an attempt to reach back to something shared by humanity before civilizations and cultures clashed: the directness of the human voice. The album brings her as close as she has ever come to political statements. In "Mouths Cradle," Bjork concludes, "I need a shelter to build an altar away from Osamas and Bushes," and she fronts a choir in a somber Icelandic song called "Vokuro," which means "Vigil."

There's also a hint of political consciousness in "Submarine," which features the reedy voice of Robert Wyatt multiplied into a moody chorus to share lines like "Shake us out of the heavy deep sleep, do it now." But most of the songs on "Medulla" look inward and find benevolence. Bjork celebrates the workings of anatomy in "Triumph of a Heart" — which, true to the idea of a heartbeat, is the album's closest thing to a dance track, even if its hooks come from a "human trombone," the singer Gregory Purnhagen. She bids a kindly farewell to a lover (with lyrics from E.E. Cummings) in "Sonnets/Unrealities XI," and counsels generosity in "Pleasure Is All Mine," which insists, "when in doubt, give." Only in "Where Is the Line" does Bjork display some irritation: "I'm elastic for you, but enough is enough."

Listeners will have to be flexible themselves to accept "Medulla." It leaves gaping holes where bass lines are expected; it has dissonant clusters of voices instead of a band. It's music for a very private space, not a public arena. Yet along with its more abstract pieces, "Medulla" has half a dozen songs with verse-and-chorus pop forms: songs that Bjork chose to orchestrate for castles in the air rather than more utilitarian locales like clubs or radio formats. Songs like "Where Is the Line" and "Who Is It" are wide open with complex superstructures, catchy but ghostly, and they probably haven't seen their final incarnation. Their spaces are not just a matter of serene artistic restraint. They are also invitations, offering both places where listeners can take refuge and openings for musical transformation that could carry the songs from Bjork's inner landscape to less subtle, more communal spheres, like dance floors. Complete in themselves, they also await their remixes.
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