SOUNDTRACK: SIGUR RÓS-“Svefn-g-englar” (1999).
This was the first I heard of Sigur Rós. I suspect my friend Lar told me about them and I was just blown away by the first track on this single–a 9 minute swelling, string-filled, otherworldly enterprise.
The first song on the single is “Svefn-g-englar.” It opens with overlaying chords and the beat is kept by an echoing keyboard note. It’s very spacey and mellow. And the vocals are unlike anything i had heard before–not just falsetto, but practically alien falsetto. There are noisy guitars but they work into the background washes of sound and don’t really register as guitars exactly. Gorgeous soaring vocals on the chorus, which I’ve always heard as “its you” but is apparently “tjú.” It’s otherworldly and beautiful Then at 6:30 the drums kick in and the song gets grounded, taking on more gravitas as the chords grow louder. This lasts for one minute as the song then slows itself back into its original style.
The second track is “Viðrar vel til loftárása.” It has a louder bass and great chords. This slow airy song is grounded by the acoustic piano–a very pretty melody with the strings behind it. Jonsi’s vocal line is beautiful but mixed very low as if he is so far away. The song ends with a great string section until the abrupt end. It clocks in at 10 minutes.
Two live songs “Nýja lagið” and “Syndir Guðs” (live at the Icelandic Opera House, June 12, 1999) show that the band can work this magic live. The guitar is more intense bring a bit more drama to the sound. But Jonsi’s voice is still amazing in the live setting. The first one is funny because you don’t really realize it’s live until the end when people start clapping. And at 9 minutes it’s an amazing listen. When it goes into a minor chord at around 5 minutes, it’s really something.
The final song “Syndir Guðs” comes from their debut album Von. It is only 5 minutes, but it’s really quite good here. It’s nice to see them translate their style to this older song. The song is quite a short one for this EP, which totals nearly 35 minutes. This is a great EP for fans of the band. Hearing those live recordings is totally worth it.
[READ: December 2, 2013] “Daniel Boone, By Himself”
I don’t know a lot about Daniel Boone, truth be told. So this story may be very accurate or maybe it’s based-on-actual-research about Boone’s possible mental state at the time of his death. Or maybe he just made it all up. Whatever the case, I did not enjoy it.
From the beginning, in which we learn the proper way to scalp someone, to the death of Boone’s son, the story was explicitly violent. And while I’m no shrinking violet when it comes to violence, there just wasn’t much more to it. I’m sure that Boone’s life was nonstop violence, and that this story is not inaccurate in that way (I don’t even know if he had a son).
And perhaps it was that nonstop violence that prevented me from learning much about him in the first place.
The end of the story’s look into Boone’s frame of mind is interesting, but again, a life filled with violence just isn’t all that compelling to me. And while, yes, this story seems like a decent look into a man’s last days, I just didn’t care enough to give it my full attention.
I was pleased by the brevity of the story, however.
For ease of searching I include: Sigur Ros.

[…] so hard to tell. It morphs into “Svefn-g-englar” which is just stunning (and reviewed a few days ago). ”Starálfur” opens with a beautiful string section over some washes of […]