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Sigur
Ros
Agaetis Byrjun
label: fatcat / mca
released: 05.22.01
our score: 4.5 out of 5.0
buy it: here
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The first
few chapters in the story of electronica's entrance in to mainstream
music bears a strikingly similar resemblance to that of the rise
and fall of the Internet's explosion and subsequent implosion:
Media outlets overly anxious to cling to the proverbial "next
big thing" wallpaper the country with magazines, newspapers,
newsletters and any other wood pulp product with proclamations
and prognostications of the coming revolution. ("Behold,
a dead horse!") And when the electronic Age of Enlightenment
failed to muster more than the power of a cap-gun, those articles
and predictions weren't worth any more than the toilet paper that
nervous-bowled record execs and online CEOs were wiping their
asses with.
Now that the
1s and 0s have settled in this nuclear winter of the dot-com age
(below the bottom line, in most cases), it's easier to distinguish
the good from the bad. Slipping in fashionably late for the party,
Sigur Rós have shown up just in time to offer a soundtrack
for electronica's funeral procession. It's almost as if they waited
around just long enough to glean the few bytes of information
on how to make good e-music from the countless synthesizer troupes
that just couldn't quite get it right.
But all of
this might suggest that Ágætis byrjun, the
group's sophomore effort, is an amalgam of bleeps and bass lines,
the staples of any standard electronica collection, which it isn't.
Well, not exactly. Originally released in 1999 in the quartet's
homeland of Iceland, Ágætis (which, fittingly
translates roughly to "Good Start") is a dreamy, ambient
journey into art-rock territory that Radiohead has only recently
made palatable with the back-to-back releases of Kid A
and Amnesiac. While the watery near-bliss of those albums
hinted at inspired new avenues in sonic landscapes, though, Sigur
Rós dive headfirst into oceans of mind-expanding beauty.
When the guitars-in-space reverb of "Svefn-g-englar"
let loose and singer Georg Holm's falsetto rises, the music literally
lifts up out of itself in an exultant rush. Prepare
to
evacuate
soul.
What made
pure electronica so difficult to swallow was its sterile, hospital-corners
emptiness, so the irony that it took a group of musicians from
the Icelandic tundra to inject warmth into the genre is exceptionally
beautiful. The multi-tasking Reyjavikians throw an electric blanket
on the corpse of electronica to create their other-worldly sound,
effectively reviving it with string arrangements, guitars, piano,
organs, a horn section and, in one case, a harmonica. But just
as easily as they stir the pot with their eclectic blend of musicianship,
Sigur Rós can strip it all away to Holm's lilting cries
and guitar feedback before ultimately bringing the noise with
the sonic pastiche of "Hjartó hamast (bamm bamm bamm)."
The layering is as deep as the Atlantic, but as light and airy
as the mist that collects in its bays.
The fact that
the band is adept at employing such a vast range of instruments
makes it difficult to categorize Ágætis as e-music,
but it's clearly the next step in the evolutionary rise of a musical
form that may not establish itself in the mainstream of Top 40
radio but that certainly proves creativity still exists in the
post-rock world. How unfair that Radiohead will forever be credited
with "daring" to plum such interesting territory. Whether
they receive the success or recognition for such inventiveness
(which they won't, by the way), Sigur Rós can sleep easy
knowing no one has yet to approach the beauty with which they've
transformed electronica.

If you
liked Agaetis Byrjun...
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| Tracklist:
1.
Intro
2. Svefn g englar
3. Staralfur
4. Flugufrelsarinn
5. Ny batteri
6. Hjartad hamast
7. Vidrar vel til loftarasa
8. Olsen olsen
9. Agaetis byrjun
10. Avalon
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