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Vespertine |  | Artist: Bjork Label: One Little Indian Category: Music
List Price: £9.99 Buy New: £6.47 as of 25/11/2009 22:32 GMT details You Save: £3.52 (35%)
New (12) Used (8) from £3.14
Seller: all your music Rating: 35 reviews Sales Rank: 6051
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 501695804602 EAN: 0501695804602 ASIN: B00005NSXL
Release Date: August 27, 2001 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Hidden Place | | • | Cocoon | | • | It's Not Up To You | | • | Undo | | • | Pagan Poetry | | • | Frosti | | • | Aurora | | • | An Echo A Stain | | • | Sun In My Mouth | | • | Heirloom | | • | Harm Of Will | | • | Unison |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Björk originally intended to call IVespertine/I IDomestika/I. The title would have been entirely appropriate (as, indeed, is Vespertine, meaning "pertaining to the evening"). Ever since 1993's vital, effusive IDebut/I, Björk's music has been increasingly intimate, gently private and concerned with seclusion. It's typical then that IVespertine/I's first single was called "Hidden Place". The studious solitude is rewarding, though. IVespertine/I is a lush, gorgeous swell of mid-pace electronica, symphonic strings and Björk's uniquely alien, spectral vocal. There are fantastical wonders here. "Cocoon" (another eulogy to withdrawal from the world) is delicate as a breath, Björk sounding too fragile to be flesh as she lauds "a beauty this immense". "Pagan Poetry" and "Aurora", likewise, are adrift in an enchanted reverie. When she chooses, she crafts killer tunes: "It's Not up to You" is as lovely as anything on IPost/I. Yet frequently, on such tracks as the yearning, glancing "Undo", Björk seems to be simply thinking aloud, revelling in this wildly rich and visceral music. She's reclaimed cutting-edge electronica, so often the province of geeks and technicians, for the poets and the passionate. IVespertine/I is a landmark, a revelation, a truly fabulous achievement. --IIan Gittins/I
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 35
Another side to the Bjork puzzle September 5, 2001 sevenjk_uk@yahoo.co.uk (Scotland) 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
I have been a fan of Bjork for aroun 8 years and really love and enjoy her music. I have to say that Vespertine is, for me, her best album! Admittedly it is a little difficult upon first hearing but that is only because you haven't heard the like of it before - not from Bjork or any other artist for that. It is very honest and intimate. You would almost think it a diary full of personal thoughts and feelings (especially listening to 'Cocoon'). Bjork fans know that with her albums she tends to take a new and surprising route with each album and goes for a particular sound eg with the album 'Post', electronic sounds were the focus and 'Homogenic' focused on strings and voice. 'Vespertine' has real beautiful uplifting choir voice which gets quite lush in places as well as the electric harp and strings. Highlights include 'Unison', 'Pagan Poetry', 'Aurora' and 'Hidden Place' which stands out using noodle-like sounds against a choir. I think this is an excellent album and am really glad I have it. With each album Bjork does something new and this is a good addition to a collection or if you just want to hear something different.
As Clear and Beautiful as Crystal ... March 17, 2006 G. Bowden (London, England) 21 out of 22 found this review helpful
Whether she liked it or not, "Dancer In The Dark" had cemented Bj#246;rk#8217;s place in pop culture as a pioneer of the utmost order, as well as leading to the most questionable choice of dress in a singer#8217;s career ever with the infamous #8220;swan#8221; draped over her shoulders. After collecting accolades for both her music and her acting (among them two Golden Globe nominations and another nod for the Best Song Oscar), it would have been assumed by many that Bj#246;rk would have come out firing on all cylinders with her next LP. Bj#246;rk#8217;s mind, however, humbled by the success of "Dancer" and a newfound loving relationship with performance artist Matthew Barney, was on a different plane altogether. The result, "Vespertine", could easily be described as the stuff of dreams, featuring soundscapes and melodies unlike any to be found in her career.pThe main difference between "Vespertine" and the albums that precede it lies directly in their environmental space. "Debut#8217;s" pop music exemplified the best of early #8216;90s UK dance, whilst "Post" saw Bj#246;rk travelling the world with many an eclectic collaborator, swinging wildly from the urban metropolis to the tropical rainforest. "Homogenic" represented a return to her nativeland with its raw geology and sweeping romanticism, whilst "SelmaSongs" used sounds directly from the film set itself to spark the character of Selma#8217;s musings into songs. "Vespertine" is very different because the environment explored here is Bj#246;rk herself. Using the advances of Internet glitch-pop much like Radiohead did with "Kid A", Bj#246;rk concocts epic pieces of music that beguilingly soar into the listener#8217;s consciousness. As strings and choirs cascade around beats that remain little more than indistinct scuttles and scratches, moments are reached that frequently rank as the most beautiful in Bj#246;rk#8217;s career.pBj#246;rk#8217;s classical influence is engaged more than ever here. Briefly touched upon in the "Post" and indulged in far more with "Homogenic", Bj#246;rk and trusted arrangers Guy Sigsworth and Vince Mendoza (who worked their fabulous wiles on the arrangements for "SelmaSongs" also) supply moments that border on the ethereal, aided substantially by the choice of choirs and Zeena Parkins on a resplendently beautiful harp. Meanwhile, the programming is subtle in the extreme; for the more boisterous songs, bass lines can be discerned, but for the most part the minutiae of the beats themselves (taken from shuffling cards, crushed ice and heavy breathing, amongst others) don#8217;t so much pin the song down rather allow them to breathe and give them texture. And they are all held together by Bj#246;rk#8217;s luminous vocal, which has really never sounded so assured and graceful.pAnother gracenote of "Vespertine#8217;s" is in the thematic strands that hold it together. Whereas "Debut" was sweet and mellow throughout with the odd dance break, "Post" was enjoyably all-over-the-place and "Homogenic" trudged malignantly through its destructive lava field, "Vespertine" manages to cover all aspects of Bj#246;rk#8217;s new world without repetition or a discernible through line. All of the songs are concerned with love and carnality, from blissful first encounters (#8220;Hidden Place#8221;) to whispered reassurances (#8220;Undo#8221;), from the inner sanctum of sexual harmony (#8220;Cocoon#8221;) to the ambivalent exercising of perfunctory lust (#8220;Harm Of Will#8221;). It is without doubt Bj#246;rk#8217;s most sexually explicit album, but inversely intimate rather than extrovertly porny and raunchy (the light to "The Teaches Of Peaches#8217;s" dark, if you will). Her lyrics also suggest an evolution in content and character, highlights including #8220;Unison#8221; (an affectionate dig at Lars Von Trier) and #8220;Pagan Poetry#8221; (a celebration of an achingly secret love).pIt must also rank as Bj#246;rk#8217;s most collaborative album, as well as her most referential. Working with the likes of Marius De Vries, Matthew Herbert, Matmos and Zeena Parkins, she also has lyrics from esteemed literary luminaries E.E. Cummings and Sarah Kane, not to mention a typically disturbing piece from filmmaker Harmony Korine. That all of the work coalesces into a whole is testament to Bj#246;rk#8217;s production skills, herself acting as sole producer on the majority of the songs on offer here. In a touching way, "Vespertine" has Bj#246;rk come full circle from the sojourn she set out on with "Debut" in 1993 #8230; "Vespertine" has the same amused, benevolent detachment of "Debut", but the knowledge and sage-like tone behind her voice and her soundscapes exhibit a maturity and poignancy that nestles the listener inside a glacial paradise. It#8217;s like listening to iceberg#8217;s melting away with love and warmth on a clear day and surely one of the most beautiful albums ever made. A shocking superlative, I know, but it really is that gorgeous #8230;
album of the year? September 7, 2001 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Well there's little doubt in my mind this is the best album I've heard over the last year or two. (I would have dubbed it the album of the millenium but that would be a little pretentious.) On my first listening I was looking for the instantly accesible, catchy tunes, and there a few of those but repeated listenings kept increasing my appreciation of this album and in particular allowed me to enjoy it as an organic whole. Bjork has crafted something absolutely fascinating, music that allows us to share her own fascinations, whimsies, wonders and moods. Its hard to describe the impact of this intimacy. I can't think of a singer since Kate Bush who has acheived such depths in her music and who gives her immagination such free reign. I don't think everyone is going to respond to this album as I did, but I do think everyone should give it a try. Simply fabulous!
Keep it in a Hidden Place August 31, 2001 ourkid1982@hotmail.com (UK) 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
Vespertine is by far Bjorks most ambitious work to date. From the bouncy pop of Debut, to the Electronic, jazz influence of Post, to the almost Techno/Classical theme (if there is such a thing) of Homogenic to the soothing electronic take on chamber music of Vespertine. And it's a real corker.pThe theme is that of An album that sounded like it was made while someone was cooking pasta, as Bjork recently put it. It's a swirling, cosmic album of gothic imagery and dreamscapes; soothing choir voices interweave harps and electronic blips and deep bass-lines. Bjorks distinct voice as always sounds so natural and unfiltered; this carries the album along beautifully.pStand out tracks include "Hidden Place" (the first single), "It's Not Up To You," "Undo," "Pagan Poetry" and "Unison." "Harm Of Will" being my personal favourite. The highly textured soundscapes are layered beautifully throughout, showing thoughtful production. Much of the rhythmic blips, squeaks and taps, courtesy of Matmos are much more understated here than in any other of Bjorks solo workings. The overall melody too is far less unforgiving from that of her previous working "Homogenic." The album soothes, it lulls, calms and uplifts. It is, without a shadow of a doubt, her finest work to date and deserves a place in any true music fans collection.
Ice crystal beauty? September 9, 2001 J P V Guffogg (St Leonards, East Sussex United Kingdom) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Being new to Bjork, I wondered how I'd like this. I had only heard a few tracks from previous works (on a free promo CD in the Times!). There is a crystal clarity to this, a sparseness, yet with the lush sounds of harp, celeste and music box. Her voice is intimate and breathy, and again passionate and full-throated. She sure can sing, and even the obscure lyrics have meaning. I love the way she twists the meter round within the music, and the Icelandic accent adds to the interest. Some tracks - like Aurora just seem to soar away to the sky. I love it. But don't listen to it too often, as it could lose meaning - you have to listen properly to appreciate. I certainly will be buying her previous works too.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 35
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