First Nations alt-pop artist GLVES reflects on Björk’s 1997 album Homogenic as a formative influence, coinciding with the ...
The singer throws up lyrics about pursuit and desertion. A snare drum lightly skips across a series of bass pinpoints, an organic foundation unthinkable before techno. The song's called "Hunter," and ...
In 1997, Björk felt she needed to be a warrior. A confluence of events – a couple of busted romantic relationships, a terrifying stalker incident, accumulated exhaustion from the first few years of ...
They used to play Björk on The Grind. In the likely event that you don’t remember The Grind, it was an MTV dance show, a sort of early-’90s variant on American Bandstand or Soul Train, where ...
In terms of success, Björk’s career has always been characterized by periods of ebb and flow, an inevitable consequence of experimentation. While “Post” (1995),“Homogenic” (1997) and “Vespertine” ...
Twenty-five years after its release, the Icelander’s third album sounds as urgent as ever. By Kate Mossman In the Nineties my father liked Björk so much that one day my brother and I sellotaped a ...
It's doubtful anyone saw this coming: Stranger Genius Award winners Industrial Revelation will be covering Icelandic singer/songwriter/producer Björk's Homogenic in its entirety at Neptune Theatre on ...
When I was young, I usually spent my weekends with my dad and my sisters. On this particular Saturday, we made our way to Golden Discs in Stillorgan. There was a sale on and I had £30 in my pocket ...