Sigur Ros We Play Endlessly Rar
Firstly, this work hailed the transition of Sigur Ros to pop music and more positive sounding. Secondly, the quartet recorded the first composition in English, All Alright. In 2009 Sigur Ros released the compilation album We Play Endlessly, which includes songs from band’s previous albums and EPs. It's quite the surprise that this is a sort of a proto-SIGUR ROS album that has all the elements of future releases in play but doesn't quite make them gel together in the brilliant cohesive manner of later albums.
- Sigur Ros, Von Full Album Zip > DOWNLOAD (Mirror #1).
- Leit af fibres (AF Endurunni? Sigur Ros) (5:03) Singles Sigur Ros - 1999 - FEVG-G-Englar Sigur Ros - 2000 - NY Batter Sigur Ros - 2005 - hoppipolla Sigur Ros - 2006 - S?glopur Sigur Ros - 2007 - Hljomalind Sigur Ros - 2008 - Innie Mer Vitleysingur Syngur Download links.
- Download FLAC Sigur Ros - Svefn-g-englar (ep, 1999) - Englar Alheimsins (Angels Of The Universe, Ost, 2. 2000 lossless CD, MP3.
At last we can put away our Icelandic dictionaries. Sigur Rós will this June release their fifth studio LP - and for the first time it will feature singing in English.
Though most of the album will still be sung in Icelandic - the first track is tellingly called Gobbledigook - the final song is in the Queen's English, albeit, presumably, yowled, stretched, and turned into a magical fairy psalm.
The album will be called Med sud i eyrum vid spilum endalaust. Just in case you've already thrown out those dictionaries, Sigur Rós translate the title as 'with a buzz in our ears we play endlessly'. Which is what Sigur Rós sceptics have been complaining about for years.
Gobbledigook, the lead single, is available now as a free download, as is the music video. It features lots of handclaps, guitar strums, and frolicking naked people. (And it's definitely not safe for work.)
The album was recorded not just in Sigur Rós' Álafoss studio, but also abroad - in London, New York, and the very un-Icelandic Havana, Cuba. String quartet Amiina loaned their talents, as did a five-piece brass section. But it's on a song called Ára Bátur that the band had the most help. The track was recorded in a single live take, with the participation of the London Sinfonietta and the London Oratory Boys' Choir - with more than 90 musicians joined in creating a rapturous racket.
The band's Jon Thor Birgisson has traditionally sung in either Icelandic or a made-up gibberish language called Hopelandic. This means that for most of us, the band's lyrics have been incomprehensible - high, beautiful glossolalia over bowed guitars and thundering drums. We've had the luxury of imagining these lyrics as the most insightful poetry we've ever had the pleasure to not understand.
But all that will end in June, when we hear All Alright, the LP's closing, English-language song. Its title does not exactly inspire confidence, it being more evocative of a Coldplay B-side than of a lost Rilke sonnet.
Med sud i eyrum vid spilum endalaust will be released on June 23 by EMI. Pre-orders begin on June 2, including a deluxe edition with book and making-of film.
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Tracklist:
1 Gobbledigook
Sigur Ros Pronunciation
2 Inní mér syngur vitleysingur
Sigur Ros We Play Endlessly Zip
3 Gó an daginn
4 Vi spilum endalaust
5 Festival
6 Me su í eyrum
7 Ára bátur
8 Illgresi
9 Fljótavík
10 Straumnes
Sigur Ros We Play Endlessly Rarity
11 All Alright