There have always been two major qualities that have made Bjork one of the most compelling artists of the last decade. Not solely in a pop-culture context, but with musicologists, contemporary, ...
People attempt covers of Björk songs all the time, but that's not an easy thing to do. If you're going to cover a Björk song, you need to have a take. Fortunately, Philadelphia's noisy and adventurous ...
Björk Guðmundsdóttir was born in Reykjavik, Iceland, in 1965, the daughter of an electrician and an activist. She was something of a child star in her home country, releasing her first album as simply ...
In 2018, a confluence of Icelandic singer Björk's birthday and a night of drag gave birth to an epic, anti-consumerist annual event: Björk Friday. This year, on the stage of the Clinton Street Theater ...
Nailah Hunter is reflecting on “Paradisia,” a brief flute fantasia from Bjork’s 2017 album, Utopia, when she stumbles upon a lovely description. “Talk about music to walk in the forest to,” says the L ...
In 1993, the former lead singer of the Sugarcubes, a popular alternative rock band from Iceland, released an album called “Debut.” So began the most extraordinary musical trajectory of the decade. Ten ...
The Knife’s Olof Dreijer has remixed Björk and Rosalía’s “Oral,” the song the pair released in November to support the fight against environmentally unsound salmon-farming operations in Iceland.
The Icelandic star and the Spanish singer released a charity single to prevent open-pen fishing practices in Iceland on Tuesday Sadie Bell was a digital news writer on the music team at PEOPLE. She ...
However, the song’s lyrics do not directly address the issue and seem more personal: “Your mouth floats above my bed at night/ My own private moon,” it begins, and continues in a similar vein, as the ...
Nov. 21 (UPI) --Icelandic singer Björk and Spanish singer Rosalía have teamed up on a new song. Björk, 58, released a single and music video for "Oral" featuring Rosalía, 31, on Tuesday. The "Oral" ...
For anyone who ever wondered what “We Are the World” would be like if it was aimed at gay weirdos, Björk and Rosalía have the answer. The two pop oddities linked up and put out a song on November 21 ...