- Two MP3 Albums for £10. Buy this and one other MP3 Album from a great selection for no more than £10. Here's how (terms and conditions apply)
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Two MP3 albums for £10
Buy this MP3 album with any other MP3 album under £8 and pay no more than £10 for both (terms and conditions apply). Just look for any album with this message, put it in your basket with another eligible title and the discount will be applied at checkout. |
| Song Title | Time | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play | 1. Army of Me | 3:57 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 2. Hyper-Ballad | 5:21 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 3. The Modern Things | 4:10 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 4. It's Oh So Quiet | 3:38 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 5. Enjoy | 3:57 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 6. You've Been Flirting Again | 2:25 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 7. Isobel | 5:48 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 8. Possibly Maybe | 5:06 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 9. I Miss You | 4:03 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 10. Cover Me | 3:07 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 11. Headphones | 5:40 | £0.69 |
Product details
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As a girl in Iceland, she used to skip across the tree-less moors and make up nonsensical rhymes and music - what she is doing here is basically the same thing, but in a studio and with the help of Tricky (one of the engineers behind Massive Attack's darkly urban sound). The result is music that sounds like a cross between a Manga cartoon and an Icelandic saga. If you are scared off by her flaky persona - don't be. These tracks are more accessible than you would expect from a girl who went to the Oscar's with a stuffed swan draped around her neck. They're different, true, but not indulgently so.
On the opening track, Army of Me, Björk launches an attack against clingy lovers: "And if you complain once more, you'll meet an army of me," she promises, and goes on to plead "self-sufficiency, please!" It's a welcome contrast to all those love-struck Katie Melua-types out there. "Modern Things", with its quirky lyrics about machines taking over the world, sees Björk in full Manga mood, and standout track "Oh So Quiet" is big-band jazz gone bonkers.
The thing that intrigues me about Björk is how someone who seems so human can be so into machine-made music. Maybe it's inevitable that this oddball would want to look to the future instead of the past: if you want retro, you won't find it here. Still, Post sticks out like a sore thumb in the normally quite ethereal and outer-spacey world of dub/rhythm and bass/ dance. Where acts like Portishead are cool like polished silver, Björk sounds like an exuberant firework display of emotions. In the end, this album is all about her voice: big, riotous, squealing, groaning, whispering, giggling and weirdly sexy.
PS. Björk is Icelandic for those Scandinavian trees that look like vegetarian versions of a Dalmatian. Or at least I THINK it is.
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