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Vespertine

Vespertine
Artist: Bjoerk
Label: Elektra / Wea
Category: Music

List Price: $11.98
Buy New: $10.99
You Save: $0.99 (8%)



Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 392 reviews
Sales Rank: 6286

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 62653
UPC: 075596265324
EAN: 0075596265324
ASIN: B00005NG4X

Release Date: August 28, 2001
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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

Similar Items:

  • Homogenic
  • Post
  • Medulla
  • Debut
  • Volta

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com's Best of 2001
Ever since Bjoerk's vital, effusive 1993 debut, her music has been increasingly intimate, gently private, and concerned with seclusion. It's typical then that Vespertine's first single is called "Hidden Place." The studious solitude is rewarding, though. Vespertine is a lush, gorgeous swell of midpace electronica, symphonic strings, and Bjoerk's uniquely alien, spectral vocals. There are fantastical wonders here. "Cocoon" (another eulogy to withdrawal from the world) is delicate as a breath, Bjoerk 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 Post. Yet, frequently, on such tracks as the yearning, glancing "Undo," Bjoerk seems to be simply thinking aloud, reveling 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. Vespertine is a landmark, a revelation, and a truly fabulous achievement. --Ian Gittins


Customer Reviews:   Read 387 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Boy oh Boy...   October 6, 2008
Mel Malone (San Francisco inner city Disco)
Ive always loved Bjork and everything shes about, but this has to be the worst cd Ive ever heard of hers. It seems to have little direction and although I enjoy deep, dark depressing tunes, I would'nt listen to this cd unless I was actually killing myself. But again, that might just be me. Her other cds rock the casbah, this one doesn't! Hope you find some enjoyment out of it....


5 out of 5 stars Uniquely Artistic   August 28, 2008
Priscilla A. Arnold (Minneapolis, MN)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

There is not much out there with this sound. It is certainly true that Bjork has a sound that cannot be categorized, and that is what I look for in unique music. This was my first Bjork album, and purchased at the recommendation of Amazon customers (as are many of my recent acquisition).

The album provides an electronically contrived sound with influences as diverse as anything I've heard. The vocals are haunting and, if not beautiful, intriguing. This is art, not commercial music.



4 out of 5 stars Vesper-tinny Voices   July 29, 2008
Alex Joseph
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

If you listen to Homogenic and Vespertine in succession, it won't take long to realize that Vespertine is undeniably post-coital compared to its predecessor. It is the most naive, intimate, sensual album that Bjoerk has created. Appropriately, it is far from everyday listening.

Glacial vocals are empowered through Matmos' organical-mechanical beats. Lyrics strip Bjoerk to her bare skin, making us ask ourselves, "Is she a feminist or not?" And the videos commissioned for Vespertine carry a unique air of pagan nudity (pierced nipples included). Add a rare Bjoerk instrumental, "Frosti," and you've in your hands a musical lapis lazuli, a blizzard snapped tightly between the hinges on an apropos white jewel case.

Compared to the Tibetan-styled calls of independence that molded Homogenic and Post, Vespertine is submissive and docile. Probably spurred on by Bjoerk's then-sophomoric-infatuation with artist Matthew Barney, Vespertine is seen by some as infantile, annoying, persistently lacking.

Vespertine certainly does run a gamut of naivety. "Hidden Place" is hearkening to some little secluded area--that, or it's a vaginal anthem. "Cocoon" is a bit less ambivalent about its sexuality. "He's still inside me," "A train of pearls," and other five-star quotes make the song ridiculously self-concerned. The crackling, semi-fluffy beats and scratchily-mouthed sensualities combine upwards into a strikingly intimate, and impressive, fusion.

The cake-flavored "It's Not Up to You" sounds bleepy and bloopy at first, but proceeds to tell us how powerless we are. Depressing? The beats thankfully counteract any melancholia by acting as Prozac. "Undo" seems a twin to "It's Not Up to You." It builds into a little angelic existentialism, professes some possibly feminist beliefs, and then falls back into slumber.

Then comes the big one. "Pagan Poetry," the video of which featured Bjoerk baring a painful McQueen dress (i.e. sewn into the nipples--yes, you read that right), is a bit overwrought on first listening. But just as you find the song to be a practice in haughtiness, you are dipped into an amazingly primal, dramatic, pro-sex feminist, avant-garde pop song. To say it simply: it's a really good song.

After interlude "Frosti," (which is cute, at best) comes "Aurora." As one of this writer's introductory Bjoerk songs, it is highly loved. Solid yet melting, drying yet dripping, it seeks a comfortable spot in the listener's ears. Powerful and brandishing a little bit of immediacy, "Aurora" must be meditated upon (at least a little) for full effect.

"An Echo, A Stain" is simply not that strong of a song. It's boring, cumbersome. "Sun in My Mouth" isn't likable at first listen, but its grainy cheer grows in time. "Heirloom" is basically Bjoerk singing over an electronic instrumental by Martin Console. It bounces and boils, sharpening its magnificent edge while maintaining a lounge feel.

"Harm of Will" cements the second half of the album as domestically apocalyptic--choral, creeping, and moaning. It teeters on breaking the fragile husk it embodies. It's bittersweet.

And as for "Unison," the final track? Questionable bits of (Bjoerk-wise) ideology aside (Compromising? Is this song going the Steinem route?), "Unison" is just wonderful. Sarcasm, irony, and snarkniess in no way intended. The lyrics are, in honesty, inspiring, but may be too hippie saccharine for some.

Wedged between upbeat and disappointed, Vespertine illuminates it wintry soul while simultaneously adhering to it. Just as powerful as Homogenic depending on the listener, though the conflicting lyrics pose a dogmatic conundrum. Still, a superb album, as well as the most indulgent and isolated in Bjoerk's discography.

EDIT: I should have rated this five-stars. Self-indulgent, sure, but still magnificent. "Frosti," upon further listening, is a perfect winter/autumn song. Highly, highly recommended.



5 out of 5 stars Orgasmical Evolution.   May 20, 2008
Stefan Hayes
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This lp with it's cold theme will enthrall you and wrap you inside the warmth of the very ice itself. Truth of juxtaposition. The ice burns, how good it feels.


5 out of 5 stars terrific dvd-audio and the album is one of her best!   May 13, 2008
Rodolfo Cruz (Los Angeles, CA USA)
the sound is truley great on this version. nice use of the sub woofer and surround is very cool also.

recommened.

i hear there is a sacd version. i find i tend to enjoy dvd-a's sound slightly more than sacd but very few systems can truely decode DSD.


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