Thursday, October 22, 2009

16 YEARS ON AND I'M STILL AMAZED BY THIS

I was an admirer of the music released by The Sugarcubes in as much that I bought singles and albums, but usually a few weeks or months after they had been released rather than on the day they hit the shops.

I was slightly sorry to learn of their break-up in 1992, and while I was interested to hear that their female lead singer was going to pursue a solo career I didn't think it was one that would have a big impact outside of her native Iceland.......(glad I never put a bet on that one at the bookies)

I first heard the debut solo LP in its entirety in a record shop one browsing afternoon. I recognised that Bjork was singing, but my first assumption was that she was doing guest vocals for someone else. It was only after the third or fourth track in row to feature her talents that I thought there was more to it, and this was confirmed by the ever-friendly indie-store sales assistant. He also told me that in the week or so since the CD had arrived in the shop it had been on very heavy rotation as it was that rare beast - ie an album that found favour with all four folk who worked in the shop.

I told him I was a fan of her former band - he replied that it was nothing at all like any of the old stuff. And he also offered me, as a well-known face in the shop who spent something in the region of £40 a week on CDs, a free copy over the weekend that I could bring back on Monday morning if I didn't like it. And if I did...well it would be added to my next bill.

I don't know how many times the CD was played over the course of that Friday night, the Saturday and the Sunday, suffice to say that not many other things got a look in.

Debut is a record that shifts from one music genre to another with the greatest of ease, class and style (another record that I think does the same is Boat To Bolivia by Martin Stephenson & The Daintees). As such, it is impossible to get bored with it. It's a combination of the songwriting genius of Ms Gudmunsdottir and magical production from Nellee Hooper (and no I haven't forgotten that he also co-wrote at least half of the songs).

I listened to this album in its entirety again in the last hour, something I probably haven't done in 10 or so years. It has not dated one bit whatsoever. It still made me smile, it made me dance and it stopped me in my tracks and made me think about loved ones present and past.

It's a truly remarkable piece of work.

It was an album that was a slow-burner. It spent ages in the UK charts but never got any higher than #3. Four singles were taken from it, and in a strange reversal from the norm, they reached progressively higher chart positions, with the lead-off Human Behaviour hitting #36 in June 1993. Venus As A Boy touched #29 in August, while Big Time Sensuality climbed to #17 on its release in November. However, in March 1994, Violently Happy reached #13.

If you don't own this record, do something about it.

mp3 : Bjork - Come To Me
mp3 : Bjork - Human Behaviour
mp3 : Bjork - Vilently Happy (Fluke - Even Tempered Mix)

Tune in tomorrow for the first in a new Friday series....

8 comments:

swissadam said...

Good post. Big Time Sensuality was massive in Manchester's clubs & pubs, especially the remix (can't remember if it was Fluke or Underworld off the top of my head). Still reminds me of meeting my wife.

Ed said...

Wonderful, wonderful album. I remember being at my first Glastonbury in my Big time Sensuality T-shirt with the legend 'i don't know my future after this weekend (and I don't want to)' on it.

Absolute goddess, so many great tunes, albums and videos.

Take it you are not including 'Play Dead' as a track on it?!

See you on the 30th, Ed

JC said...

Play Dead isnt on my copy of the album......

a Tart said...

Is it really 16 years?!? It's seems longer than that and not that long at the same time. She was is still a major force in my mind of the musical goddess. Anyone who goes out to clubs alone at night (well any woman) knows how amazing her acheivements are in this business of making music and of keeping her "voice" the way she wants it to be. This album inspired so many of us in so many ways to be ourselves. Thanks, darlin, for writing about it. It, and she, deserve so much praise xoxo

Ed said...

Play Dead was on it from late 1993 onwards. Even without it, though, it is still a phenomenal album.

Apparently when One Little Indian heard the demos for Anchor Song they thought it would sell a third of the copies that a Sugarcubes album did!

Gaz@NokiaMusic said...

Excellent post, I haven't listened to it in about 5 years, when I need my fix I tend to listen to. erm... Post, I'll be giving it a spin today.

Anonymous said...

Come to me has a virus in it and caused my itunes library to be wiped and made me spend a whole day reloading - thanks

JC said...

Anon

I'm sorry about that. As someone whose itunes library was wiped just over a week ago, I know what a pain that is.

However, I'm surprised about said virus. The file has been downloaded nearly 200 times and no-one else has said anything. I just downloaded it myself straight into itunes and didnt have any problems.