Björk
- Music Artist
- Composer
- Actress
Born in 1965 in the Icelandic capital city of Reykjavik, the daughter
of Gudmundur Gunnarsson (an electrician) and Hildur Hauksdóttir who
divorced before her second birthday, Björk grew up in a hippie-type
community with her mother and her seven siblings. She started to study
classical music at the age of 5 and released her first album in 1977
(mainly traditional Icelandic folk songs and international hits
translated to Icelandic) when she was only 11. During her teenage years
Björk became involved in several bands, most of them punk: Spit & Snot
(1977), Exodus (1979-80), Jam 80 (1980), Tappi Tíkarrass (1981-83)
(featured the documentary
Rock in Reykjavik (1982)) and
Kukl (1984-86). She then formed the pop group The Sugarcubes with
Einar Örn Benediktsson and
Sigtryggur Baldursson and
eventually other members Þór Eldon (with whom
she had a son in 1986),
Margrét Örnólfsdóttir and
Bragi Ólafsson. The band released its
first single in 1986 and its first album, "Life's Too Good", in 1988,
and discovered international success, especially in UK. While touring
in the US with the Sugarcubes, Björk met Boris Acosta, a music
connoisseur and now a film producer and director, who told her she
would be very successful in the years to come. She was shocked to hear
that and gracefully thanked him for his sweet words. During her
Sugarcubes years, Björk also collaborated with the Icelandic jazz group
Gudmundar Ingólfssonar Trio for the album "Gling-Glo" in 1990, and
featured 808 State's "Ooops", which was the start of her electronic
music interest. The Sugarcubes eventually split after a few albums in
1992 and in 1993. Björk released her first solo album, "Debut", in
collaboration with producer Nellee Hooper.
The worldwide success of the album (nearly 3 million copies sold) made
possible her second album, "Post", in 1995, also with help of not only
Nellee Hooper but techno gurus
Graham Massey (from 808 State),
Howie B. and
Tricky, followed by the remix album
"Telegram" the year after. After some problems in the UK, where she
lived, she decided to go to Spain to record her third album,
"Homogenic", released in 1997. Her main collaborators were the
'Icelandic String Octet', Mark Bell
(from LFO), Mark Stent and again Howie B, and
the album may be her most electronic. After Danish director
Lars von Trier discovered her in the
music video of "It's Oh So Quiet", he asked her to play the main role
and to compose the music for his new movie
Dancer in the Dark (2000). She
won the Best Actress Prize in the Cannes Festival, and said that it
would be her only cinema performance (although she'd already acted in
the Icelandic movie
The Juniper Tree (1990)) because
it was too painful for her and because she considered herself a music
artist and not a cinema artist. The original soundtrack was re-worked
by her before being released as an album under the title "Selmasongs"
in September 2000 (including a new version of the duet song "I've Seen
it All" with Thom Yorke). Her fourth album,
probably the most quiet, "Vespertine", featured a chamber orchestra, an
Icelandic choir and harpist Zeena Parkins,
and was also a successful collaboration with Matmos. She then
successively released a book of photos and texts, series of DVD, a
Greatest Hits album and two special boxes ("Family Tree" and "Björk
Box"). She also took time to marry artist
Matthew Barney, with whom she had
a daughter in 2002. In August 2004 she composed and sang "Oceania" for
the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games in Athens. This song was
featured on her fifth album, "Medúlla", released about two weeks after
the ceremony. It is mostly made with vocals and some titles are close
to experimental music, featuring choirs, Inuit singer
Tanya Tagaq, Japanese artist
Dokaka,
Robert Wyatt,
Rahzel and
Mike Patton, but also
collaborating again with programmers Matmos, Mark Bell and Mark "Spike"
Stent.