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    Volta (CD/DVD)

    05/22/2007


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    All Music Guide Review

    Once again finding harmony and creating alchemy between seeming opposites, on Volta Björk is bold but thoughtful, delicate yet strong, accessible and avant. The intricacy and complexity of projects like Medúlla and Drawing Restraint 9 suggested that she might have left the more direct side of her work behind, but Volta's opening track and lead single, "Earth Intruders," puts that notion to rest: the song literally marches in, riding a bubbling, ritualistic beat courtesy of Timbaland and Konono No. 1's electric thumb-pianos. Björk howls "Turmoil! Carnage!" like incantations over the din, and after several albums' worth of beautiful whispers, it's a joy to hear her raise her voice and volume like this. "Wanderlust" follows and provides the yin to "Earth Intruders"' yang, its horns and brooding melody giving it the feel of a moodier, more contemplative version of "The Anchor Song." These two songs set the tone for the rest of Volta's pendulum-like swings between sounds and moods, all of which are tied together by found-sound and brass-driven interludes that give the impression that the album was recorded in a harbor -- an apt metaphor for how ideas and collaborators come and go on this album. Timbaland's beats resurface on "Innocence," another of Volta's most potent moments; a sample of what sounds like a man getting punched in the gut underscores Björk's viewpoint that purity is something powerful, not gentle. Antony and the Johnsons' Antony Hegarty lends his velvety voice to two outstanding but very different love songs: "The Dull Flame of Desire" captures swooning romance by pairing Björk and Hegarty's voices with a slowly building tattoo courtesy of Lightning Bolt drummer Brian Chippendale; "My Juvenile," which is dedicated to Björk's son Sindri, closes Volta with a much gentler duet. Considering how much sonic and emotional territory the album spans -- from the brash, anthemic "Declare Independence," which sounds a bit like Homogenic's "Pluto," to "Pneumonia" and "Vertebrae by Vertebrae," which are as elliptical and gentle as anything on Vespertine or Drawing Restraint 9 -- Volta could very easily sound scattered, but this isn't the case. Instead, it finds the perfect balance between the vibrancy of her poppier work in the '90s and her experiments in the 2000s. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

    Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 2
  • Wanderlust
  • 5:51

  • 4
  • Innocence
  • 4:27

  • 7
  • Pneumonia
  • 5:14

  • 8
  • Hope
  • 4:02

  • 10
  • My Juvenile
  • 4:03

  • 11 (2)
  • Earth Intruders (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 12 (2)
  • Wanderlust (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 13 (2)
  • The Dull Flame of Desire (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 14 (2)
  • Innocence (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 15 (2)
  • I See Who You Are (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 16 (2)
  • Vertebrae by Vertebrae (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 17 (2)
  • Pneumonia (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 18 (2)
  • Hope (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 19 (2)
  • Declare Independence (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • 20 (2)
  • My Juvenile (5.1 Surround)(*)
  • Credits

    • Damian Taylor
    • Programming, Producer, Engineer, Editing, Vocal Programming, Vocal Treatments, Beats

    Notes

    Limited Edition.

    from bjork.com - Bjork on Volta: I am always looking for words that have some sort of energy Usually the name just comes, from a magazine or somebody says something I had waited for years while working on the album but it didn't come In the lyrics there are words like "voltage" and "voodoo", which I found to be too common somehow

    I have always tried to choose titles which are kind of latin or something, which aren't english, which is a little funny because we europeans find latin to be sort of neutral language... But I found Volta... I don't recall how it came about, but I Googled it and found that it is both the name of a scientist in Italy who invented the battery and also a river in Africa which had been built by men and a lagoon built by men called Lake Volta So several parts come into it

    I'm not going to name anything specific, people can guess for themselves what it is There is also a mideval dance with carries that name, a very funny dance which is very hard to learn Thusly, I got a lot of things in one word: a dance, a river in Africa which doesn't work anymore, and the battery So okay - this fits.
    ----

    Bjork returns to her iconic, innovative and rhythmic roots with Volta. Featuring her own infamous beats and collaborations with Timbaland, Antony Hegarty, Brian Chippendale and an all-female Icelandic brass section, the end result is an explosion of beats and an amalgamtion of sound and visuals that give Volta a life of its own, like the world hasn't seen from Bjork in years.



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