NME Artists

Sigur Ros

NME.com feature on Sigur Ros including news, reviews, biography, youtube video, audio, concerts, tour dates, photos, pictures, commentary, album reviews and live reviews and cool facts.

Sigur Ros News

Sigur Ros to release deluxe edition of latest album

Sigur Ros to release deluxe edition of latest album

It features massive photo book and original film strip

Sigur Ros captivate sold-out LA crowd

Icelandic band bring new album to the Greek Theatre

  • Oct 3, 2008

Sigur Ros, The Mars Volta close day two at Latitude

It's an evening of epicness over in Suffolk

  • Jul 19, 2008

Sigur Ros contribute to new edition of 'Prince Of Persia' game

Check out the trailer for new game on NME.COM

  • Jul 15, 2008

Sigur Ros: 'Eurovision Song Contest inspired new single'

Icelanders reveal inspiration behind new single

  • Jul 4, 2008

More Sigur Ros News

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Sigur Ros YouTube Videos

Sigur Ros - Glósóli

Sigur Ros - Glósóli (06:13)

Great music video by Sigur Ros

sigur ros - untitled #1 (vaka)

sigur ros - untitled #1 (vaka) (06:44)

sigur ros - untitled #1 (vaka)

Sigur Ros - Hoppipolla

Sigur Ros - Hoppipolla (04:26)

Music video for Hoppipolla

Sigur Ros - Saeglopur

Sigur Ros - Saeglopur (07:08)

Awseome video for Saeglopur about some kid scuba diving. This one is the full 7 min version, thanks to Flarty. anyways enjoy the video and keep listening to Sigur Ros.

Sigur Ros

Sigur Ros (07:24)

Sigur Ros Live

More Sigur Ros Video

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Sigur Ros Reviews

Sigur Ros

Sigur Ros

Me Su Í Eyrum Vi Spilum Endalaust

Sigur Ros

Hvarf Heim

  • Nov 8, 2007

Sigur Ros

Hljomalind

  • Oct 19, 2007

Sigur Ros : Takk

Like sucking God\'s cock. Or something

  • Sep 12, 2005

Sigur Ros : London Hammersmith Apollo

Brad Pitt's favourite band strip things down

  • Mar 3, 2003

More Sigur Ros Reviews

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Sigur Ros Biography

Icelandic dramatists Sigur Rós claim that to leave their native land for any length of time would be akin to "cutting the umbilical chord", confirming that the magnificent music they craft is directly inspired by the stunning topography of their immediate environment. "It is a wonderful place", they have stated of their homeland. "We have all these big empty places where no-one lives, with glaciers and lava. The sky is so big in this country."

The band was formed in Reykjavík in 1994 by Jónsi (b. Jón Pór Birgisson, 23 April 1975, Iceland; vocals/guitar), Goggi (b. Georg Hólm, 6 April 1976, Iceland; bass) and Ágúst Ævar Gunnarsson (b. Iceland; drums). Their moniker is appropriated from Birgisson's sister Sigurrós, who was apparently born on the day the band was conceived. Von was released on the local Smekkleysa label, and was followed by a remix collection featuring tracks remodelled by Icelandic illuminati such as Gus Gus and Múm. Kjartan Sveinsson (b. 2 January 1978, Iceland; keyboards/guitar) was added to the line-up for the recording of 1999's Ágætis Byrjun, and Gunnarsson was replaced by Orri Páll Dyrason (b. 4 July 1977, Iceland) shortly afterwards.

The music created by Sigur Rós recalls atmospheric melancholists such as Mogwai, Tangerine Dream, Bark Psychosis and My Bloody Valentine (who they claimed never to have heard). Re-igniting the experimental impulse of epochal late-80s dream-pop acts such as Butterfly Child and AR Kane, and endearingly claiming they will "change the future of music in everyway', the Icelandic quartet forge music that is rapturous and romantic, dramatic and alien. They alluded to such otherness on the sleeve of 1999"s Ágætis Byrjun, which depicts a foetus with angel's wings. The band opts to sing in a combination of Icelandic and their own private language Hopelandish ("Nobody understands it but me", Jónsi has asserted), suggesting an existence as otherworldly as Drexciya's mythological, subaquatic creations. Despite this barrier to literal comprehension, however, they still manage to sound fantastically, desperately poignant.

Sigur Rós made their debut for adventurous UK imprint FatCat Records with the EP Svefn-G-Englar. The beautiful title track (originally featured on Ágætis Byrjun) was used to great effect in the Cameron Crowe movie Vanilla Sky. The band's title-less 2002 album was another deep, glorious and mysterious recording, although the absence of sleeve notes was irritating. Their 2005 studio debut for EMI Records, Takk ... was a thing of expansive and monumental beauty, and was deservedly garlanded with praise by the music press. The track "Hoppípolla" received widespread coverage in the UK when it was used on the television programmes Planet Earth and Match Of The Day.

Other esoteric projects undertaken by Sigur Rós include the soundtrack to Englar Alheimisms (alongside composer Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson), contributing backing tracks to the explicit poetry of Icelandic author Didda, and working with Steindór Andersen of the Icelandic poetry society Iounn. In 2003 they composed music for Merce Cunningham's dance piece Split Sides; these tracks were later released on Ba Ba Ti Ki Di Do. In 2007 they released the documentary film Heima, which chronicled the band's tour of Iceland the previous year alongside an intimate acoustic show at a coffee shop in the small town of Borg.

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Sigur Ros Discography

Sigur Ros albums.

  • Von - 1997 (Smekkleysa)
  • Ágætis Byrjun - 1999 (Smekkleysa/FatCat)
  • Angels Of The Universe - 2001 (FatCat)
  • () - 2002 (Smekkleysa/FatCat)
  • Ba Ba Ti Ki Di Do - 2004 (EMI)
  • Takk ... - 2005 (EMI)

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Sigur Ros Videos & DVD's

Sigur Ros video and DVD releases.

  • Heima: A Film By Sigur Rós - 2007 (EMI)

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