Moderatori: sigurlotus, Ala Nera
Mod XXII ha scritto:Ho cercato con il traduttore online di capire i titoli.
Sembra quasi un concept geologico
brennisteinn (zolfo)
hrafntinna (ossidiana)
isjaki (iceberg)
yfirbord (a tutti i livelli?) [superficie]
stormur (tempesta)
kveikur (accensore?) [stoppino]
rafstraumur (elettrico) [corrente elettrica]
Bláþráður (non ho trovato nulla) [filo fino (inteso come la mia vita appesa un filo) ... poi si scoprirà che voleva dire filo blu e buonanotte al secchio ]
var (era?) [miccia]
MAX_AM ha scritto:Mod XXII ha scritto:Ho cercato con il traduttore online di capire i titoli.
Sembra quasi un concept geologico
brennisteinn (zolfo)
hrafntinna (ossidiana)
isjaki (iceberg)
yfirbord (a tutti i livelli?) [superficie]
stormur (tempesta)
kveikur (accensore?) [stoppino]
rafstraumur (elettrico) [corrente elettrica]
Bláþráður (non ho trovato nulla) [filo fino (inteso come la mia vita appesa un filo) ... poi si scoprirà che voleva dire filo blu e buonanotte al secchio ]
var (era?) [miccia]
Ho aggiunto la mia traduzione che deriva dalla mia indubbia conoscenza del dialetto veronese che si sposa assai bene con l'icelandic Un consiglio, anche se non richiesto: spesso è più facile tradurre l'icelandic con l'inglese ....e poi passare dall'inglese all'italiano. Esattamente al contrario di quello che si fa con i gusti musicali
MAX_AM ha scritto:Un consiglio, anche se non richiesto: spesso è più facile tradurre l'icelandic con l'inglese ....e poi passare dall'inglese all'italiano.
Mod XXII ha scritto:“We realized one day when we were working on this album that we hadn’t put piano on any of the songs. It was kind of funny to realize that. Obviously, there would’ve been a lot of pianos if Kjartan were there.”
Mod XXII ha scritto:[i]
Comunque... mi pare - non che centri con quanto sopra eh! - che le setlist oramai siano sempre tutte uguali.
Ecco, questo non mi piace per niente (non che io sia un fan dei bootleg, me ne basta uno o due per tour).
Sigur Rós
Losing a member leads to a new appreciation of the fast and heavy
By KEVIN RITCHIE
“Fast” and “heavy” are words not typically used to describe the music of Sigur Rós, an Icelandic band known for gorgeous, glacially paced post-rock epics. But the past year has been one of energizing change.
Last summer, keyboardist Kjartan Sveinsson opted not to tour in support of their Valtari album and then quit to pursue a career in classical music. Undeterred, singer/guitarist Jónsi Birgisson, bassist Georg Hólm and drummer Orri Páll Dýrason regrouped and started jamming in their Reykjavik rehearsal space.
The impact of Sveinsson’s departure was apparent, as the band soon found out.
“The dynamics changed a little bit – and not in a bad way,” Hólm says over the phone from Iceland. “We realized one day when we were working on this album that we hadn’t put piano on any of the songs. It was kind of funny to realize that. Obviously, there would’ve been a lot of pianos if Kjartan were there.”
While Valtari’s choral work and meandering piano recalled the ethereal prettiness of their 1999 international breakthrough, Agætis Byrjun, Hólm describes their upcoming seventh LP, Kveikur (due out June 18), as an aggressive, unpretty reimagining of their signature sweeping, cinematic sound.
It was also made uncharacteristically quickly. Kveikur will materialize a mere 13 months after Valtari, which took four years.
“‘Outside your comfort zone’ is a phrase I like to associate with [this album],” says Hólm. “We’d start playing a song and say, ‘Whoa, that’s very different! Is that good or not?’ And we just kept on going to see where it went. We surprised ourselves.”
Take lead single Brennisteinn, a relentlessly hulking number with a grotesque, farting bass that lives up to the title (“sulphur” in Icelandic) and demonstrates Sigur Rós’s newfound emphasis on rhythm.
The juiced-up sound is auspiciously timed: they’re in the midst of their first North American arena tour, which kicked off at Madison Square Garden. The show opens with Sigur Rós and their 11-piece band surrounded by translucent gauze. Hólm refuses to elaborate except to say that, like their sound, the tripped-out visuals mix the familiar with the surprising.
“Although a lot of the songs are quite aggressive, it’s not because we are aggressive,” he says. “We’re feeling energetic, and we really like what we’re doing. Sometimes you can hear that a band doesn’t like what they’re doing as much as they should. But we’re definitely enjoying this at the moment.
ottuT ha scritto:A me me pare che sto tentativo de sti sigur ros de andà avanti assomiglia a quello de Bersani quando si ostina a chiedere la fiducia al M5S.
Burriccu ha scritto:ottuT, ma che minchia è tutta 'sta gente nuova? che cazzo ci fanno? ce li hai portati te? so' amichi tuoi? con tutta 'sta folla me sta a pija un attacco de chiusofobia. Ma che è, se semo trasformati en un sito de sesso onlain???
popplagio ha scritto:so the departure of guitarist Kjartan Sveinsson
Georg ha scritto: the touring group, consisting of the trio plus Holm’s younger brother, Kjartan Dagur Holm, as well as a pianist known only as Obo, and eight other players on strings and brass, can reproduce the records as well, or better, than the four piece could. “The live show has never been as full and complete as it is at the moment. It’s better than ever.
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