ALBUMVulnicura Strings (Vulnicura: The Acoustic Version - Strings, Voice and Viola Organista Only)Björk
ALBUMVulnicuraBjörk
ALBUMBiophilia (Deluxe Edition)Björk
ALBUMDull Flame of DesireBjörk
ALBUMVolta (Deluxe Version)Björk
ALBUMDrawing Restraint #9Björk
ALBUMMedullaBjörk
ALBUMVespertineBjörk
Beliebte Musikvideos von Björk
The Gate
Björk
Wanderlust
Björk
All Is Full of Love
Björk
Venus As a Boy
Björk
It's Oh So Quiet
Björk
Pagan Poetry
Björk
Army of Me
Björk
Human Behaviour
Björk
I Miss You
Björk
Big Time Sensuality
Björk
Künstler-Playlists
Björk Essentials
The Icelandic maverick with an incomparable voice launches an electronic odyssey.
Björk Video Essentials
An iconoclast with a visual sensibility as daring as her music.
Inspired by Björk
These eclectic jams will unleash your inner Icelandic songstress.
Björk: Deep Cuts
An avant-pop adventurer who's always pushing into new worlds.
Selects: Björk
“My DJ sets try to express unfathomable admiration for music.”
Björk: Influences
The carefully curated madness that inspired this singular performer.
Björk: The Songwriters
Künstler-Biographie
The idiosyncratic quality of Björk Guðmundsdóttir's vocals is matched only by her unpredictable artistry. She's an iconic singer and songwriter whose prototypical vision has fed turns as a producer, actor, visual artist, curator, and activist. Born in Reykjavik, Iceland in 1965, she performed and recorded as a child before catching the global spotlight as lead singer for cultish alt-rock band The Sugarcubes. After the group broke up in 1993, she settled in London and launched herself into solo album Debut, inhabiting ever-shifting dance music landscapes in collaboration with producer Nellee Hooper. Follow-up album Post established Bjork as a crossover star, with the roiling "Army of Me" and a brassy cover of obscure Betty Hutton B-side "It's Oh So Quiet." In 1997, Homogenic explored an increasingly experimental aesthetic within electronic-rooted art-pop songs that borrow from noise, contemporary, classical and traditional Icelandic choir sounds. She also developed non-musical collaborations with visual artist Matthew Barney—with whom she had a child—and acted in the Lars von Trier film Dancer in the Dark. In 2011, she again broke new ground with multimedia project Biophilia, a roving suite of music, videos and apps. Continued exploration has led to work with Venezuelan producer Arca, including 2015's Vulnicura, which charted the demise of her relationship with Barney and revealed wrenching emotional rawness amid her endless sonic inventions.