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Tip of the Week
Sigur Ros

Tom Lynch

Iceland’s mysterious, massively beautiful quartet Sigur Ros returned earlier this summer with another breathtaking opus, the energizing “Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust” (“With a Buzz in Our Ears We Play Endlessly”), which sees the band changing direction a bit, somewhat ditching its well-trodden road of ethereality and glacial soundscapes and charging ahead into pop construction and actual hooks. Does it work? You bet your giddy Icelandic ass it does, and leader Jonsi Birgisson’s voice hasn’t sounded this powerful since “Agaetis Byrjun.” The first four tracks, all notable because of their stunted lengths and rousing temperaments, set the colossal mood, and the album’s centerpiece, a nine-minute jaunt called “Festival” that features four minutes of Jonsi’s angelic voice on vulnerable display, could be the band’s finest epic to date. Live, the band’s always been magnetic and looks to be improving with age. If you haven’t heard “Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust,” get on it, it’s one of the best of the year.

Sigur Ros plays September 24 at Chicago Theatre, 175 North State, (312)263-1138, at 8pm. $36.50.

(2008-09-16)




Also by Tom Lynch

Soundcheck
If the strongest musical bonds between musicians are formed at an early stage, then local five-piece The Names That Spell have a serious advantage. Having played together since each member was in his early teens, everything has led to this moment: the self-released “A & R,” an attractive assemblage of countless instruments, a kind-of-indie-pop record with a delirious determination to explore the outer realms
(2008-09-09)

Tip of the Week
One of the strongest local records released this year, Bound Stems’ “The Family Afloat,” the follow-up to its extraordinary 2006 release “Appreciation Night,” again on Flameshovel, warrants repeated listens, each more rewarding than the last
(2008-09-09)

Tip of the Week
Fifteen years ago Scottish author Irvine Welsh gave us “Trainspotting,” his highest achievement in a career of several successes, and now he’s covering “Crime,” about a strung-out detective on leave in Florida who gets mixed up with coke fiends and a 10-year-old, scared-shitless girl
(2008-09-09)

Getting There
When Maps & Atlases’ “Tree, Swallows, Houses” EP broke in 2006, it felt as if the band was taunting you, that the math-rock wizardry was almost antagonistic in its assault. Live, the local four-piece overwhelmed the senses—but, mostly, visually
(2008-09-02)

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Language Art
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Sister Act
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Copyright Newcity Communications, Inc.

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