Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Icelandic singer and songwriter Björk has recorded more than two hundred songs for ten studio albums, two soundtrack albums, a compilation album, six remix albums and three collaboration albums. She is the sole writer and producer of most of the songs included in her albums. She also sometimes plays instruments during her recording sessions.
The album spawned three top 10 singles in the UK, including "Army of Me", "Hyperballad" and "It's Oh So Quiet", which became her best-selling single and was certified gold by BPI. The album was followed by a companion remix album, called Telegram (1996).
"It's Oh So Quiet" (Hans Lang, Bert Reisfeld), performed by Bell "Enjoy" (Björk, Tricky), performed by Pattern Is Movement "You've Been Flirting Again" (Björk), performed by Evangelicals "Isobel" (Björk, Marius de Vries, Nellee Hooper), performed by Xiu Xiu "Possibly Maybe" (Björk), performed by Final Fantasy and Ed Droste
"It's Oh So Quiet" is a song by American singer Betty Hutton, released in 1951 as the B-side to the single "Murder, He Says". [1] It is a cover of the German song "Und jetzt ist es still", [ 2 ] [ 3 ] performed by Horst Winter in 1948, with music written by Austrian composer Hans Lang and German lyrics by Erich Meder. [ 4 ]
Post is the second studio album by Icelandic singer Björk. [a] It was released on 7 June 1995 by One Little Indian Records.Continuing the style developed on her first album Debut (1993), Björk conceived of Post as a bolder and more extroverted set of songs than its predecessor, featuring an eclectic mixture of electronic and dance styles such as techno, trip hop, IDM, and house, alongside ...
It should only contain pages that are Björk songs or lists of Björk songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Björk songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Live Box is a set of 4 live CDs, a live DVD and a 36-page booklet by Icelandic musician Björk, released in August 2003.Each live CD roughly corresponds to one album in her (at the time of release) four album solo discography.
Björk Guðmundsdóttir was born on 21 November 1965 in Reykjavík. [12] She was raised by her mother, Hildur Rúna Hauksdóttir (7 October 1946 – 25 October 2018 [13]), an activist who protested against the development of Iceland's Kárahnjúkar Hydropower Plant, [14] having divorced from Björk's father, Guðmundur Gunnarsson, an electrician and union leader, after Björk was born.