Green Grass Of Tunnel
by Múm on FatCat Records
Released 22/04/2002"Instead of telling you the boring truth about how this record was actually made and give you a list of bands we think it sounds like, would you not rather that I make up a nice story about it?
Well, here goes; there were these four kids who lived in a wooden shack by a dirty road that had no lights in the evening. There was not much to do around those parts, except maybe walking around, swimming or playing in the tunnel. Not that this was some kind of fairytale vacuum, life in this place had its ups and downs and emotional run-arounds. And for some reason, maybe just to pass the time or trying to colour it in or something like that, the kids spent their days and nights building big wooden tone-apparats and number-processors to make music. That´s right, make music. No, the machines did not really make this music, the kids stayed awake many a long night feeding numbers to the machines and turning their big wheels and knobs and even recording to them some windy melodies and song-singing.
The music turned out so lively that it spread around their little valley and nearby counties. People who heard it tapped their feet and even saw moving pictures in their heads. They tapped their feet…"
FatCat are proud to announce our first release by recent signings from Iceland, Múm. ‘Finally we are no one’ is the stunning, highly-anticipated second album from this Icelandic 4-piece. Beautifully meshing some dense but intricate programming with gorgeous vocal and instrumental melodies, richly textured, hypnotic and unashamedly sumptuous, this is a stunning, emotive album whose pop surface belies a deep sense of exploration.
Now based between Reykjavik and Berlin, múm are four kids from a middle class background, like most everybody else in Iceland. Two guys (Gunnar Örn Tynes and Örvar Þóreyjarson Smárason), and two classically trained twin sisters (Kristín Anna and Gyða Valtýsdóttir), they have forged a gorgeously warm, rich and melodic take on electronica, imprinting it with their own unique sound and character. Whilst they’ve been quickly taken to the hearts of the electronica scene, what sets the band apart from so many of their peers is both the strong, melodic vocals, and their warm, bold integration of both analogue and digital technologies. Playing an assortment of instruments – including accordion, melodica, glockenspiel, synthesizers, guitars, bass, and cello – alongside some crisply programmed electronic washes, beats and bleeps, the bands musical talent is immediately audible.
Prior to forming múm, Gunni started out playing old-school hardcore on an Amiga. Orvar began to do music when his parents bought their first computer. He needed a tune for a game he was programming on BASIC. Since then his love for bleeps as never diminished. Kristin and Gyda started to play piano and cello at a tender age, and when both were 9 years old, they decided to write a musical about garbage children with their classmates at music school. The boys spotted the girls playing at a community centre, as part of a dodgy band doing Pixies cover versions, both girls were then 15 years old. And so the band was formed, and began their rapid rise.
Following a number of earlier collaborative projects, the group’s celebrated debut album "Yesterday was dramatic, today is ok" (released on Thule Music in March 2000) garnered a wealth of glowing press and widespread praise, as did their following releases, the remixes of ‘the ballad of the broken birdie records’ (including mixes by Mu-Ziq), and a further remix project, ‘please smile my noise bleed’, released on the German Morr Music label in November 2001 (which featured contributions from Isan, Phonem, Arovane, Styrofoam and B. Fleischmann.
Their first release on FatCat, ‘Finally we are no one’ is preceded by a stunning 7” / 3” CD single, ‘Green Grass of Tunnel’, which features another brand new track, the shimmering ‘In through the lamp’.
Besides their solo and remix work, Múm have also undertaken a number of collaborative projects with writers, singers, dancers, experimentalfolks, sadlaptopfolks, priests and activists to do all the things they could think of and some of it actually turned out pretty good. But now they are back to making some music on their lonesome.
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MP3 (320KPS)
DS7FAT06 — £1.49
Tracklist
- Green Grass Of Tunnel
- In Through The Law
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