Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Vespertine> ?p ?o. }
- Vespertine runtime "55.55".
- Vespertine abstract "Vespertine is the fifth studio album by the Icelandic recording artist Björk, released on 27 August 2001. The album featured chamber orchestras, choirs, hushed vocals, microbeats made from household sounds, and personal, vulnerable themes. She collaborated with experimental sound manipulators Matmos, Denmark-based DJ Thomas Knak, and the experimental harpist Zeena Parkins for the album. Lyrical sources included the works of American poet E. E. Cummings, the American independent filmmaker Harmony Korine, and English playwright Sarah Kane's penultimate play, Crave.To coincide with the album's release, Björk released a coffee table book of loose prose and photographs titled Björk. Björk embarked on a tour of theatres and opera houses in Europe and North America in support of the album, accompanied by the musicians Matmos and Zeena Parkins and an Inuit choir, whom she had held auditions for on a trip to Greenland prior to the tour.The album yielded the singles "Hidden Place", "Pagan Poetry" and "Cocoon". The album's lead single, "Hidden Place", is the only single from the album to have charted in the United States. At the time, Vespertine was Björk's quickest selling album ever, having sold two million copies by the end of 2001 and went gold in France and Canada and silver in the UK.Vespertine was widely acclaimed by music critics. Both Keith Phipps of The A.V. Club and David Fricke of Rolling Stone magazine named Vespertine Björk's best album to date. A more lukewarm review came from Pitchfork Media who thought that "While undeniably beautiful, Vespertine fails to give electronic music the forward push it received on Björk's preceding albums" and that the album "is riddled with sameness."At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100, Vespertine currently holds a rating of 88/100, indicating universal acclaim. The album is also ranked No.55 on Metacritic's 200 best-reviewed albums. It was also nominated for Best Alternative Album at the 2002 Grammy Awards.".
- Vespertine artist Bj%C3%B6rk.
- Vespertine genre Art_rock.
- Vespertine genre Downtempo.
- Vespertine genre Electronica.
- Vespertine genre Experimental_music.
- Vespertine genre Musique_concr%C3%A8te.
- Vespertine previousWork Selmasongs:_Music_from_the_Motion_Picture_Soundtrack_Dancer_in_the_Dark.
- Vespertine producer Bj%C3%B6rk.
- Vespertine producer Console_(musician).
- Vespertine producer Marius_de_Vries.
- Vespertine producer Thomas_Knak.
- Vespertine recordLabel One_Little_Indian_Records.
- Vespertine releaseDate "2001-08-27".
- Vespertine runtime "3333.0".
- Vespertine subsequentWork Greatest_Hits_(Bj%C3%B6rk_album).
- Vespertine wikiPageExternalLink index.htm.
- Vespertine wikiPageID "486995".
- Vespertine wikiPageRevisionID "605955744".
- Vespertine after "Murray Street by Sonic Youth".
- Vespertine align "right".
- Vespertine artist Björk.
- Vespertine before "Tragic Epilogue by Anti-Pop Consortium".
- Vespertine bgcolor "#c6dbf7".
- Vespertine collapsed "yes".
- Vespertine cover "BjorkVespertine.jpeg".
- Vespertine genre Art_rock.
- Vespertine genre Downtempo.
- Vespertine genre Electronica.
- Vespertine genre Experimental_music.
- Vespertine genre Musique_concrète.
- Vespertine hasPhotoCollection Vespertine.
- Vespertine headline "Japanese bonus track".
- Vespertine label One_Little_Indian_Records.
- Vespertine lastAlbum "Selmasongs".
- Vespertine length "101.0".
- Vespertine length "160.0".
- Vespertine length "244.0".
- Vespertine length "264.0".
- Vespertine length "268.0".
- Vespertine length "276.0".
- Vespertine length "279.0".
- Vespertine length "308.0".
- Vespertine length "312.0".
- Vespertine length "314.0".
- Vespertine length "328.0".
- Vespertine length "3333.0".
- Vespertine length "338.0".
- Vespertine length "405.0".
- Vespertine mc "88".
- Vespertine misc "--08-06".
- Vespertine name "Vespertine".
- Vespertine nextAlbum "Greatest Hits".
- Vespertine note "Interlude".
- Vespertine note "also available on the Family Tree box set".
- Vespertine producer Björk.
- Vespertine producer Console_(musician).
- Vespertine producer Marius_de_Vries.
- Vespertine producer Thomas_Knak.
- Vespertine quote "A word that helped me a lot making this record was "hibernation." Being internal is a form of hibernation, and I related it to winter, the sound of crystals in wintertime. That's what I wanted this album to sound like.".
- Vespertine recorded "2000".
- Vespertine released "2001-08-27".
- Vespertine rev About.com.
- Vespertine rev Alternative_Press.
- Vespertine rev Entertainment_Weekly.
- Vespertine rev Tiny_Mix_Tapes.
- Vespertine rev Uncut_(magazine).
- Vespertine rev "Allmusic".
- Vespertine rev "NME".
- Vespertine rev "Robert Christgau".
- Vespertine rev "Rolling Stone".
- Vespertine rev "The A.V. Club".
- Vespertine rev3score "8".
- Vespertine rev4score "favourable".
- Vespertine rev5score "B+".
- Vespertine rev6score "8".
- Vespertine rev7score "A−".
- Vespertine source "Björk in a interview with Metromix.com, 2001.".
- Vespertine thisAlbum "Vespertine".
- Vespertine title Cocoon_(Björk_song).
- Vespertine title Hidden_Place.
- Vespertine title Pagan_Poetry.
- Vespertine title "An Echo, a Stain".
- Vespertine title "Aurora".
- Vespertine title "Frosti".
- Vespertine title "Generous Palmstroke".
- Vespertine title "Harm of Will".
- Vespertine title "Heirloom".
- Vespertine title "It's Not Up to You".
- Vespertine title "Sun in My Mouth".
- Vespertine title "The Wire's Record of the Year".
- Vespertine title "Undo".
- Vespertine title "Unison".
- Vespertine type "Album".
- Vespertine width "30.0".
- Vespertine writer "Björk".
- Vespertine writer "Björk, Console".
- Vespertine writer "Björk, E.E. Cummings, Sigsworth".
- Vespertine writer "Björk, Guy Sigsworth".