%0 Journal Article %T Sigur R車s's Heima: An Icelandic Psychogeography %A Tony Mitchell %J Transforming Cultures %D 2009 %I %X This paper examines the sonic geography of the Icelandic ambient rock group Sigur R車s with particular reference to their documentary film Heima, which documents a tour the group made of remote places in their home country. Known for causing some people to faint or burst into tears during their concerts, Sigur R車s*s music could be said to express sonically both the isolation of their Icelandic location and to induce a feeling of hermetic isolation in the listener through the climactic and melodic intensity of their sound. This is distinguished by lead guitarist J車nsi Birgisson*s falsetto vocals and Gibson Les Paul guitar played through reverb with a well-resined cello bow, heavily amplified drums, and the use of various types of keyboards, including church organ, minimally emphatic bass, and an all-female string section called Anima who play instruments such as xylophone, celeste, a glass of water, a musical saw and a laptop. Singing both in Icelandic and an invented language called Hopelandic (vonlenska), J車nsi, who is gay and blind in one eye, channels a striking form of glossolalia in his vocals which links the group*s music to ambient rock predecessors such as the Cocteau Twins and Dead Can Dance. As Edward D. Miller has stated, &Glossolalia reveals the tension between voice and signification, and exposes the communicativeness of sounds itself. The casual listener to Sigur R車s easily becomes an involved one. S/he is listening to made up words and in accepting the meaning of their arrangement in a melody, imagines what the lyrics might mean. This dual dynamic creates a strong emotional correspondence between the band and its listener* (2003: 8). The group acknowledges a strong degree of Icelandic animism in their music 每 they have referred to &the presence of mortality* in the Icelandic landscape, and their links to stories, sagas, magic and ritual in a remote country where &the majority of the population believes in elves and power spots # the invisible world is always with us* (Young 2001:33). In their music they create geomorphic soundscapes which transport the active listener into an imaginary world. As bass player Georg Holm, who is demophobic, has stated, &we provide the colours and the frame and you paint the picture* (Zuel 2005). This paper mobilises Barthes* &jouissance*, Michael Bull*s work on personal stereos, and Daniel Grimley*s work on music and Nordic identity along with various notions of musical affect to discuss relations between Sigur R車s*s music, arctic landscape and its resonances outside Scandinavia. %K music %K culture %K place %U http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/TfC/article/view/1072