
Sigur Rós release new single "Stendur æva"
Sigur Rós are back with "Stendur æva", the second track to be lifted from the Icelandic group's new album Odin’s Raven Magic.
"Stendur æva" follows last month's lead single "Dvergmál", and features vocals from Jónsi and Steindór Andersen.
The orchestral and choral arrangements were largely put together by former bandmate Kjartan Sveinsson and amiina's Maria Huld Markan Sigfúsdóttir.
Sigur Rós' new LP was created out of Hilmarsson's fascination with medieval Icelandic literature, specifically a poem called Hrafnagaldur Óðins, which roughly translates to Odin's Raven Magic. The tale is named after the Norse god Odin's two ravens. The poem was said to be a fabrication back in 1867 by Norweigian scholar Sophus Bugge, but scholars restored it as an official addition to the Edda (two Icelandic manuscripts that are the sources of Norse mythology and Skáldic poetry) in 2002.
Hilmarsson says of Hrafnagaldur Óðins, "Hrafnagaldur Óðins has lots of interpretation and implications that fire up the imagination… It’s a very visual poem, with images all about falling down, and a world freezing from north to south. It was an apocalyptic warning. Perhaps the people of the time felt it in their skins. Today, of course, Iceland is involved in environmental issues surrounding hydro-electric power and the destruction of the highlands. We are being warned again."
The band first recorded an orchestral take on the Icelandic poem for the Reykjavik Arts Festival in 2002.
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