ÁTTA

by 
AlbumJun 16 / 202310 songs, 56m 37s97%
Ambient Chamber Music Modern Classical
Popular Highly Rated

The Icelandic avant-rock outfit Sigur Rós has been making music, in various arrangements, for nearly 30 years. Their debut full-length *Von* came out in 1997, and their breakthrough album *Ágætis byrjun* arrived two years later. The second project was the first to feature multi-instrumentalist Kjartan Sveinsson, who, despite departing the group 15 years later, has always been seen as a critical piece of the magic. After their surprisingly dark and dissonant 2013 album *Kveikur*, the band took a break, focusing on personal projects and personal lives. But a series of casual jam sessions—from Iceland’s Sundlaugin to London’s Abbey Road—reignited their creative spark and resulted in *ÁTTA*, their first album in 10 years. The project, a collaboration with conductor Robert Ames and the London Contemporary Orchestra, is full of sweeping, mystical soundscapes that mirror the majestic vistas of the group’s home country. Although there is a lingering sense of apocalyptic foreboding—very likely a nod to climate-disaster-related doom—most of these songs are imbued with hope. “Gold,” a meditative vocal number bathed in pastel tones, seems to surround you, wide and warm, like arms in an embrace. “Andrá,” glacial and glowing, is practically a hymnal. Even the more mournful songs (“Skel,” “Mór,” and “Fall” are three) feel affectionate and tender—more like bittersweet love songs than sounds of alarm. For a band that has long been openly weary about the state of the world—a rage captured vividly on their last studio record—this project feels like a deep, cathartic breath, a tribute to the magnificent beauty that remains.

376

7.2 / 10

After a decade, the Icelandic band returns with an album of minimal music performed maximally, along with a 41-piece orchestra, climate despair, and Jónsi’s inimitable vocals.

4 / 10

Without a drummer but with an old friend back in the line-up, the post-rock pioneers return with a surprise record, their best since 2005's 'Takk'

8.4 / 10

ÁTTA, Icelandic post-rock group Sigur Rós' first album in 10 years, arrives with the help of an orchestra that helps their sound grow even more massive. Read our review here.

8 / 10

It's been a long decade since the last full-length album from Sigur Rós. They've kept busy enough during the 10 years following 2013's Kveik...

8 / 10

Has it really been so long…? Pre-match hype bills ‘ÁTTA’ as the first new album from Sigur Rós in almost a decade, and a quick check on streaming reveals

Read MOJO’s verdict on the new Sigur Rós album, Átta

With ambient strings and language-less vocals to the fore, the Icelandic art-rockers’ first album in a decade is in danger of washing right over you

8.2 / 10

ÁTTA' By Sigur Rós album review by Greg Walker. The Icelandic trio's full-length drops on August 16th via BMG Records and DSPs

75 %

Album Reviews: Sigur Rós - Átta

85 %

3.4 / 5

Sigur Ros - ÁTTA review: Attantion please

The Icelanders distil their already intense sound into yet purer variants. New msuic review by Joe Muggs