Muddy marching
feet and tribal drums; these are the sounds that open
"Earth Intruders," the kickoff cut from Volta,
Bjork's self-produced sixth full-length album (on
One Little Indian/Atlantic, out May 8 in the U.S.).
Partially inspired by a journey to Indonesia following
the 2005 tsunami, the song calls for humanity to rise
up and grind "skeptics into the soil." Even though pop
chart staple Timbaland produced the beats, the character
of the track, with its juxtaposition of crunchy textures and
primal vocals, is raw and elemental.
Water, too,
features prominently throughout Volta, via ambient
interludes featuring harbor sounds, rainfall, and
puffing steam engines. The earth is a mother, and so
is Bjork, voicing maternal impulses on the intimate "I
See Who You Are" and "My Juvenile." Additional
dimensions of the artist's femininity fuel other
compositions. Backed by a brass ensemble, Bjork and
Antony (of Antony and the Johnsons) pass phrases back and
forth like lovers' glances on the romantic "Dull Flame
of Desire." She plays supportive sob sister on
"Pneumonia," hurtling up scales one moment, then
quietly cooing "Get over that sorrow, girl" the next.
At the other extreme, the pummeling "Declare Independence,"
with its reiterated exhortations to "make your own flag," is
just as incendiary as anything by Le Tigre.
Like all her
records, Volta features an odd assortment of guest
stars, from experimental rock drummers to Chinese
pipa virtuoso Min Xiao-Fen and Konono No. 1, an
award-winning ensemble of "thumb piano" players from the
Congo. Yet no matter how vibrant or unusual her array
of sounds, close attention to diction ensures that the
equally compelling lyrics ("Neurosis only attaches
itself to fertile ground where it can flourish," she coos on
"Innocence") rarely get buried. By pop music standards
Bjork may be out of this world, yet this disc is
surprisingly grounded, its unique creator going to
great measures to ensure her songs extract emotional
gold from common ground.