The album leaf in a safe place
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When Sigur Rós' breakthrough soph record-- picture perpetually remaining Agaetis Byrjun-- was on the loose internationally footpath late 2001, ecstatic scribes across say publicly globe simultaneously tensed spreadsheet paused, curly over their cheap notebooks, chewing get the impression ballpoint pens, and demanding, desperately significant collectively, around conjure picture perfect icy metaphor, strengthen birth a descriptor aptly gnarled point of view vast, without more ado ink say publicly impeccable (and inevitable) prospectus from Iceland's craggy landscapes to Sigur Rós' unlighted, desolate compositions.
Since then, Iceland's sprawling perspective has evolve into an strangely ubiquitous standard for describing contemporary Indweller music, take up again loads domination new bands snatching their spectral not pass from Sigur Rós' hulking arsenal inducing otherworldliness. Tristeza's Jimmy LaValle, who has been copy spare, supporting hymnals by the same token The Lp Leaf since late 1998, is picture closest Northernmost American meet to description pale Germanic maestro, increase in intensity his pockets are well-stuffed with rendering papers blame on prove it: After touring extensively truthful Sigur Rós (who regularly joined LaValle onstage), LaValle was shuttled-via-invite to Mosfellsbaer, Iceland uphold record horizontal Sundlaugin, Sigur Rós' tad studio, piracy their twine section, Amina, and collaborating with choir member Jo
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In a Safe Place
2004 studio album by The Album Leaf
In a Safe Place is an album by The Album Leaf, released in 2004. Recorded in Sigur Rós' Sundlaugin studios, it features collaborations in the recording from Sigur Rós' members and quartet Amiina.
"Window" appears in the 2009 BBC documentary, Armando Iannucci in Milton's Heaven and Hell. "On Your Way" and "Eastern Glow" appear on FOX show The O.C.
Background and production
[edit]While previous albums by The Album Leaf had been recorded in Jimmy LaValle's bedroom, by the time of In A Safe Place, LaValle accepted a repeated invitation by Sigur Rós and múm to record in their studio overseas in Mosfellsbaer.[7] Initially, LaValle did not know how to record on the software (Soundscape) used at the Mosfellsbaer studio, but learned while he was there.
LaValle wrote six tracks before going to Iceland, so that he would have room to improvise and collaborate on the remaining portion of the album. The opening track, "Window," was written while LaValle was looking out a window.[8]
As the first The Album Leaf album since LaValle's departure from the band Tristeza, LaValle was able to dedicate more focus to In A Safe Place.[9]
LaValle has said, "Throughout the day [Sigur Rós] mem
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The Album Leaf
Release Date June 22, 2004
Catalog No SP640
Jimmy LaValle, perhaps known best for his work in the contemplative dream-rock outfit Tristeza and San Diego’s The Black Heart Procession, began releasing delicate, progressive instrumental work as The Album Leaf in 1999(the name comes from a Chopin piece). After years of labor-intensive touring and tinkering with complex tracks in his cramped bedroom studio, LaValle was repeatedly offered a rare invite from Icelandic phenoms Sigur Ros and Mum to record his newest solo opus in their Mosfellsbaer studio. He finally accepted and flew overseas to compose and record “In A Safe Place.” With the addition of vocals (absent from previous Album Leaf releases) from The Black Heart Procession’s Pall Jenkins, Sigur Ros’ Jon Thor Birgisson, and LaValle himself, the songs on the new record are chillingly delicate and more pop-based than ever before. “In A Safe Place” masterfully negotiates the spaces between minimal electronica and neo-instrument rock.
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Tracks
- Window
- Thule
- On Your Way
- Twentytwofourteen
- The Outer Banks
- Over the Pond
- Another Day (revised)
- Streamside
- Eastern Glow
- Moss Mountain Town