Worm
Is Green started as the bedroom electronica
project
of Arni Asgeirsson, who soon enlisted
longtime friends from his hometown
of Akranes, Iceland (population 5,500)
to flesh out his melodic soundscapes.
Solidifying into a group, Worm Is
Green began recording the songs that
would become Automagic, released overseas
last year on Iceland's Thule Musik
(home of Mum and The Funerals) and
now available in the U.S. on The Arena
Rock Recording Co.
Critically
praised throughout Europe, Automagic
is a wondrous album that pairs Asgeirsson's
intricate sound constructions with
a potent rhythm section and the haunting,
otherworldly vocals of Gudridur Ringsted.
Her ethereal singing peppers a record
that flits between ambient dream pop
and slightly menacing electro-organic
music with beats.
Ringsted
shines brightest on a risky cover
of Joy Division's beloved "Love
Will Tear Us Apart," a dramatically
different take on a classic that was
recorded as a request from Thule Musik's
owner. "He wanted to hear a chillout
version with female vocals,"
Asgeirsson notes. "The result
was very surprising, and everybody
liked it, so we decided to put it
alongside the other tracks we'd previously
recorded for Automagic
."
Elsewhere, Worm Is Green focus on
creating their own memorable songs,
starting in Asgeirsson's bedroom,
and in one case, at his grandfather's
jewelry shop, where he recorded samples
of Icelandic stones rubbing together
and turned them into beats. Once the
original ideas are in place, the musicians
craft the songs in the studio. While
the band's music has dark overtones,
a sense of humor comes across in songs
like "The Robot Has Got The Blues,"
and in the quirky melodic turns of
the aquatic "Walk Thru."
"We
take our work seriously, but the humor
is what keeps us together," says
Asgeirsson.
This
playfulness carries over into the
band's own description of its hard
to peg sound. Jonsson once told a
Finnish TV interviewer, "We are
like Lionel Richie. Only newer. And
not with the Commodores.
"
Perhaps, but a more apt comparison
is to British new wave and pop, Factory
and 4AD bands, even Portishead. That's
all for others to ponder, though,
while Worm Is Green stay trained on
the future. Automagic earned them
a nomination for best new act in Iceland's
music awards, and the band was still
jelling as the record came together.
Now with a few years of experience
both in the studio and on stage, the
musicians are on a mission to develop
their sound further. Plans include
adding more vocals and touring extensively.
"We
consider our live show being our greatest
aspect," says Asgeirsson. "We
deliver electronic music in a new
way, with a live drummer, vocals,
bass player and two synth maniacs.
It's very chilled out and laid back,
but everything is possible. We've
played shows more reminiscent of Nine
Inch Nails than Worm Is Green.
"
Until you get a chance to see Worm
Is Green live, check out Automagic,
a record that aligns the band with
Iceland's skewed geniuses (Bjork,
Sigur Ros) and incorporates sounds
that conjure up images of purple sunsets,
jagged cliffs and stark landscapes.
However, as Asgeirsson puts it, "We
aren't really walking on glaciers
on an everyday basis."
Arni
Teitur Asgeirsson- Programming &
Synthesizer
Bjarni Thor Hannesson- Sampler &
Synthesizer
Thorsteinn Hannesson- Drums
Vilberg Hafsteinn Jonsson- Bass Gudridur
Ringsted- Vocals |