30 January 2014

Sigur Ros-Heima and the Importance of Music That Moves You

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I have felt a bit downtrodden recently.   The normal day to day occurrences that cause us all stress, the biting cold of the winters in Rochester, whatever your gloom, it is something we can all relate to.  Some of us lose ones we love, through death or through the end of relationships, and it hurts. It takes the warmth in our chests and replaces it with an emptiness that feels as though it will never be whole again.  We could wallow in self-pity, we could get angry at ourselves, or at the situations we are in.  Or we can accept these things for what they are, and put on a Sigur Ros record.
Towards the end of next month (February 21st) the Alternative Music Film Society will be screening “Heima”.  A documentary that follows the Icelandic post-rockers back to their homeland to play a series of shows for free, some in fields that look like they were pulled right out of middle earth, some in old defunct bomb shelters, some in the middle of a village.  They decided to go home and remind themselves and their countrymen that they knew where they came from.  I would highly recommend attending this film.  It is life changing.
I can still remember the first time I ever heard Sigur Ros. It was almost 6 years ago now.  I was driving down Norton St. heading towards the 590 on-ramp. This was right after the girl I had been dating for close to a year called me, to tell me she had met someone else.  Cliché?  Incredibly.  However, this is an integral part of the story.  My body felt devoid of feeling.  I felt incredibly alone, betrayed, and confused.  The CD in my car had a mix of songs I had never heard, songs that my older, wiser cousin Pat had recommended to me.  To this day he has never steered me wrong when it comes to music.  He had been telling me about this Icelandic band I had never heard of, and how it would literally change the way I looked at the world, and the way I thought about music. 
I put in the mix CD and turned the volume all the way up (the way you do as a 19 year old whose heart has just been broken).  I heard the first few notes slowly fade in, an ambient wash of bells, reverb drenched guitars and glockenspiel.  It grew and grew, and as I saw the sun over the peak of the hill, the most beautiful piano melody that (to this day) I have ever heard embraced me in its gorgeous intervals.  The song (which I would later discover was called “Hoppipolla”) made this metaphorical light inside me grow, and slowly warm my chest, my hands, and my face.  I felt tears rolling down my cheeks, unrelated to the “heartbreak” I had just experienced.  For a moment I felt as though I was floating.  I felt this huge wall of beautiful sounds lifting me from my seat, and placing me in a world that was devoid of anything ugly or morose.  The song reached its climax and then dropped to just a layer of ambience and a lead vocal line.  The vocalist sang a string of words I couldn’t understand, “Og ég fæ blóðnasir. En ég stend alltaf upp.” At that moment it didn’t matter that I didn’t understand the language, I connected to it.  As the vocal phrase finished, the enormous wave of sound returned more triumphant than before.  I felt goose-bumps form on my arms, I let the unbidden tears flow, I was one with everything.  As an army of trumpets took over the vocal melody I turned onto the 590 ramp, felt the sun’s warmth on my face and smiled through the tears.  I knew someone had felt exactly as I did that very moment, and had captured it in this song.  I knew this was a pivotal moment in my life.  I knew I would never forget it.
Last week, the relationship I had been in for 3 years ended abruptly.  All the emotions I thought I had experienced and understood came back like a storm.  I couldn’t bring myself to get in my car that day.  I walked to work in the snow.  I wanted to feel something, even if it wasn’t pleasant, and as my iTunes shuffle began, the quiet build I now knew well, “Hoppipola” swept me away, and once again I smiled through the tears, through all the pain that I felt inside, and I let it wash over me again. As empty as I felt, as cold as I was, and bitter as that winter morning’s frozen kiss on my cheeks felt, I let the warmth return to me.  I felt at peace.
I know this isn’t my typical blog post.  I apologize to those of you expecting my normal semi-sarcastic-analytical-run-on-sentence laden post.  I am sorry to bear my soul, but in order to understand how powerful the music that Sigur Ros makes is, it needed to be contextualized.  I hope that anyone that is feeling hollow, or broken, or cold can take the same feeling of unbridled joy and sheer awe that I did from Sigur Ros.  My cousin was right.  Sigur Ros changed the way I looked at music.  They changed the way I saw the world.  On the 1 in 7 billion chance that someone from Sigur Ros is reading this, I want to say this...I don’t know your reasons, I don’t know your inspiration, I can’t speak your language, but you have given me something that I will never be without.  You have given me hope, and I will share it with anyone who will listen. 

If you can attend our screening of Sigur Ros’ “Heima” on 2/21/14 I suggest you do so.  It is truly a touching testament to a band who does it for all the right reasons.  If you can’t make it, and want to check them out, come in and see us at Lakeshore, we have their whole discography on CD and vinyl, most of which you will find no where else.  And thank you everyone who read this.  It was very therapeutic, and if nothing else, even if you never agree with my recommendations, I hope that there is music that moves you on this level.  Everyone deserves to have hope.
Listen to "Hoppipolla" By Sigur Ros

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