Selmasongs: Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack Dancer in the Dark is, and is not, a
Bjoerk album. While it's filled with rampant creativity, startling emotional leaps, and breathtaking vocals and arrangements, it isn't as playful as her other albums, even 1997's relatively dark
Homogenic. Instead, it presents
Bjoerk as
Selma, her character from
Lars von Trier's
Dancer in the Dark: a Czech factory worker who is going blind but finds hope and refuge in the musicals she watches at the cinema. (
Von Trier wanted to work with
Bjoerk after seeing
Spike Jonze's musical-inspired video for
"It's Oh So Quiet.") She acts through the music she composed, performed, and produced with conductor/arranger
Vincent Mendoza and her longtime collaborators
Mark "Spike" Stent and
Mark Bell.
Selma's unsinkable optimism and tragic end are telegraphed through songs like the irrepressible, cartoonish
"Cvalda" to the sad, starry lullaby
"Scatterheart." Selmasongs' best tracks are poignant, inventive expressions of
Bjoerk's talent and
Selma's daydreams and suffering.
"In the Musicals" shows how easy it is for
Selma to slip into one of her Technicolor reveries: "There is always someone to catch me,"
Bjoerk sighs as clouds of strings, harps, and xylophones rise up to meet her.
"New World" reprises the simultaneously hopeful and ominous melody of
"Overture," adding striking vocals and shuffling, industrial beats that reflect
Selma's life in the factory as well as
Bjoerk's distinctive style.
Selmasongs also succeeds as a soundtrack, sketching in details of
Selma's story.
"I've Seen It All," a duet with
Thom Yorke, captures her stunted romance with a co-worker, while the tense
"107 Steps" takes the listener to her journey's end. Intimate and theatrical, innovative and tied to tradition,
Selmasongs paints a portrait of a woman losing her sight, but it maintains
Bjoerk's unique vision. ~ Heather Phares