Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 06/13/1995
After
Debut's success, the pressure was on
Björk to surpass that album's creative, tantalizing
electronic pop. She more than delivered with 1995's
Post; from the menacing,
industrial-tinged opener,
"Army of Me," it's clear that this album is not simply
Debut redux. The songs' production and arrangements -- especially those of the epic, modern fairy tale
"Isobel" -- all aim for, and accomplish, more.
Post also features
Debut producer
Nellee Hooper,
808 State's
Graham Massey,
Howie B, and
Tricky, who help
Björk incorporate a spectrum of
electronic and
orchestral styles into songs like
"Hyperballad," which sounds like a love song penned by
Aphex Twin. Meanwhile, the bristling beats on the volatile, sensual
"Enjoy" and the fragile, weightless
ballad "Possibly Maybe" nod to
trip-hop without being overwhelmed by it. As on
Debut,
Björk finds new ways of expressing timeworn emotions like love, lust, and yearning in abstractly precise lyrics like "Since you went away/I'm wearing lipstick again/I suck my tongue in remembrance of you," from
"Possibly Maybe." But
Post's emotional peaks and valleys are more extreme than
Debut's.
"I Miss You"'s exuberance is so animated, it makes perfect sense that
Ren & Stimpy's
John Kricfalusi directed the song's video. Likewise,
"It's Oh So Quiet" -- which eventually led to
Björk's award-winning turn as
Selma in
Dancer in the Dark -- is so cartoonishly vibrant, it could have been arranged by
Warner Bros. musical director
Carl Stalling. Yet
Björk sounds equally comfortable with an understated string section on
"You've Been Flirting Again." "Headphones" ends the album on an experimental, hypnotic note, layering
Björk's vocals over and over till they circle each other atop a bubbling, minimal beat. The work of a constantly changing artist,
Post proves that as
Björk moves toward more ambitious, complex music, she always surpasses herself.
~Heather Phares, All Music Guide