Voltaic (Deluxe Limited Edition) (2xCD+2xDVD)
Deluxe limited edition double CD/DVD format! The Voltaic DVD contains highlights of Bjork's visually dazzling Volta tour, full of on-your-feet moments, filmed in Paris and Reykjavik. Also includes a CD of remixes of Volta album tracks by such fellow travelers as Spank Rock, Simian Mobile Disco, Ratatat and Modeselektor, plus a second DVD of Volta video clips, including Michel Gondry's take on "Declare Independence," set in a drab factory, that manages to reach a colorful, hopeful conclusion - a revolution meant to be televised.
"This relentless restlessness liberates me," Bjork declares on "Wanderlust" from her 2007 studio album, Volta, which is also the dramatic concluding track of her new Voltaic live CD. "I feel at home whenever the unknown surrounds me."
Volta had been designed, Bjork has said, as a journey, with the sound of fog horns and clanging bells linking individual tracks and artists from around the world making guest appearances, including Congolese band Konono No.1, Malian kora player Toumani Diabate, pipa virtuoso Wu Man, beat-master Timbaland, Lightning Bolt drummer Brian Chippendale and sublime chanteur Antony Hegarty. The New York Times called it "a 21st-century assemblage of the computerized and the handmade, the personal and the global."
Voltaic, then, is a remarkable, multi-media document of what happened after the record was completed, a journey of a different sort as the ever-evolving singer assembeld her live band, made a collection of typically amazing videos and one-step-ahead remixes, and toured the world for tour years, making headline appearances at diverse venues and large festivals, including Glastonbury, Coachella and even Harlem's Apollo Theatre. She recorded the Voltaic live CD in one take at Olympic Studio in London with her new band, prior to her 2007 Glastonbury appearance, presenting the set she would play on tour - songs from Volta and new arrangements of such older material as "Pagan Poetry," "All is Full of Love" and a thunderous version of "Army of Me." It's a stunning performance, featuring cutting-edge computer technology, an old-school horn section and a female, flag-toting Iceland choir - "bursting with raw life," to paraphrase The Independent's description of Volta.