Monday, March 29, 2010

Country Music from Iceland? "Lay Low" singing "By and By" at Frikirkjan in Reykjavik




I heard this young lady interviewed on National Public Radio's Weekend Edition. She has quite a voice and this song is one of the best I've heard in a while. Her music is getting more popular on iTunes and Amazon so it's likely more people will hear of her soon, although few of us are likely to be able to pronounce her real name.

(from her MySpace site biography) "LAY LOW is the alter ego of singer-songwriter Lovísa Elísabet Sigrúnardóttir, who was born in London in 1982 to an Icelandic mother and Sri Lankan father, with the family relocating to Reykjavík when she was a small child. She took piano lessons at a young age and started playing bass and guitar in her teens, performing with several local acts before joining the experimental rock band Benny Crespo's Gang adding keyboards, synthesizers….and her voice….to her musical armory.

"LAY LOW evolved in early 2006, after Lovísa was contacted by a local label showing an interest in a raw demo she had placed on MySpace that combined elements of blues, folk and country and twisted them into a fascinating new shape. Just a few short months after being discovered she had recorded and released her debut album, ‘Please Don't Hate Me’, which topped the Icelandic chart and became the bestselling original album in the country that year, getting nominated for four Icelandic Music Awards (winning three) in the process.

"Demonstrating a musical maturity beyond her years, ‘Please Don't Hate Me’ was an impressive debut, with Lovísa’s intoxicating new take on classic Americana sounds attracting much praise and her authentic and compelling live performances standing up well to the recorded versions of her songs."




“What does LAY LOW sound like to us? Like Nashville and Reykjavík aren’t 3.260 miles apart. Sigrúnardóttir strums and croons lovely, twangy tales of heartbreak and lonely nights like an Icelandic Patsy Cline in a hoodie and skinny jeans.”
– Paste Magazine

16 comments:

  1. I'm not into country music, but I'm not fazed by her ability to convincingly perform it. One of the finest "Celtic" (Irish) bands are actually from Sweden. And they "get" it. I don't know how these cross-cultural thuings are done, but hats off to those who can do them.

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  2. Talking of cross-cultural musical influences, I only found out yesterday that Norah Jones's father is Ravi Shankar. I expect eveybody else in the world knows that already, but it came as a surprise to me.

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  3. Yes, Melanie, I gather from her interview "Lay Low" had a lot of musical influences growing up---why she picked up on country-music is interesting, but I should be said, of course, that many musicians go out of their culture to find influences and styles that suit their taste. And, yes, somehow hearing the music done well in the final analysis is all that matters.

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  4. I didn't know this! I guess I need to to get out more ;-)

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  5. Bravo!

    Enjoyed that and would never have placed it as 'Country'.

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  6. I guess it's not more strange than Russian or Japanese Rock and Rollers! lol
    I wasn't really impressed with her singing, but I'm using laptop speakers. Maybe it'll sound better on real ones!

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  7. I liked that...goes to show that good music crosses culture

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  8. Hi Doug - couldn't get the video working, but assume this is the same song... and even if it isn't thanks for introducing me to this... it's great.

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  9. Thanks Jim.

    It does seem to be a bit beyond country. But I guess that's the niche the interviewer put Lay Low's musical style in--a sort of Patsy Cline-Dolly parton mash up. Doesn't sound like either one here really does it?

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  10. I think hers' is a voice that appreciates more with a speaker-system upgrade, Jacquie. The more bass the better.

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  11. Thats's true Shedrick. It's one thing we as people have in common when language and politics wedge us apart.

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  12. Glad you enjoy this song as much as me Ian. But i must say its not quite fair of you to post a better video of the song than I managed to upload ;-)

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  13. Very well put. I agree she has a very nice voice,

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  14. True Fred. And she doesn't dress weird like that other female singer from Iceland, Bjork...not that there's anything wrong with that. ;-)

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