Robyn
|
| List Price: | $13.98 |
| Price: | $12.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
86 new or used available from $1.98
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Curriculum Vitae
- Konichiwa Bitches
- Cobrastyle
- Handle Me
- Bum Like You
- Be Mine!
- With Every Heartbeat - with Kleerup
- Who's That Girl
- Bionic Woman
- Crash And Burn Girl
- Robotboy
- Eclipse
- Should Have Know
- Any Time You Like
- Dream On
- Handle Me - RedOne Remix - Cherrytree Bonus Track
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #5892 in Music
- Released on: 2008-04-29
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Extra tracks
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
2007 UK pressing of the Swedish diva's self-titled album. Although she has been recording for more than a decade, her musical reinvention at the turn of the millennium has increased her profile worldwide. The critically acclaimed album features 15 tracks including the singles 'Konichiwa Bitches' and ‘With Every Heartbeat’. Island.
Amazon.co.uk
Robin Carlsson--better known as Robyn, the diminutive Swedish fireball who scored a hit with 1997’s "Show Me Love"--has slowly but surely made her mark as an international R & B queen. Robyn, her fourth album, is arguably her strongest statement to date, jam-packed with sassy, streetwise lyrics and an array of novel beats and songs. Tracks like "Be Mine" and the playful, upbeat "Konichiwa Bitches" are instant, immaculate pop gems, while "With Every Heartbeat"--which boasts a Royksopp-esque melancholy, sidereal bleeps and rousing strings--is much more dance than R & B. "Who's That Girl" (produced by The Knife) rides an infectious electroclash groove; "Crash and Burn Girl" is a cheerful take on disco; while "Bum Like Me" and "Should Have Known" (which owes a conspicuous debt to Prince) are shiny slower jams that warn against getting hurt by time-wasting men. With the exception of "Eclipse" and "Anytime You Like", Robyn is a delightfully upbeat album, cementing Robyn’s reputation as a kick-ass pop diva with some seriously deadly Ninja moves. --Danny McKenna
About the Artist
She is Robyn. The most killingest pop star on the planet. A pint-sized atom bomb dosed to the hilt on electric and dispensing wisdom in three-minute modernist pop bulletins on the post-adolescent condition. `Robyn' is also a collection of ultra-concise pop moments - that rarest of things, a classic pop album. It's a sad-eyed, super-strong battery of nuclear-powered pop that, along with her arresting voice, are her lethal weapons.
Robin Miriam Carlsson was born in Stockholm in 1979. She spent the first seven years of her life touring with her director father and actress mother in their Constructivist-inspired theatre company. At the age of 14 she was discovered by Swedish pop singer Meja when singing a sad, self-written song about her parents' divorce in a school workshop and was immediately signed to BMG. A debut album of R&B-influenced pop in 1995 saw her paired with future Britney-hitwrangler Max Martin, and the global success of the sweet, soulful single `Show Me Love' in 1997 cemented Robyn as an bonified pop star. Shellshocked by the lack of artistic control offered by her label, however, Robyn migrated to a sister company for her third album, but felt disillusioned by their attempt to ship her to America to be shoehorned into the pre-fabricated boy-toy template that was depressingly omnipotent in 2002.
"I think the third record I made was a big compromise," she says. "I felt like it wasn't fun anymore. Once you make the record and you give it to the record company, it's not your record anymore! And I hated that situation. "I was going backwards. I wasn't doing what I wanted to."
In 2003, Robyn returned home, defeated, to Stockholm. Upon returning, she stumbled across a new CD by a mysterious local brother-sister duo. The CD, titled `Deep Cuts', was a passionate, hallucinatory reading of pop music carved from geometric blocks of pure texture. Karin Dreijer Andersson and Olof Dreijer called themselves The Knife, and with `Deep Cuts' they had sketched a blueprint for a kind of abstract future pop. "I was amazed by it," gasps Robyn. "I thought it was the best thing I'd heard in years. I just felt like wow this is really what I've always been looking for - and not only was it good, it was Swedish."
Energised by the potential atom-splitting that could occur if she harnessed her own piercingly honest pop to The Knife's uncompromising, peculiarly Swedish energy source, Robyn approached Karin and Olof to work on a potential single. The result was `Who's That Girl' - unquestionably one of the freshest pop moments of the past five years. Injecting herself into the very heart of The Knife's towering, architectural synthpop - a shifting, interlocking grid of color and beats, hard enough to break your fists on - Robyn emptied all of her frustration, insecurity and desperation. The lyrics, specifically, railed against her contractual purgatory, but `Who's That Girl's loaded despair resonates powerfully with anyone - any girl left beaten by the capriciousness of gender or image politics. In the song, Robyn soars. Her anger is rocket fuel for the titanium-strong music which encases her, projects her, makes her indestructible. Although Robyn had always written songs, this stark piece of brutalist pop should be considered The First Robyn Song. Unbelievably, her label hated it. "They just thought it was weird," sighs Robyn. "They just didn't understand it. I guess they didn't consider it to be pop music, which I think is crazy. It's TOTALLY pop music! Modern, inventive music - that's what pop music should try to be."
Exasperated to the point of resignation, Robyn looked to how her new comrades Karin and Olof self-financed and released their work. In a completely unprecedented move for a mainstream pop artist, Robyn bought herself off her label. "So then I was free but I was not really happy to go back and sign with a major label again. It was totally illogical. Why would I do that? I felt like either I quit making music or I start my own record company." Six months later, Robyn was CEO and founder of Konichiwa Records. In her back pocket she had `Who's That Girl', the opening song for a new album that would be her story. She also had a new sidekick. Klas Åhlund is the main man behind Teddybears, Stockholm's amazing bricolage pop group who have variously been fronted by Annie and Neneh Cherry, Iggy Pop and Mad Cobra. "I'd never thought we were gonna work together, cos what Teddybears do is... boy music." Robyn giggles. "I didn't think he could embrace a girl perspective." Nevertheless, the first thing Klas brought to the Konichiwa table was the basic frame for a song depicting intense unrequited love, that Robyn would color in with every kind of craving. In `Be Mine!,' every word that Robyn sings - `It's a good thing tears never show in the pouring rain/As if a good thing ever can make up for all the pain' - sounds like it's being crumpled up and clutched to her chest. In the bridge, the `song' just falls clean away, leaving a spoken word Polaroid that chews at your heart: "I saw you at the station. You had your arm around whatsername. She had on that scarf I gave you, and you got down to tie her laces. You looked happy - and that's great. I just miss you, that's all."
"I wanted to feel like I was 15 or 16 again, and big emotions were REALLY BIG. Y'know, if you were in love you were IN LOVE and if you were heartbroken you were HEARTBROKEN! "Cos that's what people want music to be for them," explains Robyn. "I know I do when I listen to music."
The sparse production to `Be Mine!' makes its simplicity all the more brutal. Just strings that slice in, all gasps and sighs, and a flutter of drum machine that emulates a racing pulse. "I still wanted to write pop music," affirms Robyn. "I wanted it to be simple, I wanted it to be sparse, and I wanted it to be hard."
Robyn may now be the kickingest label CEO around, but she was out on a limb here. A lifetime's earnings had been ploughed into a dream. The conflict of liberation and anxiety about the project, as well as galvanizing Robyn, seemed to polarize her character. One half of `Robyn' is all hip-thrusting-fuck-you-cool, but in the gentle suite of ballads that wind everything down there is a smaller, sadder Robyn. "I'm a Gemini maybe that's what it is!" she exclaims. "Because I am this very outgoing person people think that I'm always sure what I'm gonna do, which I'm not! I always question myself! The perfect example is `Konichiwa Bitches'. That song was made because I was so scared! I was like ARGH what am I DOING? I had to like bang my chest and go RAR! I'm the shit! I'm the best girl in the world!" `Konichiwa Bitches' is Robyn's signature tune. Over pixellated hip-pop beats, Robyn unloads like a manga Missy Elliott. Its biggest inspiration was Bugs Bunny, and the way he'd totally front on Yosemite Sam with big-ass ACME boxing gloves. Robyn describes it as "a concentrate of attitude. It's like a baby ninja! Like really dangerous but really small and cute! It's like a child with a huge machine gun." It kicks your face. It's Robyn.
What `Robyn' really represents is the story of one ass-kicking little blonde woman who blasted through the industry b.s. and made a startling, profound, honest pop music all of her own. It is music with one message - Be your own star.
Customer Reviews
She's A Great Vocalist, But Slightly Arrogant.
When comparing it to the Robyn of the past she's almost unrecognisable, she is a woman with a great voice and an ear for innovation. With this album, it has some amazing tracks such as "Bum Like You" and "With Every Heartbeat" in these tracks she displays just exactly why we fell in love with her music in the first place. It was original, yet she didn't go insane with trying to sound so different that she actually sounded much the same of other such musicians.
There is a gripe I have with Robyn and this album, however, and that's it spews musical arrogance. She's insisting upon her own talent and saying to the world "Look I'm a great singer and I can rap too" but the response I have to that is no, Robyn you can't rap and it actually makes you sound ridiculous. I've always had a problem with British or other European artists thinking they can rap by using very Americanised words. She's so confident in her apparent rapping abilities that she's managed to destroy what had the potential to be album of the year.
Skipping songs along the same lines as "Konichiwa Bitches" in which she displays her rapping "Talent", this is actually a very good easy listening album.
It's Good, But It's Arrogant
Now don't get me wrong, I like this album; it's got some really good songs, but I can't help but feel there's a certain arrogance in her music. The main problem I have with the album as a whole is the attempt at giving us a diverse sounding album. We're given such good songs like "Bum Like You" and "Every Heart Beat." They're great, but then they're canceled out by Robyn's attempt at "rapping" in songs like "Konichiwa Bitches" and "Cobrastyle." Listening to her attempt at putting on an American rap style voice to deliver such childish lyrics, make me bow my head in shame.
This isn't right and really destroys what could have been a 5 star album for me. It saddens me to give it 4 but there you go. If you like Robyn's past work, then I promise you will love this. And hell, maybe you'll even enjoy her rapping, I certainly didn't.
Always keepin it simple!
WOW! her sound is beyond amazing!!!!great artist and there music is always under appreciated!




