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Icelandic composer, multi-instrumentalist, and producer
Ólafur Arnalds earned a reputation in the late 2000s for blending luminous neo-classical works with subtle elements of post-rock, pop, and electronic music, recording a series of highly regarded releases for the Erased Tapes label, including 2007's
Eulogy for Evolution and
...And They Have Escaped the Weight of Darkness. In addition to forming the experimental techno duo
Kiasmos with Faroese-Icelandic minimalist
Janus Rasmussen, he also branched out into film and television soundtracks, earning acclaim for his scores to the films
Another Happy Day and
Gimme Shelter as well as the BBC series Broadchurch. Meanwhile,
Arnalds continued to explore the classical world on collaborative projects like 2014's
The Chopin Project with cellist
Alice Sara Ott and an ongoing set of releases with German composer
Nils Frahm. He returned to solo work in 2018 with the experimental release
re:member.
Having begun his music career as the drummer for a series of Icelandic metal bands,
Arnalds' entry into the neo-classical field was somewhat accidental. After the German band
Heaven Shall Burn heard some solo demo material, they asked him to provide piano-and-string pieces for their 2004 album,
Antigone.
Robert Raths, founder of the newly formed Erased Tapes label, heard the album and was impressed with
Arnalds' contributions, and the label contacted
Arnalds about recording a full album of material in that vein. The life-cycle concept album
Eulogy for Evolution, released in 2007, was the result, with
Arnalds -- primarily on piano -- supported by a string quartet. A trio of EPs followed in 2008 and 2009. Also in 2009,
Arnalds formed the experimental techno duo
Kiasmos with
Janus Rasmussen of
Bloodgroup.
Kiasmos' first release was a split EP with Erased Tapes labelmate
Rival Consoles.
In 2010,
Arnalds provided the scores for the 13-minute short Blinky TM and the feature-length Órói (Jitters), and he also released
...And They Have Escaped the Weight of Darkness, his second proper album. His score for Sam Levinson's
Another Happy Day (2011) greatly increased his profile, as he continued to release works like Stare (2012) -- a collaborative EP with
Nils Frahm -- and
Kiasmos'
Thrown EP. He then began a partnership with Mercury Classics, which issued
For Now I Am Winter (2013), his first album to include vocals. Later that year,
Arnalds scored the BBC television series Broadchurch, which produced its own soundtrack. A digital download of the composer's score for Ronald Krauss' film
Gimme Shelter was released in February of 2014, followed by a physical release in April.
Kiasmos released their self-titled debut album in October of 2014. Two accompanying EPs, Swept and Looped, followed in 2015. Also that year,
Arnalds collaborated with pianist
Alice Sara Ott for
The Chopin Project on Mercury Classics. He continued collaborating with
Frahm on Erased Tapes, which issued the EPs Loon and Life Story/Love and Glory as well as the full-length Trance Frendz. All of these releases, as well as 2012 EP Stare, were compiled as the double-CD Collaborative Works. In 2016,
Arnalds issued a volume of the LateNightTales mix series. The following year saw the release of the soundtrack album
Broadchurch: The Final Chapter, which consisted of his score for the BBC series' last season.
The full-length
re:member arrived in 2018 and featured unique custom-built software called Stratus, which incorporated two semi-generative player pianos triggered by
Arnalds' own live piano playing. It debuted at number eight on Billboard's Top Heatseekers chart. The composer received an Emmy nomination for his theme to the Apple TV+ mini-series Defending Jacob in 2020. With featured spots by British musician
Bonobo (the Grammy-nominated "Loom"), Icelandic singer
JFDR, and German singer/songwriter
Josin, the intimate solo set
some kind of peace followed on Mercury KX that November. ~ Andy Kellman & Paul Simpson