News
22 October 2012
Vinyl Bundle Offers
Now's your last chance to grab discounted Ben Frost vinyl, but fear not - we've added a new Valgeir vinyl offer.
Since our recent Ben Frost Vinyl Bundle offers were quite the hit, we've decided to offer a similar bundle for Valgeir Sigurðsson's two vinyl releases! Head here to grab the limited vinyl bundle consisting of Valgeir's debut Ekvílibríum plus his recent Architecture Of Loss on vinyl for a discounted price.
This week will also be the final Ben Bundles week so why not save on shipping and stop by Ben's store for his bundles while you're at it?

What the press says
The music [...] can sound chill and eerie: there’s singing, echoing, rasping, crackling. At times, the piano emits single, spaced-out notes that sound like water dripping resoundingly on ice in a momentary thaw.
Arts Journal (June 21st 2012) Read all reviews
Hypnotic
New York Press (June 21st 2012) Read all reviews
Cool and haunting.
danceviewtimes (June 21st 2012) Read all reviews
A spare, melancholy, original score.
Solomons Says (June 21st 2012) Read all reviews
“…a staggeringly beautiful collection of heavyweight, noise-inflected classicist compositions….Fascinating and adventurous, we have a welcome foil to the overtly pretty side of modern classical music and a superb body of work in its own right.”
Squaler (August 22nd 2012) Read all reviews
...Sigurðsson appears to bridge the gap between the primarily electronic textures and ambience of his debut and the sweeping orchestral feel of his second album to create a vastly different set up, which intrigues and fascinates in equal measures.
The Milk Factory (September 12th 2012) Read all reviews
...brilliantly harrowing
The Wire (September 14th 2012) Read all reviews
...a gorgeous album
Erik Otis — Sound Colour Vibration (September 14th 2012) Read all reviews
...Architecture of Loss is so dense, subtly varied and even ambiguous that to try and tie it down is an exercise in futility. Best to relax and bask in the numerous moments of touching, and troubling, beauty that run through its 10 mini-suites.
The Liminal (September 17th 2012) Read all reviews
The execution of production is second to none and bears all the hallmarks of [Valgeir’s] visceral, expansive sound design across its 10 diverse and striking parts.
Boomkat (September 18th 2012) Read all reviews
For Architecture Of Loss [Valgeir’s] turned off the computer and gone straight for your heart with strings. The result is, as you can imagine, rather downbeat but delightful in ways that you’d expect from an Icelandic man with such a resume.
Drowned In Sound (September 20th 2012) Read all reviews
A mind-numbingly beautiful take on your neoclassical thing utilising piano, wonderfully evocative viola/violin and plenty of…space.
Norman Records (September 21st 2012) Read all reviews
Architecture Of Loss is moving, beautiful and thought-provoking. It commands your attention, admiration and respect, transcending the noises in the speakers, becoming something that symbolises loss and grief through the medium of music.
Larry Day — Bearded Magazine (September 21st 2012) Read all reviews
“Architecture of Loss” offers a powerful and philosophically driven narrative at once sublime and disconcerting.
Q2 (September 24th 2012) Read all reviews
An album at once lyrical and avant-garde, full and concise, epic and contemplative, melodic and noisy…
Indie Rock Mag (September 25th 2012) Read all reviews
Architecture of Loss pits gravely emotive chamber music against furtive electronic frequencies.
Brian Howe — Pitchfork (September 28th 2012) Read all reviews
Architecture of Loss is a leap forwards in sound and form for Valgeir Sigurðsson, a massively confident statement, icily beautiful. Recommended!
John Boursnell — Fluid Radio (September 30th 2012) Read all reviews
Sigurðsson has created a soundscape that is coherent, timeless, and thrilling…This album is sparse yet deeply layered, foreboding yet hopeful, dense yet melodic. It is, quite simply, beautiful, heartwarming and a masterpiece.
Jez Collins — PopMatters (December 7th 2012) Read all reviews
On Architecture Of Loss [...] Sigurðsson’s sound is even more mature, reflective and measured…As with the rest of Bedroom Community’s quality catalog, this is not an album to be missed.
Headphone Commute (December 18th 2012) Read all reviews
“...an exquisite, often programmatic work in instrumental and digital processes. Built on a ballet, the sense of movement and gesture is intact even in its sparest moments.”
Create Digital Music (December 26th 2012) Read all reviews
“...an indulgence in the best sense…Architecture of Loss lives up to its title as an aural meditation on not just loss but destabilization, an architecture coming apart.”
Ned Raggett — AllMusic (January 3rd 2013) Read all reviews
A true musical creation from one of music’s most gifted and essential modern composers.
Fractured Air (January 24th 2013) Read all reviews
I’ve fallen in love with the LP
Stereophile (February 22nd 2013) Read all reviews
Here, Sigurðsson adopts a restrained approach to the soundtrack to a particularly grave film, and he does so with great lucidity, underlying the content with powerful yet discreet touches. His greatest achievement is to manage to give the music an identity away from the images it was written for.
The Milk Factory (February 24th 2010) Read all reviews
On Draumalandid, a soundtrack for a new Icelandic environmental documentary, Valgeir Sigurðsson goes the extra mile to produce work that stands up against the best of its genre.
Brian Howe — Pitchfork (March 3rd 2010) Read all reviews
Sigurðsson’s touch is at its most precise here, crafting an emotional weight that is moving, but not overstated. With such a keen ear for composition and flow, Sigurðsson has created a score that sounds remarkably evocative of the film’s main themes, while still able to stand alone as an album. At the very least, Draumalandið is another brilliant showcase of Bedroom Community’s burgeoning potential.
Dusted Magazine (March 4th 2010) Read all reviews
“Draumalandið is a forceful and poignant piece of work, and as part of the larger film project its quite outstanding.”
Matt Poacher — The Line of Best Fit (March 16th 2010) Read all reviews
“Starting with a vocal number and ending with harrowing bombast, this soundtrack covers a lot of ground with grace…”
Greg Argo — Adequacy (June 22nd 2010) Read all reviews
“...everything about this collection of feelings, emotions and resonant creative constructions is pretty much immaculate.”
Joe Shooman — Grapevine (September 2nd 2010) Read all reviews
Alex Waxman — The Fader Magazine (May 1st 2007) Read all reviews
George Bass — god is in the tv (June 21st 2007) Read all reviews
themilkman — The Milk Factory (August 3rd 2007) Read all reviews
Boomkat — Boomkat (September 1st 2007) Read all reviews
Danny Clark — The Times (September 29th 2007) Read all reviews
Categories
Latest Releases
Baroque
Released on 18 March 2013
CD, Digital
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Drones
Released on 12 November 2012
CD, Digital
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Disquiet
Released on 5 November 2012
CD, Digital
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Forthcoming Releases
Everything Everywhere All The Time / The Whale Watching Tour
Released on 27 May 2013
DVD
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Upcoming events
Sam Amidon U.K album launch
Bush Hall
London (United Kingdom)
supporting CocoRosie
with Valgeir Sigurðsson
Huxley's Neue Welt
Berlin (Germany)
Grain Barge
with Sam Amidon
Grain Barge
Bristol (United Kingdom)
Holy Trinity Church
with Sam Amidon
Holy Trinity Church
Guildford (United Kingdom)
Kilbi Festival
with Valgeir Sigurðsson
Kilbi Bad Bonn Festival
Düdingen (Switzerland)





