Releasing her first album in Iceland at the age of eleven, Björk found fame with
alternative indie stars The Sugacubes before moving to London where she
discovered electronic music and a vibrant dance culture, which was an
inspiration for her first major solo album 'Debut' in 1993. Named NME's Album of
the Year, it was full of bouncy, eccentric club hits like 'Human Behaviour',
'Big Time Sensuality' and 'Venus As a Boy', but Björk's sound soon began to
mimic the stark, volcanic beauty of her homeland, using Inuit choirs, throat
singers and orchestras to create ethereal, ambient s...