Singer/songwriter issues otherworldy songs from his own private island
Despite having been recorded on Gotland, the windswept Swedish island that was the final refuge for famously bleak film director Ingmar Bergman, The Singer is not an album carved solely from existential angst. Teitur Lassen shares with the late auteur a gift for penetrating slice-of-life vignettes and meditative landscapes that only reveal their deeper truths after repeated exposure and time in mind. Following Káta Hornið, his third studio album and first totally performed in the language of his native Faroe Islands, Teitur writes songs with clever turns of phrase and quirky metaphors that wouldn’t likely occur to someone fed on a lifetime of English clichés.
While he’s certainly a poet, Teitur is foremost a pop craftsman, something that’s occasionally obscured by his favoring of minimalist strings, hushed backing harmonies and pulsating horn sections. His strengths become more obvious on the giddily twee “Catherine the Waitress” and the romantic, softly galloping “The Girl I Don’t Know,” two tracks that build easily accessible bridges from an album that clearly inhabits its own island.
Listen to Teitur's "The Singer" performed live:

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