AVAILABILITY 
          Obtainable direct from www.touch.demon.co.uk 
        
The back catalogue of the visionary Touch label, for 
          those not familiar with it, represents a broad church, ranging from 
          improv giant Evan Parker, via the Nordic ambient of Biosphere and guitar 
          acoustics of founder member of Genesis Antony Phillips, to ex-Cabaret 
          Voltaire member and BBC wildlife recordist Chris Watson. Couple this 
          with Mike Harding's and Jon Wozencroft's impeccable design tastes and 
          comparisons with ECM are, to these eyes and ears, not far wide of the 
          mark (maybe with a bit of Antony H. Wilson's original Factory thrown 
          in!). Jóhann Jóhannsson's Englabörn is both 
          typical, in its eclecticism, and atypical, in its immediacy, of the 
          label's output. It is also a worthy successor to Touch's previous venture 
          into Icelandic soundtrack music, Hilmar Örn Hilmarrsson's magnificent 
          Children of Nature. 
        
 
        
The disc begins and ends with its only vocal pieces, 
          computerised/vocoded realisations of words, Odi et amo, written 
          by Roman poet Catullus. What comes between is very much in keeping with 
          this. The music is plaintive, highly melodic and deeply affecting. In 
          Sálfræðingur it really takes flight rhythmically, 
          with muted hunting horns in attendance, whereas Bað must 
          be the sound of icicles melting in Spring. Englabörn - tilbrigði, 
          in contrast, could be the finest film score short Michael Tippett never 
          wrote. The Eþos String Quartet are the constant presence in this 
          recording and they interact completely organically with the composer 
          and gifted percussionist Mathías M.D. Hemstock. In "Ég 
          átti Gráa æsku", the musical backdrop is reminiscent 
          of Alan Stivell's essential Au-delà des Mots and even 
          Howard Shore's Breakdown of the Fellowship (Lord of the Rings 
          OST)! 
        
 
        
Although this recording may appear short on time, it 
          is a supremely distilled offering and contains more of value than many 
          discs almost twice the length. If you like the music of Jan Garbarek, 
          cellist David Darling, Arvo Pärt's more intimate moments, Terry 
          Riley, Roger Eno (especially Between Tides) etc. then you will 
          love this record. A work of modest and thoughtful beauty, like the nation 
          that spawned it; though the vitriolic potency of the compatriot music 
          of, say, Jon Leifs, might suggest otherwise it is hard not to relate 
          this humility to the awe experienced in respect of the primal, natural 
          setting of its genesis. If you have ever been to the Icelandic interior, 
          you will know exactly what I mean, if not then read the liner notes 
          by Manfred Eicher for Garbarek's Officium (the next best thing). 
        
 
        
Jóhann Jóhannsson is another great discovery 
          for Touch and living proof that there is a third stream operating within 
          contemporary composition which eschews both the bland and the wilfully 
          uninviting. Superb.
 
          Neil Horner