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Cornucopia (concert tour)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Concert tour and theatrical production by Björk
Cornucopia
Tour byBjörk
Official poster for Cornucopia, designed by Tobias Gremmler andM/M Paris
Associated albums
Start dateMay 6, 2019 (2019-05-06)
End dateDecember 5, 2023 (2023-12-05)
No. of shows
  • 18 in North America
  • 21 in Europe
  • 4 in Oceania
  • 2 in Asia
  • 45 total
Björk concert chronology
Wikimedia Commons has media related toBjörk's Cornucopia.

Cornucopia (also calledBjörk's Cornucopia) was the tenthconcert tour and first theatrical production by Icelandic singer and songwriterBjörk. Debuting as aresidency show on eight non consecutive nights atManhattan'sThe Shed culture center, it was one of the first shows being performed at the venue, which was inaugurated in April 2019.[1] Concepted upon Björk's ninth studio album,Utopia (2017), it is directed byArgentine film directorLucrecia Martel, and was described as the singer's "most elaborate stage concert yet."[2]

The show featured several digital visuals created by media artist Tobias Gremmler, while Chiara Stephenson provided the stage design, which was made to resemblefungi. Onstage, Björk was backed byThe Hamrahlid Choir, an Icelandic 50-people choir, which would also open the show. The live band included a 7-pieceflute ensemble, aharpist, apercussion section,electronics and also a number ofbespoke instruments, which were implemented in thesurround sound stage design. Björk requested areverb chamber to feature onstage, in which she could sing before technical equipments, to mimic the way she usually composes her music. Björk and the band wore dresses byBalmain'sOlivier Rousteing andIris van Herpen.[3] A speech bySwedishclimate activistGreta Thunberg was projected onstage as an interlude before the encore.[4]

The performances were praised by critics, who lauded the singer's performance and the overall production of the show. Tickets for Cornucopia sold out quickly after going on sale.[5] In 2025, anaccompanying concert film directed byÍsold Uggadóttir, documenting theLisbon show, was premiered onApple TV+ in a shortened version before getting released to theaters worldwide.

Background and concept

[edit]
Björk performing atVictoria Park inLondon on May 27, 2018, during theAll Points East Festival.

On 27 May 2018, Björk kicked off herUtopia tour in London[6] after performing two dress rehearsals in her hometown of Reykjavik.[7] The tour lasted throughout the summer and hit many European music festivals, ending in Rome on 30 July 2018.[8]

On 12 November 2018, Björk announced her new theatrical production / concert tour Cornucopia atThe Shed, a new performing arts venue opening in Manhattan'sHudson Yards neighborhood in the Spring of 2019. She described it as her "most elaborate stage concert yet, where the acoustic and digital will shake hands, encouraged by a bespoke team of collaborators". On the musical side, these collaborators include the seven member female Icelandic flute ensemble Viibra, percussionistManu Delago, harpist Katie Buckley, andBergur Þórisson on electronics, all of whom performed on Björk's 2018 Utopia tour. The show will be directed by Lucrecia Martel with stage design by Chiara Stephenson and digital visual design by Tobias Gremmler. The creative team for Cornucopia is rounded out by Margrét Bjarnadóttir (choreography), Bruno Poet (lighting design), Iris Van Herpen and Olivier Rousteing (costume design), Gareth Fry (sound design), John Gale (sound engineering), and artist James Merry,[9] who has been a frequent collaborator and mask maker for Björk since 2011.[10] Members of The Shed (called "Shed Movers") received early ticket access. Also unannounced was what material Björk will be playing at Cornucopia as her 2017 album,Utopia, was not referenced during the press release[11] though the promotional art for the tour had the singer in the same outfit featured in her "Utopia" music video.[12] On 8 January 2019,The New York Times reported the opening of The Shed as 5 April 2019, with Björk's Cornucopia opening a month later on 6 May and running for 8 performances, concluding on 1 June 2019.[13]

On 29 April 2019,The Hamrahlid Choir was announced as part of Cornucopia's lineup, conducted byÞorgerður Ingólfsdóttir. Björk herself was once a member of the famous choir and utilized them for theUtopia track "Body Memory". Airfare for the 50-person choir was provided by the Icelandic government, with Minister of Education Lilja Alfreðsdóttir saying, "the state often strengthens cultural events" and "this will be very good for all parties".[14] This news broke as part of an update to The Shed's digital program for Björk's Cornucopia which also announced new versions of classic Björk tracks "Isobel" and "Mouth's Cradle" prepared byUtopia's co-producer,Arca.

The day after the show opened, Björk confirmed toDazed her plans to tour Cornucopia around the globe.[15] On May 24, 2019, it was announced that the show would continue as aconcert tour with additional shows inMexico City.[16][17] On August 5, 2019, Björk announced five additional arena shows for the tour, taking place inBelgium,Luxembourg,England,Scotland andIreland.[18][19][20]

Development

[edit]
Argentine film makerLucrecia Martel directed the show.

Björk views Cornucopia as "digital theater" and a "sci-fi pop concert."[21] She instinctively knew the music ofUtopia was best suited to "a theatrical set design and staging for the songs to be semi-believable."[15] The Shed's artistic director, Alex Poots, commissioned the work and said he "would've been really upset if (The Shed) hadn't seemed relevant" to Björk. They first worked together at theManchester International Festival in 2011 when Poots, working as artistic director, commissioned the first of sevenBiophilia tour residencies. Poots admires Björk's ability to "(keep her) eyes wide open all over," her "prodigal approach to creativity" and her "yearning to reinvent."[21] Björk spoke equally well of Poots, complimenting his positive attitude towards "idiosyncratic ideas" and his disinterest in "differentiating between high and low arts."[15] Björk also described her new show as "an optimistic proposal" on how the world can deal with climate change. She envisioned a possible "postapocalyptic" future where "plants, birds and humans will merge into a new mutant species," an idea she created sonically on Cornucopia's 2017 parent album,Utopia. "On the album there are birds that sound like synths, synths that sound like flutes, and flutes that sound like birds... Nature will still offer energy, optimism and life. She always finds a way."[22]

Lucrecia Martel was brought onto the production in January 2019,[15] replacing original director John Tiffany ofHarry Potter and the Cursed Child fame.[23] Björk described Martel as "instinctive, vibrant and fun"[15] and Cornucopia is Martel's first theatrical production in New York[21] after a celebrated and ongoing career as a filmmaker in Argentina. Martel admitted to finding Björk's unique working methods and turns of phrase "a little bit hard to understand" at times and often feared, "this is a disaster," but, she concluded, "when I see everything together, it is incredible." While Björk did the musical arrangements, Martel added "materiality and physicality"[21] and devised the special projection concept which throws up digital artist Tobias Gremmler's creations against a curtain of ropes placed in front of the stage in addition to the large screen behind the performers.[21] "The whole show," Björk said, "is a lot about females supporting each other" and she described her flute arrangements as "folk music for the future."[21] She sees her acoustic and electronic fusions as "ways to express the spiritual in the digital... there is an enormous need to the find a place for the soul in our global landscape."[15] Supporting this grassroots, female-led vision is a direct appeal for global climate reform by young Swedish activistGreta Thunberg[21] whose video message appears towards the end of the show unencumbered by digital effects or music. Thunberg and Björk's daughter are roughly the same age, and Björk notes that their generation "is extremely aware of the power of activism, and I'm very proud of them."[21] TheUtopia concept is a proposal to deal with nature in "a more compassionate way... Hopefully (starting) from a female point of view will help"[21] And, Björk concluded, after nature is brought to the brink, "we would all go to an island and become mutants between plants and birds, break off branches and make them into flutes and start playing."[22]

About the show

[edit]

Fashion

[edit]
Fashion designersOlivier Rousteing(left) andIris van Herpen(right) designed costumes for the show.

Costume designerOlivier Rousteing ofBalmain revealed he's been a Björk fan since herDebut album and thatDancer in the Dark, which Björk starred in and composed thesoundtrack to, is his favorite film.[22] The Icelandic singer reached out to Rousteing after she saw Balmain's Spring 2019 couture line: "It was a curious feeling after me and (frequent collaborator) James Merry had been swirling around in our utopian hemisphere for a while to see Olivier Rousteing's Balmain collection a few months ago and witness such an obvious overlap between both of our headspaces. We had been looking for plantlike uniforms for habitants of this sci-fi concert, and we were thrilled when we found it."[22] "It's often hard to describe music without words," Björk later said, "but Balmain really understands my esoteric descriptions."[24] Rousteing had to alter each piece to fit the physical needs of Björk and the other musicians, of which he dressed 15 including Viibra, the flute septet and percussionist Manu Delago[22] with particular attention paid to harpist Katie Buckly's outfit.[22] In all, Balmain contributed 3 different outfits for Bjork herself to wear during Cornucopia's run at The Shed, including a new dress inUtopia's green/blue color scheme.[22] "I think the fact that she has no boundaries with her music," Rousteing said, "that's where we connected, and that's what she loved about the last couture show. Is it fashion? Is it art? Is it furniture? What is that? There's no name. You can't put it in a box. You cannot label it, and I think that's what she loved."[22]

After seeing everything come together during the opening night dress rehearsal, costume designer Rousteing was moved to "tears. It was really emotional for me and sometimes I think we forget that fashion is about emotion. This was pure, beautiful emotions."[24]

For the shows in Dublin, Oslo, Copenhagen and Stockholm, Björk wore new costumes designed respectively byDilara Findikoglu,Manish Arora, Yuhan Wang and Noir Kei Ninomiya.

Stage and instruments

[edit]
Björk performing atThe Shed inNew York City on May 9, 2019.

In an interview withVogue Magazine set designer Chiara Stephenson revealed that "Björk wanted Cornucopia to be both intensely intimate, as though the audience could feel her whispering in their ear, and vast, voyeuristic and distant,".[25] The designer was inspired by natural shapes to create the setting for the show, saying "Natural forms are at the heart... whether the intricate beauty of fungi or the grand wonder of the cosmos, there was no part of reality too big or small to consider. In the same way, Björk's music is so personally and emotionally raw, it takes you deep into your own life experience, but is also about the human condition in general."[25] Stephenson went on to say that she sees no separation between high and low culture and sees Björk as a "brilliant example" of someone who can "confidently" move between both worlds.[25] She also detailed how the stage would use asurround sound system that syncs with a surround lighting, to give the audience the feeling of being surrounded by the music and the stage.[25] Steve Jones fromd&b audiotechnik explained that "Björk wanted the sound for Cornucopia to create an otherworldly sensory experience that draws the visual, aural and virtual elements together and utilizing Soundscape, from the studio composition scenario all the way through to the show performance scenario has delivered of that vision".[26] Craig Jenkins ofVulture describes the stage by saying that "[the stage] gives the appearance of an outgrowth of oyster mushrooms, one for the singer and her harp player, Katie Buckley; another for drummer and percussionist, Manu Delago; a third for the storied Icelandic producerBergur Þórisson; and a fourth for the flute septet, Viibra. A screen behind the flutes pumps in visuals, sometimes mined from the music videos and sometimes not, while complementary videos are displayed on either side of the band and projected on a series of translucent curtains at the front of the stage".[5]

The show was backed by severalbespoke instruments, created or modified to suit the needs of the show and the singer. The performance of "Body Memory" utilizes a unique instrument consisting of four conjoined flutes that are curved to form a circle called The Circle Flute. The instrument cannot be played by a single performer and requires four players to come together into a quartet where each player's relationship to the instrument becomes inseparable from their relationship to the others. It was designed by an Icelandic /German artist duo called Studio Brynjar & Veronika and built by flute maker Jean Yves Roosen.[27][28] The show features a set of twoorgan pipes, which make the tone ofE♭ andB-flat major, axylosynth, analuphone, apiezoelectricviolin made by MONAD Studio and the Segulharpa, aharp whose steel strings interact with themagnetic fields created by the internalanalog circuitry.[29]

In addition to this, the show also includes a cocoon-likereverb chamber, a large pod created by meant to recreate the effect of singing alone in nature and the way she often composes music.[21] The singer first described the concept for the chamber toArup Group's acoustic designer Shane Myrbeck viaSkype call.[30] At first, they were to have multiple rooms on stage, but at the end the team settled for only one, with anoctagonal layout with a tall roof, inspired by the architecture ofcathedrals. To test the design, Björk sent the group an audio of her performing a song with areverb effect, before completing the work inLondon where Björk could test the reverb room before the opening of the show.[30] Björk admitted to being "scared" to be so raw in front of an audience.[21]

Concert synopsis

[edit]
Cornucopia stage atForest National inBrussels(left) with the singer performing(right) on November 13, 2019.

The Hamrahlid Choir opened the evening with a 20-minute set of traditional Icelandic songs and choral arrangements of Björk's "Sonnets/Unrealities XI" and "Cosmogony". Björk emerged from "swirly helixes of color" to perform "The Gate", which segues into "Utopia" and "Arisen My Senses".[31] The singer goes inside the reverb chamber to perform thea cappella track "Show Me Forgiveness" and "Venus as a Boy", which she hadn't performed since 2006 and 2011 respectively.[32] Afterwards, Björk sings theUtopia album track "Claimstaker" and the second single fromPost, "Isobel", which was re-imagined byArca and features "percussive intervention". Later on, Brooklyn-based artistserpentwithfeet joined Björk on stage for a live rendition of his duet remix of "Blissing Me". Following the performance, a video interlude projects a message about the risks of "pulling out of theParis Agreement, while backed by a flute solo. Björk then sings "Body Memory", while accompanied by the Flute Circle and the choir. At one point during the performance,confetti resembling snow start falling on stage. Björk and the choir then sing a reworked version of "Hidden Place" and "Mouth's Cradle". Later on, Björk segues a shortened version of "Pagan Poetry" into "Losss", before singing otherUtopia tracks, "Sue Me" and "Tabula Rasa".[33] Before the encore, a video message byGreta Thunberg is shown, in which she addressesclimate change andsustainable energy:

We are about to sacrifice our civilization for the opportunity of a very small number of people to continue making unimaginable amounts of money. The biosphere is being sacrificed so that rich people in countries like mine can live in luxury. But it's the suffering of the many which pays for the luxuries of a few. In the year 2078, I will celebrate my 75th birthday. If I have children, maybe they will spend the day with me. … Maybe they will ask why you didn't do anything while there still was time to act. You say you love your children above all else, and yet you're stealing their future in front of their very eyes. Until you start focusing on what needs to be done rather than what is politically possible, there is no hope. We cannot solve a crisis without treating it as a crisis … And if the solutions within this system are so impossible to find, then maybe we should change the system itself. They have ignored us in the past and they will ignore us again. They have run out of excuses and we are running out of time. But I'm here to tell you that change is coming, whether they like it or not. The real power belongs to the people.[4]

Björk then returns onstage after changing into a dress by Iris van Herpen to perform "Future Forever" with the choir. She then proceeds to introduce the musicians that played with her, before closing the show with "Notget", taken from her 2015 albumVulnicura.[32]

Critical response

[edit]

The future of live music is in safe hands.

The Arts Desk aboutCornucopia

Björk's Cornucopia opened to positive reviews from the music press.RockNYC gave the preview dress rehearsal an "A" grade and called it "stunning" and "the best show in town...like reality overlaid on to virtual reality" and "a world of sound like no other." Writer Imam Lababedi called serpentwithfeet's surprise duet with Björk on "Blissing Me" and new renditions of "Isobel" and "Venus as a Boy" evening highlights and described Björk's voice as "warm and clear and confident."[34]The Guardian labeled it "a masterclass in exploration"[35] andRolling Stone said the show's billing as Björk's most elaborate staged concert to date "would be a tough claim to refute". They described the digital projections against the stage's forefront curtain of threads as "jaw-dropping" and "lushly layered" and heralded the environmental message behind the show as "gloriously angry in the way Björk can be at her best" and "punk-rock Valkyrian fury."[4] Both publications praised the musicians that joined Björk on stage, with The Guardian signaling outThe Hamrahlid Choir as opening act and support during the main show, as well as the stark, unprocessed video projection at the end of the concert by 16 year old Swedish climate activistGreta Thunberg.Rolling Stone called it "a poignant passing of the torch from artist to activist" and said "it put the datastorm complexity of what came earlier into stark, simple, fittingly scary perspective."

Björk performing atThe Shed inNew York City on May 6, 2019.

Entertainment Weekly praised the show and its visual presentation, with journalist Leah Greenblatt describing it as "the meticulous product of her own supremely Björkian making, from the heralding trumpets and imported Icelandic choir that open the evening to the gleaming Barbarella tea-cup platforms and the mind-bending visuals, projected throughout like screensavers from a civilization much more advanced than ours".[36]Vulture journalist Craig Jenkins billed the show as "the Wildest Visual Display in a Concert That I've Ever Seen". He went on to commend the show as "a dream of a future where technology and nature can commune as one. For 100 minutes, Cornucopia helps the audience to imagine that world. It is one of the most incredible displays of lights and sounds ever to grace a stage in the city".[5] Eli Petzold fromThe Reykjavík Grapevine analysed the theme of the show, noting that "In Cornucopia, coherence, linearity, and familiarity are indulgences rather than givens, underscoring the overarching imperative to reject comfort and precedent in search of a better future".[31] In a mixed review for the show,Financial Times journalist John Rockwell observed how "Björk's remarkable ear for musical timbres can get lost in a bass-heavy sonic sludge. Her fascinating lyrics are pretty much impossible to discern, and the costumes often verge on the downright weird. The whole affair verges on emotion overcome by pretension", but concluded by writing that "there is nothing out there like Björk, in Iceland or Brooklyn or the world. She epitomises Icelandic art while transcending it".[37]NJ.com commended the show for its promotion of climate change awareness, noting that "that's not to suggest this performance was simply a vehicle for Björk's political views, or to say the musicians relied on the room's exceedingly advanced tech as some sort of crutch. No, the most dazzling moments came from the humans involved in this mesmerizing production, which was at once bafflingly esoteric and immediately unforgettable".[38] Gabriela Tully Claymore ofStereogum described the show as "a sensory feast".[39]

Spin-off media

[edit]

Book

[edit]
Cornucopia: The Book
AuthorBjörk
Santiago Felipe
GenrePhotography
PublisherOne Little Independent
Publication date
November 15, 2024 (2024-11-15)
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (softcover)
Pages480
ISBN978-1-7396-0567-4

On October 8, 2024, Björk announced the release of aphoto-book documenting the tour. The book, titledCornucopia: The Book, chronicles the performances with images shot by photographer Santiago Felipe and designed byM/M Paris.[40][41] The book features 313 color images, a combination of photographs by Felipe and imagery designed for the concerts by directors Tobias Gremmler,Andrew Thomas Huang,Gabríela Friðriksdóttir and Pierre-Alain Giraud,Nick Knight,Warren Du Preez and Nick Thornton Jones.[42]

Björk observed that the presence of digital art taken from the visuals accompanying the tour as a "subplot woven in: a second story of an avatar—a modern marionette who alchemically mutates, from puppet to puppet, from the injury of a heart wound to a fully healed state".[43]

The book was released on November 15, 2024, and additionally featured a 16 pages staple-bound booklet printed in fluorescent colours, attached to the main book with bookmark ribbon.[44] To promote the release of the book, Björk performed two DJ sets. On December 8, 2024, she performed at theRough Trade shop inLondon,[45] while on December 13, 2024 she was featured during theMánakvöld – Cold Moon event at theSmekkleysa record store inReykjavík,Iceland.[46]

Film

[edit]
Main article:Cornucopia (film)

In a November 2023 interview withRolling Stone, Björk confirmed that Cornucopia would be adapted into aconcert film, slated for release in 2024.[47] TheCornucopia movie was officially announced duringClimate Week 2024 in New York.[48] The movie, filmed inLisbon,Portugal, was produced by Snowstorm Productions, S101 Films and Level Forward.[49] A shortened version of the movie was premiered onApple TV+ as part of theApple Music Live series on January 24, 2025, with a full length version receiving a theatrical release.[50][51]

Set list

[edit]
6 May 2019 – 31 March 2023

This set list is from the 6 May 2019 concert in New York.[52] It is not intended to represent all concerts for the tour.

Choir opening performance
"Family" video intro

  1. "The Gate"
  2. "Utopia"
  3. "Arisen My Senses"
  4. "Show Me Forgiveness"
  5. "Venus as a Boy"
  6. "Claimstaker"
  7. "Isobel"
  8. "Blissing Me"

"Arpeggio" flute interlude

  1. "Body Memory"
  2. "Hidden Place"
  3. "Mouth's Cradle"
  4. "Features Creatures"
  5. "Courtship"
  6. "Pagan Poetry"
  7. "Losss"
  8. "Sue Me"
  9. "Tabula Rasa"
Encore

Video message fromGreta Thunberg

  1. "Future Forever"
  2. "Notget"

Notes

  • Björk performed "Blissing Me" withserpentwithfeet during the shows in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco.[53][54][55]
  • Starting from the 3 March 2023 show in Perth, Björk performed "Atopos" and "Ovule" instead of "Venus as a Boy" and "Claimstaker".[56]
  • During the last three shows in Perth, the encore performance was omitted, with "Future Forever" being performed only by the choir.[57]
  • During the shows in Tokyo, Kasimyn made a guest appearance during the performance of "Atopos".[58]
1 September 2023 – 5 December 2023

This set list is from the 23 September 2023 concert in Bologna.[59] It is not intended to represent all concerts for the tour.

"Family" video intro

  1. "The Gate"
  2. "Utopia"
  3. "Arisen My Senses"
  4. "Ovule"
  5. "Show Me Forgiveness"
  6. "Venus as a Boy"
  7. "Claimstaker"
  8. "Isobel"
  9. "Blissing Me"

"Arpeggio" flute interlude

  1. "Victimhood"
  2. "Fossora" / "Atopos"
  3. "Features Creatures"
  4. "Courtship"
  5. "Pagan Poetry"
  6. "Losss"
  7. "Sue Me"
  8. "Tabula Rasa"
Encore

Video message from Greta Thunberg
"Mycelia" video interlude

  1. "Future Forever"
  2. "Notget"

Notes

  • During the 1 September 2023 show in Lisbon, "Body Memory", "Hidden Place" and "Mouth's Cradle" were performed with the choir instead of "Venus as a Boy", "Claimstaker" and "Mycelia".[60]

Tour dates

[edit]
List of 2019 concerts
Date (2019)CityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenue
6 MayNew York CityUnited StatesThe McCourt atThe ShedThe Hamrahlid Choir10,000 / 10,000$1,151,693
9 May
12 May
16 May
22 May
25 May
28 May
1 June
17 AugustMexico CityMexicoParque BicentenarioUNAM Staccato Choir18,930 / 18,930$1,519,170[61]
20 August
23 August
27 August
30 August
13 NovemberBrusselsBelgiumForest NationalThe Hamrahlid Choir4,336 / 5,073$434,696
16 NovemberEsch-sur-AlzetteLuxembourgRockhal5,512 / 5,512$461,189
19 NovemberLondonEnglandThe O2 Arena12,655 / 12,655$1,328,590
25 NovemberGlasgowScotlandThe SSE Hydro5,797 / 7,111$480,487
28 NovemberDublinIreland3Arena8,018 / 8,018$686,507
2 DecemberOsloNorwayOslo Spektrum6,321 / 6,890$682,501
5 DecemberCopenhagenDenmarkRoyal Arena6,376 / 7,031$565,432
8 DecemberStockholmSwedenEricsson Globe7,879 / 8,345$649,756
List of 2022 concerts[62]
Date (2022)CityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenue
26 JanuaryLos AngelesUnited StatesShrine AuditoriumTonality
29 January
1 February
5 FebruarySan FranciscoChase Center16,203 / 18,514$2,066,217
8 February
List of 2023 concerts[63]
Date (2023)CityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenue
3 MarchPerthAustraliaLangley ParkVoyces18,661 / 18,661$2,000,000[64]
6 March
9 March
12 March
28 MarchTokyoJapanTokyo Garden TheatreSamadhi Choir
31 March
1 SeptemberLisbonPortugalAltice ArenaThe Hamrahlid Choir12,110 / 12,375$1,014,136
4 SeptemberMadridSpainWiZink Center8,855 / 12,589$757,586
8 SeptemberParisFranceAccor Arena10,627 / 11,630$1,034,638
12 SeptemberMilanItalyMediolanum Forum
16 SeptemberPragueCzech RepublicO2 Arena
19 SeptemberViennaAustriaWiener Stadthalle8,814 / 8,949$663,830
23 SeptemberBolognaItalyUnipol Arena
18 NovemberKrakówPolandTauron Arena
21 NovemberHamburgGermanyBarclays Arena
24 NovemberLeipzigQuarterback Immobilien Arena
28 NovemberZürichSwitzerlandHallenstadion6,817 / 8,000$875,409
2 DecemberNantesFranceLe Zénith
5 DecemberBordeauxArkéa Arena
Total167,911 / 180,283 (93%)$16,371,837

Cancelled dates

[edit]
DateCityCountryVenueReason
7 June 2023ReykjavíkIcelandLaugardalshöllProduction issues[65]
10 June 2023
13 June 2023

Personnel

[edit]

All credits adapted fromThe Shed official website andCornucopia: The Book.[66][67]

  • Björk – creative sound, visual director, choir, flute, clarinet and strings arrangements, production, musical direction and 360 sound mixing
  • James Merry – co-creative visual director, masks
  • Lucrecia Martel – original theatre director

Music and visuals

[edit]
  • Bergur Þórisson – musical director, electronics, keyboards, trombone, magnetic harp, EWI, 3d printed violin
  • Matt Robertson – musical director for rehearsals, score preparation
  • Manu Delago – percussion, aluphone, waterdrums, xylosynth, dhol
  • Katie Buckley – harp
  • Ruth Ellen Benneth – harp(only during Mexico, Belgium, Luxembourg and London shows)
  • Arca – original music co-production, new versions of "Isobel" and "Mouth's Cradle"
  • serpentwithfeet – vocals on "Blissing Me"(only during New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles shows)
  • Kasimyn – electronics on "Atopos"(only during Tokyo shows)

Flutes and clarinets

  • Viibra – flute septet
    • Áshildur Haraldsdóttir
    • Berglind Maria Tómasdóttir
    • Björg Brjánsdóttir
    • Dagný Marinósdóttir
    • Melkorka Ólafsdóttir
    • Steinunn Vala Pálsdóttir
    • Þuríður Jónsdóttir
    • Sólveig Magnúsdóttir(only during Mexico shows)

Choirs

  • The Hamrahlid Choir
    • Þorgerður Ingólfsdóttir – choir conductor
  • Staccato Choir
    • Odilón Chávez – choir conductor
  • Tonality
    • Alexander Lloyd Blake – choir conductor
  • Voyces
  • Samadhi Choir

Original visuals and animations

Fashion

[edit]
  • Hungry – make up
  • Edda Guðmundsdóttir – styling

Hair

Costumes

Stage, audio and technical

[edit]
  • Peter van der Velde – production director
  • Bruno Poet – lighting designer
  • Richard White – lighting designer, lighting operator
  • Chiara Stephenson – set designer
  • Margrét Bjarnadóttir – choreography for flutes
  • Chris Taplin – production manager
  • Mark Cameron – stage manager
  • Nunu Cruz – stage manager
  • John Gale – front of house engineer
  • Jack Blenkinsop – foh, 360 immersive sound tech
  • Finnur Ragnarson – monitor engineer
  • Manu Goodwin – monitor engineer
  • Dominic Gallagher – audio & rf tech
  • Paul Holleman – laser software development
  • NAP Framework – laser software platform
  • Daniel Bond – video operator
  • Chema Menendez Herrera – video operator
  • Iain Harvey – video operator, teleprompting
  • Jake Stebbings – video operator, teleprompting
  • Peque Varela – video editor
  • Brooks Wenzel – stage, curtain and set rigger
  • Lydia McDonald – stage, curtain and set rigger
  • Will Dameron – stage, curtain and set rigger
  • Scott Turnbull – set builder
  • Ian Bell – set builder
  • Simon Rackham – set builder
  • Reuben Warnes – set builder
  • Jake Miller – playback engineer
  • Anton Wernberg – playback engineer
  • Simon Schindler – percussion technician
  • Catherine Verna Bentley – tour manager
  • Melanie Susan Knott – tour manager
  • Meg Hood – production coordinator
  • Irma Studio – production design
  • Rosemary Llagostera – Björk assistant day to day
  • Vigdís Sigurðardóttir – choir liaison
  • Chris Elms – playback midi programmer
  • Raj Patel – reverb chamber designer
  • Shane Myrbeck – reverb chamber designer
  • Arup Group – reverb chamber designer
  • Heimir Sverrison – reverb chamber fabricator
  • David Schletchtstriemen – reverb chamber technician
  • Richard Nutbourne – set maker
  • Ken Fleary – set maker
  • d&b Audiotechnik – audio provider
  • Sound Expert – d&b immersive
  • Steve Jones – d&b immersive
  • Sam Kirby – tour agent
  • David Levy – tour agent
  • Derek Birkett – Björk management
  • Emma Birkett – Björk management
  • Chiara Michieletto – Björk management
  • Santiago Felipe – photographer

References

[edit]
  1. ^Barone, Joshua (8 January 2019)."The Shed, a Rare New Arts Center on the Hudson, Is Set to Open".The New York Times. Retrieved9 January 2019.
  2. ^"Björk to Debut "Most Elaborate" Stage Show Yet in New York".Spin.com. 12 November 2018. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  3. ^"Björk Announces New Concert Performance Cornucopia".Pitchfork.com. 12 November 2018. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  4. ^abc"Björk's 'Cornucopia' Is a Psychedelic Cautionary Tale About the Environment".Rolling Stone. 10 May 2019. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  5. ^abcJenkins, Craig (21 May 2019)."Björk's Cornucopia Is the Wildest Visual Display in a Concert That I've Ever Seen".Vulture.
  6. ^"All Points East review – Björk brings life to corporate festival newcomer".Theguardian.com. 28 May 2018. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  7. ^"Björk has announced a special stage rehearsal at the Háskólabíó theater in Reykjavik next month ahead of her Utopia tour!".Facebook. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  8. ^"Inside Björk's romantic, otherworldly Utopia Tour".Vogue.fr. 17 August 2018. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  9. ^"CORNUCOPIA".Theshed.org. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  10. ^"Meet the Artist who Brings Björk's Wildest Creative Fantasies to Life".GQ.com.au. 21 October 2018. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  11. ^"Björk Announces 'Cornucopia,' Her 'Most Elaborate Stage Concert Yet'".Uproxx.com. 12 November 2018. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  12. ^"Björk – "Utopia" Video".Stereogum.com. 8 December 2017. Retrieved13 November 2018.
  13. ^"The Shed Sets April Opening".Playbill.com. 9 January 2019. Retrieved9 January 2019.
  14. ^"Björk Guðmundsdóttir heldur átta tónleika í nýju tónleikahúsi í New York á næstu þrjátíu dögum".Ruv.is. 3 May 2019. Retrieved4 May 2019.
  15. ^abcdef"How Björk created her Cornucopia".Dazeddigital.com. 10 May 2019. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  16. ^"Björk visitará México con su show 'Cornucopia'".La Jornada. Retrieved23 May 2019.
  17. ^Alva Carranza, Patricia (23 May 2019)."Björk llegará a México para presentar 'Cornucopia'".Publimetro.
  18. ^"Björk annonce 5 concerts en Europe dans le cadre de sa tournée Cornucopia. A quand un concert à Paris ?".infoconcert.com (in French). Retrieved6 August 2019.
  19. ^Yates, Jonathan (5 August 2019)."Bjork announces London O2 Arena show on Cornucopia Tour – here's how to get tickets".mylondon.news. Retrieved6 August 2019.
  20. ^"Bjork announces Glasgow show on Cornucopia Tour – here's how to get tickets".dailyrecord.co.uk. 5 August 2019. Retrieved6 August 2019.
  21. ^abcdefghijkRyzik, Melena (8 May 2019)."How Björk Brought Her Sci-Fi, Feminist Fairy Tale to Life".The New York Times. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  22. ^abcdefgh"Björk and Balmain's Olivier Rousteing on Their Otherworldly Fashion Collaboration".Vogue.com. 10 May 2019. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  23. ^"Björk and Harry Potter and the Cursed Child Director John Tiffany Team Up for New Concert Production".Playbill.com. 12 November 2018. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  24. ^ab"Olivier Rousteing on creating an ethereal couture collection just for Björk".Dazeddigital.com. 10 May 2019. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  25. ^abcd"Meet the Set Designer Behind Björk's Latest Showstopping Performance". 10 May 2019. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  26. ^"Bjork's Cornucopia, enriched by the d&b Soundscape at New York's newest cultural center".d&b audiotechnik. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  27. ^"These sixteen pieces together make the circle flute".Facebook. Retrieved8 May 2019.
  28. ^"the circle flute played in #cornucopia consists of four conjoined flutes..."Facebook. Retrieved8 May 2019.
  29. ^Björk."in preparation for the next performance, we wanted to share with you some of the instruments that are included in the cornucopia performance …".Facebook. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  30. ^abWilson, Mark (15 May 2019)."The fascinating design behind Björk's otherworldly reverb chamber, on tour now".Fast Company. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  31. ^abPetzold, Eli (19 May 2019)."Björk's 'Cornucopia': A Utopian Reverie For A World In Peril".The Reykjavík Grapevine. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  32. ^abYoung, Alex (7 May 2019)."Björk debuts "Cornucopia" stage show: Video + Setlist".Consequence of Sound. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  33. ^"Bjork's 'Cornucopia' debuted at The Shed (pics, video, setlist)". 7 May 2019. Retrieved8 May 2019.
  34. ^Lababedi, Iman (7 May 2019)."Björk's "Cornucopia" at The Shed, Monday, May 6th, 2019, Reviewed".Rock NYC. Retrieved8 May 2019.
  35. ^Ledonne, Rob (10 May 2019)."Björk's Cornucopia: is this the singer's most ambitious show yet?".The Guardian. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  36. ^Greenblatt, Leah."Björk brings wild, wood-sprite-y Cornucopia to sold-out show in New York".Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  37. ^Rockwell, John (13 May 2019)."Psychedelic flowers and singsong incantations — Björk's lavish Utopia opens at The Shed, New York".Financial Times. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  38. ^Olivier, Bobby (17 May 2019)."Bjork's insane new theater production is an experimental artpop masterpiece: review".NJ.com. Retrieved23 May 2019.
  39. ^Tully Claymore, Gabriela (23 May 2019)."Björk's Cornucopia Is A Sensory Feast".Stereogum. Retrieved23 May 2019.
  40. ^Green, Walden (October 9, 2024)."Björk Announces New Cornucopia Tour Book".Pitchfork. RetrievedDecember 29, 2024.
  41. ^Antonietti, Téa (December 17, 2024)."Quand Björk immortalise sa tournée "Cornucopia" dans un ouvrage flamboyant".Harper's Bazaar France (in French). RetrievedDecember 29, 2024.
  42. ^Cornucopia: The Book. One Little Independent. 2024.ISBN 978-1-7396-0567-4.
  43. ^Ross, Gemma (October 10, 2024)."Björk announces new 480-page book documenting "ambitious" live tour".Mixmag. RetrievedDecember 29, 2024.
  44. ^Salvadó, Arnau."Björk publishes Cornucopia: The Book".Metal Magazine. RetrievedDecember 29, 2024.
  45. ^"björk on Instagram".Instagram. November 29, 2024. RetrievedDecember 11, 2024.We warmly welcome you to a celebration at @roughtrade , London, next Sunday 8th of December. Santa is bringing the first batch of CORNUCOPIA THE BOOK to the store, where you can purchase a signed copy. Björk will wear a mask as pr usual and asks you to do the same - but which yule lad will you dress up like ??
  46. ^"Mánakvöld - Frermáni: Bláleiðir & Cornucopia".Facebook. RetrievedDecember 11, 2024.
  47. ^Grow, Kory (November 5, 2023)."How Protesting Iceland's 'Frankenstein Fish' Inspired Björk and Rosalía to Unite for a Surprisingly Poppy Duet".Rolling Stone. RetrievedDecember 29, 2024.
  48. ^Grow, Kory (September 27, 2024)."Bjork Teases 'Cornucopia' Concert Film at Climate Week: 'Imagine a Future. Be in It'".Rolling Stone. RetrievedDecember 29, 2024.
  49. ^D'Alessandro, Anthony (September 27, 2024)."Björk Launching 'Cornucopia': New Concert Film Addresses Climate Issues".Deadline. RetrievedDecember 29, 2024.
  50. ^Nicholson, Rebecca (January 12, 2025)."'I like to break the rules': Björk on comedy, darkness and the most flamboyant tour of her career".The Guardian. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2025.
  51. ^Wille, Matt (January 21, 2025)."Björk Is Hopeful for Our Planet".Paper. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2025.
  52. ^Young, Alex (7 May 2019)."Björk debuts "Cornucopia" stage show".Consequence of Sound.Archived from the original on 2019-05-08. Retrieved16 September 2019.
  53. ^Hatfield, Amanda."Bjork's 'Cornucopia' debuted at The Shed (pics, video, setlist)".Brooklyn Vegan. Retrieved25 September 2023.
  54. ^Larsen, Peter (30 January 2022)."Björk's Cornucopia show provides a feast for the senses at the Shrine Auditorium".Los Angeles Daily News. Retrieved25 September 2023.
  55. ^Gentile, Dan."Björk's San Francisco concert at Chase Center mixes emotions and politics".Sfgate. Retrieved25 September 2023.
  56. ^Chrisfield, Bryget."Björk's staggering 'Cornucopia' reinvents what's possible in live performance". Retrieved25 September 2023.
  57. ^"LIVE: BJÖRK CORNUCOPIA – Perth, WA, 6 March 2023". Retrieved25 September 2023.
  58. ^"Björk on Instagram: "thank you tokyo for a great evening and thank you Kasimyn for joining us !"".Instagram. Retrieved25 September 2023.
  59. ^"Björk Concert Setlist at Unipol Arena, Casalecchio di Reno on September 23, 2023".setlist.fm. Retrieved25 September 2023.
  60. ^"Björk, A Radiância de Cornucópia em Lisboa".Arte Sonora. Retrieved25 September 2023.
  61. ^"Current Boxscore | Billboard".Billboard.Archived from the original on 16 September 2019. Retrieved16 September 2019.
  62. ^"Björk announces Cornucopia concerts in Los Angeles and San Francisco". 7 October 2021.
  63. ^Hussey, Alison (30 January 2023)."Björk Announces 2023 Cornucopia Shows".Pitchfork. Retrieved9 February 2023.
  64. ^Pickup, Jo (16 January 2024)."Which festivals are breaking records despite cost of living crisis?".Artshub. Retrieved16 January 2024.
  65. ^"Björk Cancels Cornucopia Shows in Reykjavík".Reykjavik Grapevine. 4 May 2023. Retrieved22 August 2023.
  66. ^"Björk's Cornucopia – The Shed".The Shed. Retrieved20 May 2019.
  67. ^Cornucopia: The Book. One Little Independent. 2024.ISBN 978-1-7396-0567-4.

External links

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