Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

The Knife|The Knife

The Knife

The Knife

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Although it inevitably falls somewhat short of the excellent and utterly original albums that followed it, the Knife's self-titled (and originally self-released) 2001 debut does more than merely hint at the duo's potential. For one thing, it reveals that their strange and idiosyncratic sensibility was fully apparent right from the beginning -- this couldn't possibly be mistaken for the work of any other band. In fact, within The Knife's considerable emotional range, and featuring the same inventive approach to synth programming and textural exploration, it already contains all the stylistic and musical elements that the duo would develop further on their later albums, encompassing both the glistening, off-kilter dance-pop of Deep Cuts and the frosty, otherworldly darkness of Silent Shout. And then of course there's Karin Dreijer's voice, which isn't subjected to nearly as much processing and digital manipulation here as it would be in their later work (except on the absurd, Darth Vader-referencing "A Lung"), but it's a formidable and curiously affecting instrument even in its unadulterated state. There are even some directly traceable elements for the trainspotters -- the dubby drip-like clicks that open Shout's "Like a Pen" are audible on the instrumental "Zapata," while the gently anthemic "Parade" features the lyric "we raise our heads for the color red," which would reappear as one of the more inscrutable lines in "Heartbeats." But as revealing as it may be for fans of their later work, The Knife is an eminently worthwhile listen in its own right. Freewheelingly experimental, but always in an accessible and song-driven fashion, it veers from the industrial rock menace of "I Take Time" to the poignant semi-acoustic fragility of "N.Y. Hotel" to the techno-pop chinoiserie of standout "Kino," with its infectiously chintzy riff and sturdy electro groove. At the time of this release, The Knife must have seemed inexorably indebted to the 1980s, particularly considering Dreijer's oft-remarked vocal similarity to Cyndi Lauper, but in the context of the heavy synthesizer presence that has continued throughout the 2000s it sounds practically prophetic. Even so, the album's largely synthetic soundscape is punctuated by touches of organic instrumentation, often used in unexpected ways -- hushed saxophone harmonies temper the sparse, pointillistic synth-funk of "Neon," while "Parade" blossoms into a rousing Celtic folk march rich with organ and accordion -- striking an affecting balance between human and machine (something that the duo would essentially abandon with the scarily remote, technological aesthetic of Silent Shout.) Lyrically, much of the album is imagistic and elusive, but marked with the Dreijer's characteristic combination of sentiment ("N.Y. Hotel"'s tender farewell), creepiness ("I Just Had to Die"'s ambiguous reference to "watching school girls"), and humor (the yuletide-themed "Reindeer," which is evidently sung from the perspective of one of Santa's elves).
© K. Ross Hoffman /TiVo

More info

The Knife

The Knife

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 12,49€/month

1
Neon
00:04:08

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

2
Lasanga
00:05:07

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

3
Kino
00:03:14

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

4
I Just Had to Die
00:04:35

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

5
I Take Time
00:03:05

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

6
Parade
00:03:51

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

7
Zapata
00:04:10

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

8
Bird
00:04:34

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer, MixingEngineer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer, MixingEngineer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

9
N.Y Hotel
00:02:47

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

10
A Lung
00:03:27

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

11
Reindeer
00:07:15

Olof Dreijer, Composer, Producer - Karin Dreijer, Composer, Producer - The Knife, MainArtist

2001 Rabid Records 2001 Rabid Records

Albumbeschreibung

Although it inevitably falls somewhat short of the excellent and utterly original albums that followed it, the Knife's self-titled (and originally self-released) 2001 debut does more than merely hint at the duo's potential. For one thing, it reveals that their strange and idiosyncratic sensibility was fully apparent right from the beginning -- this couldn't possibly be mistaken for the work of any other band. In fact, within The Knife's considerable emotional range, and featuring the same inventive approach to synth programming and textural exploration, it already contains all the stylistic and musical elements that the duo would develop further on their later albums, encompassing both the glistening, off-kilter dance-pop of Deep Cuts and the frosty, otherworldly darkness of Silent Shout. And then of course there's Karin Dreijer's voice, which isn't subjected to nearly as much processing and digital manipulation here as it would be in their later work (except on the absurd, Darth Vader-referencing "A Lung"), but it's a formidable and curiously affecting instrument even in its unadulterated state. There are even some directly traceable elements for the trainspotters -- the dubby drip-like clicks that open Shout's "Like a Pen" are audible on the instrumental "Zapata," while the gently anthemic "Parade" features the lyric "we raise our heads for the color red," which would reappear as one of the more inscrutable lines in "Heartbeats." But as revealing as it may be for fans of their later work, The Knife is an eminently worthwhile listen in its own right. Freewheelingly experimental, but always in an accessible and song-driven fashion, it veers from the industrial rock menace of "I Take Time" to the poignant semi-acoustic fragility of "N.Y. Hotel" to the techno-pop chinoiserie of standout "Kino," with its infectiously chintzy riff and sturdy electro groove. At the time of this release, The Knife must have seemed inexorably indebted to the 1980s, particularly considering Dreijer's oft-remarked vocal similarity to Cyndi Lauper, but in the context of the heavy synthesizer presence that has continued throughout the 2000s it sounds practically prophetic. Even so, the album's largely synthetic soundscape is punctuated by touches of organic instrumentation, often used in unexpected ways -- hushed saxophone harmonies temper the sparse, pointillistic synth-funk of "Neon," while "Parade" blossoms into a rousing Celtic folk march rich with organ and accordion -- striking an affecting balance between human and machine (something that the duo would essentially abandon with the scarily remote, technological aesthetic of Silent Shout.) Lyrically, much of the album is imagistic and elusive, but marked with the Dreijer's characteristic combination of sentiment ("N.Y. Hotel"'s tender farewell), creepiness ("I Just Had to Die"'s ambiguous reference to "watching school girls"), and humor (the yuletide-themed "Reindeer," which is evidently sung from the perspective of one of Santa's elves).
© K. Ross Hoffman /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms

Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By The Knife

Manhood

The Knife

Manhood The Knife

Shaking the Habitual

The Knife

Deep Cuts

The Knife

Deep Cuts The Knife

Shaking the Habitual

The Knife

Silent Shout

The Knife

Silent Shout The Knife

Playlists

You may also like...

Hyperdrama

Justice

Hyperdrama Justice

Tourist (Remastered Hi-Res Version)

St Germain

Moon Safari

Air

Random Access Memories

Daft Punk

Random Access Memories

Daft Punk