Mammút Debut “Breath Into Me” Video

Mammút have shared the video to their single, "Breathe Into Me."

Icelandic bands often resemble a force of nature, and Mammút are no exception. Today the band are thrilled to share their spectacular video for track “Breathe Into Me”, that is taken from their forthcoming album Kinder Versions, due for release on July 14th through Bella Union.

Of the video, which was shot, directed and edited by Mammút themselves, the band say: “After a hard day working in the studio we needed to go out and switch to more physical energy so we went to Ása’s backyard and shot the music video on our phones. It had been snowing straight for three days and the scenery was otherworldly. Our creative minds were woken up by the light that the enormous amount of snow projected on the winter sky.”

Mammút is Icelandic for ‘mammoth’ – the name that singer Katrína Mogensen “plucked out of the air” when she joined guitarists Alexandra Baldursdóttir and Arnar Pétursson, bassist Ása Dýradóttir and drummer Andri Bjartur Jakobsson for their stage debut, aged just 14. Katrína is the daughter of bassist Birgir Mogensen, a former bandmate of Björk back when they were young post-punk adventurers; a questing spirit that Mammút have also unconsciously adopted, though without ever really discussing what kind of music they play. “We’re so close as a band, we have no limits for each other, no boundaries, we just follow our gut instincts,” says Katrína.

It worked from the off; they quickly won the Músíktilraunir ‘battle of the bands’ and thereafter nominations and awards at the Icelandic Music Awards: their third album Komdu til Mín Svarta Systir won three of its eight nominations in 2014, including Album (Pop & Rock) and Song (Pop & Rock) for their epically slow-burning ‘Salt’. And with vocalist Katrína now singing in English, there’s a chance much more of the planet will discover what their homeland has known for a while.

Kinder Versions intense character is obvious from the get-go, with opening tracks “We Tried Love” and the title track the album’s two longest, at over seven and six minutes respectively, embodying everything that is thrilling about Mammút’s ebbing and flowing dynamic. “With those lyrics and the soundscape, those songs had to be the introduction,” Katrína vouches. “And with the [the sparser, gentler] ‘Bye Bye’ following, it’s the most honest way into the album.”

Mammút’s shows at last November’s Iceland Airwaves festival solicited rave reviews from The Arts Desk – “Hard-edged, rocky, circular songs with folky, spiritual melodies… Unreservedly fantastic” – and Rolling Stone, which referred to Katrína’s “icy, piercing vengeance” and the music’s “arena-worthy, shamanistic hard rock.”

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