Eivør (singer)

Singer-songwriter

Birthday July 21, 1983

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Syðrugøta, Faroe Islands

Age 40 years old

Nationality Faroe Islands

#40312 Most Popular

1983

Eivør Pálsdóttir (pronounced ; born 21 July 1983), known mononymously as Eivør, is a Faroese singer-songwriter and actress.

Born and raised in Syðrugøta, she had her first televised performance at the age of 13.

Over the course of her decades-long career, her musical output has spanned a wide range of genres such as folk, art pop, jazz, folk rock, classical and electronica.

She is the elder sister of singer Elinborg.

1999

In 1999, at the age of 15, she became the lead singer in Clickhaze.

2001

The following year, she released her first self-titled album, Eivør Pálsdóttir, and then won the 2001 Prix Føroyar song contest as part of the band Clickhaze.

2002

She moved to Reykjavík in 2002 to study music, releasing an album with Yggdrasil the same year.

2003

Her second solo album, Krákan, released in 2003 and was nominated in three categories at the Icelandic Music Awards, winning Best Singer and Best Performer – an honour normally only reserved for Icelandic artists.

The same year, she participated in Söngvakeppnin with the song "Í Nótt", reaching 6th place.

2004

In 2004, Eivør was named Ársins Føroyingur (Faroe Islander of the Year).

2005

In 2005, the DR Big Band released its 40th anniversary album, with all songs written and sung by Eivør.

The same year, her performance of Úlfhamssaga led to her winning the awarded the Icelandic Gríma award.

2007

In 2007, Eivør's 5th album Mannabarn was released; an English-language version, Human Child, was released on the same day.

2010

In 2010, she released the album Larva, marking a stark departure away from her folk sound, moving towards a more experimental and electronic musical style.

2012

She married the Faroese composer and long-time collabrator Tróndur Bogason in 2012; the same year, she released the album Room, which won three awards at the Faroese Music Awards: Best Female Singer, Best Artist and Best Album of the Year.

The following year, she covered "Den vilda" by One More Time in Icelandic, which charted on Tónlist TV.

2015

In 2015, Eivør released two companion albums, Bridges and Slør, sung in English and Faroese respectively.

Describing the writing process in an interview with Stacja Islandia, she said that "[it] kept coming to me in such a manner that I would write a lyric in English and straight afterwards a lyric in Faroese would arrive – a kind of mirror image or reflection. Most of the songs were written together in pairs. The albums are therefore two different works yet also a unity. This has been my dream project for over 2 years now."

2016

In 2016, she collaborated with Bear McCreary on the soundtrack for God of War, performing it with a live orchestra at the E3 2016 Sony press conference.

2018

She collaborated with the DR Big Band once again that same year, releasing the orchestral album At the Heart of a Selkie. In 2018, she collaborated with John Lunn on the soundtrack to The Last Kingdom.

2020

In 2020, she released the album Segl.

She became the cover artist first time of ÖMC Dergi (Dergi), Turkey's biggest digital music magazine, to promote her new album Segl.

2022 saw her collaborating again with Bear McCreary on the soundtrack for God of War Ragnarök, the sequel to 2018's game.

Describing the about album process in an interview with Alp Kılıç, she said that "I think that every album I make is marked by where I am in my life creatively and also personally, and every album has elements from my previous work entwined with new elements which I amcurious to explore. Slør is very much about home sickness and returning back to my roots. Segl is more about lookingout and navigating though unknown places."

ÖMC Dergi (Dergi) announced for the first time the Segl album and Segl Tour news in Turkey.

In 2021, she received Nordic Council Music Prize.

In September 2023, independent label Season of Mist announced on Instagram that Eivør had signed with them.