Collection: Bjork Vinyl Records – Debut, Post, Homogenic & Essential Electronic Albums on Vinyl
Bjork emerged from Reykjavik as the voice of the Sugarcubes before embarking on a solo career that redefined what pop and electronic music could be. Starting with her 1993 debut, she's spent three decades exploring the space where human and digital collide — layering synths with strings, whispers with stuttering beats, and her distinctive voice across genres that refuse easy categorisation. Her influence on electronic music, visual art, and experimental production is immense, yet she remains fiercely individual: each album sounds like nothing else she's made.
On vinyl, her records reveal their architecture — the careful layering, the breathing space between sounds, the way Icelandic strings cut through electronic grain. She's one of the few artists who has managed to be both endlessly experimental and genuinely popular, and her back catalogue on One Little Independent Records is one of the most rewarding deep dives in modern music.
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Bjork – Post [180g Vinyl LP]
Vendor:BjorkRegular price £25.99 GBPRegular priceSale price £25.99 GBP -
Bjork – Homogenic (Remastered Edition) [LP Vinyl]
Vendor:BjorkRegular price £24.49 GBPRegular priceSale price £24.49 GBP -
Björk - Jóga [2× 12" 180g Vinyl EP]
Vendor:BjorkRegular price £29.99 GBPRegular priceSale price £29.99 GBP -
Björk — Greatest Hits [2× Vinyl LP]
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Björk — Debut [Vinyl LP]
Vendor:BjorkRegular price £25.49 GBPRegular priceSale price £25.49 GBP
Best Bjork Albums on Vinyl
Debut (1993)Bjork's first solo record marked a clean break from the Sugarcubes' rock energy. Drawing from techno, jazz, trip hop, and house, it introduced her as a singular artist: playful but intricate, experimental yet direct. Human Behaviour, Venus as a Boy, and Big Time Sensuality remain instant classics, each one a miniature study in production. The record that got the world's attention.
Post (1995)Heavier and more restless than Debut, Post finds Bjork pushing further into beats and attitude. Army of Me and Hyperballad became global hits, but the album's real strength lies in its ambition — it refuses to stay in one place. The synth-pop gloss of It's Oh So Quiet sits next to abstract instrumental passages. Deliberately sequenced so each side flows with purpose.
Homogenic (1997)The masterwork. Homogenic pairs her most sophisticated production with unexpected warmth: the Icelandic String Octet provides lush arrangements that wrap around electronic beats in ways that feel organic rather than ornamental. Hunter and All Is Full of Love showcase her at her creative peak. The album that proves electronic music and classical elegance aren't opposites.
Vespertine (2001)A dramatic shift toward intimacy. Recorded with close-microphone technique — vocals whispered, almost confessional — Vespertine sounds like secrets being shared in the dark. Glitchy microbeats and found sounds accompany her most delicate melodies on Hidden Place and Pagan Poetry. Her quietest record and perhaps her most affecting.
![Bjork – Post [180g Vinyl LP]](http://vikingrecords.co.uk/cdn/shop/files/CS564219-01B-BIG.jpg?v=1756821424&width=533)
![Bjork – Homogenic (Remastered Edition) [LP Vinyl]](http://vikingrecords.co.uk/cdn/shop/files/CS19303-04B-BIG.jpg?v=1753130838&width=533)
![Björk — Debut [Vinyl LP]](http://vikingrecords.co.uk/cdn/shop/files/R-4859494-1377886610-8887.jpg?v=1775740041&width=533)




