Dikta

簡(jiǎn)介: 冰島獨(dú)立樂(lè)團(tuán)。
In its present incarnation, the group began in 1999. They played in the Icelandic band competition Músíktilraunir in 2000 and w 更多>

冰島獨(dú)立樂(lè)團(tuán)。
In its present incarnation, the group began in 1999. They played in the Icelandic band competition Músíktilraunir in 2000 and were finalists. Dikta's four members have been friends since they were children. Last year they've played on festivals such as In The City in Manchester, the SPOT-festival in Denmark and Iceland Airwaves. Their powerful performance in front of a packed venue at Iceland Airwaves earned them a mention in Rolling Stone Magazine.
Dikta's first album, "Andartak", was released in late 2002. It was released in Iceland by the band members themselves under their own label called Mistak Records. One of its singles reached the top of the Icelandic charts. All three singles, "Taminóra," "Andartak," and "Engin ore," were played frequently on Iceland's largest rock station at the time, X-ie 977. The lyrics on "Andartak" are all in Icelandic.
Dikta released their second album, "Hunting for Happiness" in 2005 in Iceland. The album was produced by Ace from Skunk Anansie and was released by the Sugarcubes-owned label, Smekkleysa SM (Bad Taste). The album artwork was made by Gabríela Frieriksdóttir, who has previously collaborated extensively with Bj?rk. "Hunting for Happiness" also had four successful singles, "Chlo?", "Breaking the Waves", "Someone, Somewhere" and "Losing Every Day". All the singles got heavy airplay on Iceland's rock radio stations X-FM and X-ie 977 as well as Iceland's National Radio (Rás 2), except for "Chlo?", which was not played on Rás 2. The lyrics on "Hunting for Happiness" are in English. "Hunting for Happiness" was released by Smekkleysa in Denmark in 2006 and UK in 2007.
Their third album is called Get It Together(2009)