Björk’s Post was a sensory experience, a genre collision, and a love letter from a woman spinning through big-city chaos with wide-eyed wonder and deep emotional intelligence. Released in June 1995, it was adventurous, awkward, beautiful, brutal — just like life. Think you know Post? Here are five wild facts even the deepest Björk nerds might have missed.
1. She Recorded Vocals in the Ocean. Yes, Literally.
While working at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas, Björk walked into the water at sunset with a digital recorder powered by a generator. She recorded vocals while the waves crashed around her. This wasn’t just vibes — this was commitment to environment-as-instrument. It doesn’t get more post-genre than singing with your feet in the sand and your head in a dream.
2. “Cover Me” Was First Recorded in a Cave.
Before it became one of the album’s most haunting moments, “Cover Me” was recorded deep inside a cave. That echo you hear? That’s not a studio trick — it’s Mother Nature’s reverb. For Björk, the song was partly a love letter and partly a joke about how dangerous she makes the recording process. You know, just another day spelunking in the name of art.
3. She Rejected a Polished Album to Add More “Real” Instruments.
After returning from the Bahamas, Björk delayed Post’s release — even though the label expected it the next day — because something didn’t feel right. She went back into studios in London, brought in live strings, brass, and percussion, and reshaped the album from the ground up. She even recruited Brazilian legend Eumir Deodato to arrange “Hyperballad” and “Isobel.” Good things take time. Iconic things take instinct.
4. The Iconic Album Cover Jacket Was Made of Envelope Paper.
The red-white-and-blue jacket Björk wears on the Post cover isn’t just stylish — it’s made of Tyvek, the same material as Royal Mail envelopes. Designed by Hussein Chalayan, it was a literal embodiment of the album’s title: Post, as in mail. The jacket now lives under glass at Hard Rock Reykjavík. Yes, her album art has been in a museum. Of course it has.
5. She Performed “Possibly Maybe” in a Video Directed by Her Ex… About Their Breakup.
Björk wrote “Possibly Maybe” about her breakup with director Stéphane Sednaoui — then asked him to direct the video. Awkward? Sure. But artistically brilliant. The video features East Asian aesthetics, blacklight sensuality, and Björk reflecting on herself and her identity through a silent Japanese doll. It’s icy, intimate, and deeply cinematic. Breakup goals, Björk style.
Post was ahead of its time, and truly from another dimension entirely. It’s the sound of someone discovering who they are by building worlds no one else could imagine. Whether she’s recording in caves, designing postal fashion, or rewriting genre boundaries in real time, Björk makes sure every detail means something. Now, go throw “Hyperballad” on your headphones and remember: it’s not weird. It’s wonder.