Bjork - Post-flac-
The story of finding her voice in the chaos of London after the global success of her first solo album, . Released in
The Delicacy of “Hyperballad” This is the track that justifies the FLAC upgrade. As the song builds from the early morning ambient field recordings (the distant foghorn, the gentle lapping of Icelandic water) to the four-on-the-floor kick drum, the lossless format preserves the dynamic range. You hear the granular texture of Björk’s breath between syllables. When the strings swell at 2:45, they don’t clip or digital distort; they bloom. The final minute, where the beats fall away to leave just her voice and the clicking of pebbles, is hauntingly transparent. Bjork - Post-FLAC-
Headphones: A "subdued" experimental track with layered melodies and vibrating bass notes, designed for spatial clarity. The story of finding her voice in the
The Verdict: Is it Worth the Storage Space?
A complete Bjork - Post-FLAC- folder (including Telegram and all B-sides) clocks in at roughly 1.2GB to 2.4GB depending on bit depth. That is significant storage. Pros: Higher bit depth means a lower noise floor
Searching for a (Free Lossless Audio Codec) version of Björk's 1995 album
- Pros: Higher bit depth means a lower noise floor. The ambient details (the birds on "Isobel," the rain on "Headphones") are lifted out of the mix.
- Cons: Some fans argue the high-res remaster is a bit "brighter" in the upper mids compared to the warm, analog feel of the 1995 CD.





































