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Alex Somers
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Alex Somers (born March 7, 1984) is an American visual artist and musician from Baltimore, Maryland, who attended Berklee College of Music and Listaháskóli Íslands. Somers lives and works in Los Angeles. Previously he ran a recording studio in downtown Reykjavík where he produced, engineered, and mixed since 2010.
Key Information
He and his former partner Jónsi, with whom he split in 2019,[1] produce music and visual art under the name Jónsi & Alex. The pair have released an album and a picture book, both titled Riceboy Sleeps. Jónsi and Somers have also collaborated on Jónsi's solo project. Somers co-produced and played instruments on Jónsi's album Go. He then joined Jónsi in his five-piece live band, playing guitar and keyboards for the world tour in support of Go. Somers has produced and mixed a large number of records, including those of Sigur Rós, Jónsi, Julianna Barwick, Briana Marela, Death Vessel, Sin Fang,[2] and Pascal Pinon.
Somers has been vegan since 2004,[3] and a raw vegan since 2007.[4]
Sigur Rós
[edit]Alex Somers has worked as co-producer/mixer/engineer on several Sigur Rós releases, including Valtari, Kveikur, iTunes Festival: London 2013 and Brennisteinn EP. Somers has also worked with the band on their artwork/designs. Most notably on their album Takk...,[5] which received Best Album Design at the 2006 Icelandic Music Awards.
In 2005–2006, Somers and Lukka Sigurðardóttir collaborated to form the design team "Toothfaeries", who made all of the official hand-made merchandise for Sigur Rós sold at the Takk... tour.[6]
Parachutes
[edit]Parachutes was a band formed in 2003 as a duo consisting of Alex Somers and Scott Alario.[7] The band was named after a common term for dandelion seeds[broken anchor]. They recorded in Alex's kitchen and living room, and commonly experimented using household objects and toys as instruments. After two albums and an EP, Parachutes stopped making music in 2008.
Discography
[edit]Studio albums
[edit]- Siblings (2021)
- Siblings 2 (2021)
Collaborative albums
[edit]Jónsi & Alex (with Jónsi)
[edit]- Riceboy Sleeps (2009)
- All Animals (2009)
- Lost & Found (2019)
With Parachutes
[edit]As producer
[edit]- Rökkurró – Í Annan Heim (2010)
- Jónsi – Go (2010)
- Sigur Rós – Valtari (2012)
- Julianna Barwick – Nepenthe (2013)
- Sigur Rós – Kveikur (2013)
- Pascal Pinon – Twosomeness (2013)
- Sin Fang – Flowers (2013)
- Hymnalya – Hymns (2013)
- Tom Gallo – Continuation Day EP (2013)
- Death Vessel – Island Intervals (2014)
- Briana Marela – All Around Us (2015)
- Veroníque Vaka – Erlendis (2015)
- Gordi – Clever Disguise EP (2016)
- Sin Fang – Spaceland (2016)
- Sound Of Ceres – The Twin (2017)
- Gordi – Reservoir (2017)
- A. G. Cook – 7G (2020)
- Bob Dylan – Shadow Kingdom: The Early Songs of Bob Dylan (2021)
- Hyd – Clearing (2022)
- William Tyler – Time Indefinite (2025)
As film composer
[edit]- We Bought a Zoo (2011) (co-produced soundtrack with composer Jónsi)
- Manhattan (2014) (TV series, with Jónsi, Zoë Keating & Jeff Russo)
- Aloha (2015) (with Jónsi)
- Captain Fantastic (2016)
- Dawson City: Frozen Time (2016)
- Black Mirror: Hang the DJ (2017) (TV series, one episode)
- Hale Country This Morning, This Evening (2018) (with Scott Alario & Forest Kelley)
- Honey Boy (2019)
- Miss Americana (2020)
- Charm City Kings (2020)
- Here We Are: Notes for Living on Planet Earth (2020) (Animated short film)
- Audrey (2020)
- Together Together (2021)
- Alone Together (2022)
- Fresh (2022)
- Causeway (2022)
- Nickel Boys (2024) (with Scott Alario)
- Overcompensating (2025) (TV series)
- Rental Family (2025) (with Jónsi)
- Holland (2025)
Album artwork
[edit]- Sigur Rós - Takk
- Sigur Rós - Glósoli
- Sigur Rós - Hoppípolla
- Sigur Rós - Saeglópur
- Helgi Hrafn Jónsson - For the Rest of My Childhood
- Sismo - Le Magica Exists
- Japanese Compilations 1,2 & 3
- Jónsi & Alex - Riceboy Sleeps
- Jónsi & Alex - All Animals
- Jónsi & Alex - Rain Down My Favorite Songs
- Hammock - Maybe They Will Sing for Us Tomorrow
- Leif Vollebekk - North Americana
References
[edit]- ^ Albertson, Jasmine (October 17, 2019). "Jónsi and Alex Somers on Waking Up Riceboy Sleeps, Trading Glaciers for Sunny Beaches and Working Together Post-Breakup". www.kexp.org. Retrieved August 18, 2020.
- ^ "saoing faoing, Two excited young men in the studio. Started". sinfang.tumblr.com. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
- ^ Josef Lincoln (February 17, 2017), "Why I'm Vegan" Podcast with Alex Somers, retrieved February 18, 2017
- ^ Peltonen, Sari (August 18, 2009). "Raw in Reykjavík". The Reykjavík Grapevine. grapevine.is. Archived from the original on October 19, 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2016.
- ^ "eighteen seconds before sunrise – sigur rós news " 2006" January" 25". sigur-ros.co.uk. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved January 13, 2009.
- ^ "sigur rós - new t-shirts in the making". sigur rós. July 1, 2005. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Parachutes". Parachutes. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Parachutes, by Parachutes". Parachutes. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Susy, by Parachutes". Parachutes. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Tree Roots, by Parachutes". Parachutes. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
External links
[edit]- Official Alex Somers website
- Official Jónsi & Alex website Archived April 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- Official Parachutes website
- Alex Somers at IMDb
Alex Somers
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Upbringing in Baltimore
Alex Somers was born on March 7, 1984, in Baltimore, Maryland, where he spent his early years in the Oella neighborhood.[1] Growing up in a musically inclined family, he was particularly influenced by his older brother John, a musician whose work served as a key role model for Somers' creative development.[1] His parents further nurtured this environment by introducing him to music from a young age, including playing The Doors' "Hello, I Love You" 7-inch single on a Fisher Price turntable, which became one of his earliest musical memories.[8] At age 11, his mother took him to the 1995 Lollapalooza festival in Baltimore, immersing him in the local punk and alternative rock scene and broadening his exposure to live performances.[8] During his adolescence, Somers began exploring creative pursuits in both music and visual arts, drawing inspiration from Baltimore's eclectic cultural landscape. His initial foray into visual expression came through exposure to the films of local icon John Waters, whose unconventional aesthetics he first encountered while watching Pink Flamingos during basement rehearsals with friends.[8] This early engagement with provocative visual storytelling aligned with his self-taught experiments in art, reflecting the city's vibrant, boundary-pushing artistic vibe. These experiences laid the groundwork for his multifaceted identity as a visual artist alongside his musical interests. Somers' transition to music solidified around age 13, when he received a guitar as a Christmas gift and purchased a Tascam Portastudio 424 four-track recorder to experiment with sound layering.[1] Influenced by grunge acts like Nirvana—whose songs he quickly learned to play—and ambient tracks such as Smashing Pumpkins' "Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness" title track, he taught himself drums, bass, keyboards, and synthesizers. In middle school, he formed his first band, Jayne, covering Sonic Youth's "Star Power," and made his debut public performance in sixth grade by playing Nirvana tunes at a talent show.[8] By his late teens, his tastes evolved toward electronic pioneers like Aphex Twin, Autechre, and Oval, fueling his interest in ambient sound manipulation.[1] These informal pursuits in Baltimore ultimately prompted his move to Boston for studies at Berklee College of Music.Formal musical training
Alex Somers pursued formal musical training at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, starting in 2002, where he earned a double major in film scoring and music therapy in the early 2000s.[1][9] His studies there emphasized music theory and composition, providing a rigorous foundation in technical skills such as orchestration and therapeutic applications of sound, though he later described the environment as overly academic and less conducive to creative experimentation.[10] During this period, Somers experimented with ambient music, creating long drone pieces alongside his brother, which honed his interest in experimental soundscapes through self-taught recording techniques using tools like a Tascam four-track.[10] Following his time at Berklee, Somers relocated to Reykjavík, Iceland, in 2005, where he enrolled in a three-year visual arts program at Listaháskóli Íslands (Iceland Academy of the Arts).[9] The curriculum focused on integrating visual media with creative expression, offering students substantial autonomy through daily morning sessions with professors from 8 a.m. to noon and weekly critiques by department heads, fostering a multidisciplinary approach that aligned with Somers' evolving interest in blending music and art.[10] His cohort of approximately 25 students per year included many musicians, which encouraged cross-pollination between visual projects and sonic experimentation, influencing his ambient and post-classical style by emphasizing intuitive, collaborative processes over rigid theory.[10] The move to Iceland profoundly shaped Somers' artistic worldview, introducing a culture shock from Baltimore's urban intensity to Reykjavík's intimate, supportive creative community of around 75 visual arts students total, which prioritized raw innovation and peer-driven inspiration.[10] This environment reinforced his preference for ambient, experimental forms by immersing him in a landscape and society that valued subtle, atmospheric expressions, ultimately bridging his musical training with visual pursuits.[11]Musical career
Involvement with Sigur Rós
Alex Somers first connected with Sigur Rós in the early 2000s while studying at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, where he was introduced to frontman Jón Þór Birgisson (Jónsi) during a band visit to the school.[1] By 2005, Somers had relocated to Reykjavík, Iceland, to live with Jónsi and pursue studies at the Iceland Academy of the Arts, immersing himself in the local music scene.[12] His initial involvement with the band was as a visual artist, designing the cover artwork for their 2005 album Takk... in collaboration with Ísak Winther and Lukka Sigurðardóttir, which earned the Best Album Artwork award at the 2006 Icelandic Music Awards.[9] Somers' role expanded into production and engineering by the late 2000s, coinciding with the band's creative evolution. He contributed to recording sessions for Sigur Rós' 2012 album Valtari, serving as co-producer and engineer alongside Birgir Jón Birgisson at his Reykjavík studio over six weeks in 2011.[9] During these sessions, Somers enhanced the album's unfinished ambient drones by adding layers of texture and focus, helping to shape its ethereal, immersive soundscapes, while also encouraging the band to incorporate Icelandic lyrics over their signature Vonlenska glossolalia.[9] He continued in a similar capacity for the 2013 album Kveikur, mixing tracks that introduced more electronic and rhythmic elements to the band's post-rock style.[13] Although Somers occasionally performed with the band during live shows and contributed to side projects like the ambient Liminal series (2017–2019), his direct involvement began to evolve after 2013 as he shifted toward independent production and solo endeavors.[1] This transition aligned with Sigur Rós' brief hiatus and Somers' growing focus on collaborations outside the band, including scoring for film and television, while maintaining occasional ties such as co-composing pieces for the 2017 Black Mirror episode "Hang the DJ."[14]Parachutes ambient project
Parachutes was established in 2007 as an ambient collaborative project between Alex Somers and Jónsi (Jón Þór Birgisson of Sigur Rós), focusing on immersive soundscapes built from drone elements and field recordings. The duo's work emerged from their shared artistic partnership in Reykjavík, where they experimented with organic layering of sounds drawn from natural environments and acoustic sources to create ethereal, non-vocal compositions. This formation built on earlier explorations dating back to 2003, but the project's public debut came through multimedia exhibitions that integrated music with visual art.[15][16] The project's signature release, Riceboy Sleeps (2009), showcased their innovative approach to ambient music through a 68-minute instrumental album recorded exclusively with acoustic instruments in Iceland. Tracks like "Happy Heart" and "Daníel Land" employed slow-building drones, subtle field recordings of wind and water, and orchestral swells to evoke vast, introspective landscapes, earning praise for its emotional depth and textural richness. Critics highlighted the album's ability to transcend traditional ambient boundaries, blending post-rock influences with minimalist beauty to produce "stunningly beautiful" and "emotionally evocative" soundscapes that felt both intimate and expansive. The accompanying graphic book further emphasized the project's synesthetic quality, pairing the music with Somers' abstract visuals.[17][18] Parachutes extended beyond recordings into live performances and installations that merged audio and visual elements. In 2007, the duo staged their first major exhibition in Hot Springs, Arkansas, presenting ghostly projections and sound installations that immersed audiences in a dreamlike atmosphere. This was followed by gallery shows worldwide under the Riceboy Sleeps banner, where music played alongside Somers' artwork to create site-specific environments. By 2019, marking the album's tenth anniversary, they revived the project for live concerts, including a full performance of Riceboy Sleeps at the Philharmonie de Paris and the Sydney Opera House, featuring expanded instrumentation and visuals to recreate the original's hypnotic immersion. These events underscored the project's emphasis on experiential art over conventional concerts.[16][19][20] The Parachutes project profoundly shaped Somers' subsequent ambient endeavors, laying the groundwork for his solo explorations through 2021. Its focus on acoustic drones and environmental sampling directly informed releases like the Liminal series (2017–2019), a Sigur Rós-related ambient compilation to which Somers contributed, and his debut solo albums Siblings and Siblings 2 (both 2021), which echoed the duo's organic layering while incorporating found sounds from film scores. This evolution marked a transition from collaborative immersion to personal, introspective ambient works, influencing Somers' broader production style in visual and scoring contexts.[21][22]Collaborations with Jónsi
Alex Somers and Jónsi, the frontman of Sigur Rós, expanded their partnership beyond ambient compositions into vocal-driven orchestral pop with the 2010 release of Jónsi's album Go, which Somers co-produced alongside the artist and engineer Peter Katis. Recorded in Reykjavík and Connecticut during the summer of 2009, the album features lush string arrangements by Nico Muhly and emphasizes optimistic, layered soundscapes blending folk, post-rock, and electronic elements. This project marked a pivotal shift for the duo, incorporating Jónsi's falsetto vocals and intricate instrumentation to create an accessible yet experimental pop aesthetic.[23] Their collaboration extended to film soundtracks, where they contributed original songs blending ethereal vocals with cinematic orchestration. For the 2010 animated feature How to Train Your Dragon, Somers produced Jónsi's end-credits track "Sticks & Stones," a soaring anthem that integrates the film's score by John Powell with the duo's signature atmospheric production. Similarly, for the 2011 drama We Bought a Zoo directed by Cameron Crowe, Somers and Jónsi co-produced the full score, including vocal pieces like the titular "We Bought a Zoo," which captures the film's themes of renewal through gentle, harp-infused melodies and subtle electronic textures.[24][25] In the early 2010s, the duo supported these works through live performances, including Jónsi's international tour for Go—which showcased the album's orchestral arrangements with a backing band—and select joint appearances highlighting their shared material. These shows, often featuring visual art elements co-created by Somers, emphasized the duo's interdisciplinary approach and helped bridge their studio recordings with intimate, immersive experiences for audiences.[26] Following the initial burst of activity, Somers and Jónsi's partnership evolved into more sporadic projects after 2013, even after their personal separation in 2019,[27] profoundly shaping Somers' production style toward hybrid orchestral-electronic sound design. In 2019, they released the ambient album Lost and Found as a "sibling" to Riceboy Sleeps, featuring six instrumental tracks of immersive soundscapes.[28] Notable joint efforts include Jónsi's guest contribution of the track "Boy 1904" to Somers' score for the 2016 film Captain Fantastic, which echoes their earlier pop sensibilities in its tender, family-focused narrative. Their ongoing collaboration culminated in co-scoring the 2025 drama Rental Family, directed by Hikari, further refining Somers' approach to emotional, landscape-inspired compositions influenced by their shared history.[29][30]Solo releases and evolution
Alex Somers released his debut solo albums, Siblings and Siblings 2, on March 19, 2021, via Krúnk Records, marking a significant step in his independent music output following years of collaborative ambient work.[31] These double albums, each containing 13 impressionistic tracks, explore haunting and spiritual soundscapes that blend ambient, post-classical, and experimental electronic elements, reflecting Somers' personal introspection and evolution as a composer.[32] The production process drew from his longstanding interest in film scoring techniques, incorporating layered field recordings, subtle drones, and ethereal textures to create immersive, otherworldly atmospheres without reliance on traditional song structures.[22] Siblings delves into darker, more unsettling territories, evoking themes of loss and emotional turmoil through suffocating, post-rock-infused ambience that critics described as disturbingly effective and hauntingly beautiful.[33] In contrast, Siblings 2 shifts toward uplifting journeys with brighter melodies and lighter atmospheres, offering a sense of resolution and spiritual transcendence, as if emerging from the shadows of its predecessor.[34] This duality in the paired releases highlights Somers' stylistic progression, allowing for greater individual creative control compared to his collaborative efforts, where shared visions often tempered the intensity of ambient explorations.[8] Critical reception praised the albums for their emotional depth and innovative production, with reviewers noting how Somers' solo work distinguishes itself through raw, personal vulnerability absent in his more polished joint projects.[35] Since 2021, Somers' solo output has remained selective, with no major new personal albums announced by late 2025, as his focus shifted toward integrating ambient sensibilities into film and television scoring, further evolving his signature soundscapes in narrative contexts.[1]Production and composition
Record production credits
Alex Somers has established himself as a sought-after producer for Icelandic and international artists, often infusing recordings with ambient textures and layered soundscapes drawn from his background in experimental music. His production work extends beyond his personal collaborations, contributing to albums by Sigur Rós in roles such as additional producer and mixer, as well as full productions for emerging acts including Death Vessel, Julianna Barwick, Pascal Pinon, and Damien Rice. This approach typically involves enhancing emotional depth through subtle atmospheric elements, bridging post-rock and indie pop genres. One of Somers' key contributions to Sigur Rós came on their 2012 album Valtari, where he served as additional producer, mixer, and engineer. The project began as ambient sketches, which Somers helped refine by layering long drones and reverb-heavy elements to create immersive textures. This technique amplified the album's slow-motion avalanche quality, transforming raw ideas into a cohesive ambient post-rock sound without overpowering the band's core dynamics.[9] Somers continued his involvement with Sigur Rós on Kveikur (2013), co-producing and mixing the record alongside the band. Here, his production emphasized a shift toward more aggressive rhythms while retaining ambient layering, using engineering to balance raw energy with ethereal overlays that maintained the group's signature atmospheric haze. These efforts helped the album achieve a broader sonic palette, blending intensity with subtle environmental sounds recorded in Reykjavík's Sundlaugin studio.[36] In producing Jónsi's solo debut Go (2010), Somers co-handled production with Peter Katis, focusing on acoustic arrangements enriched by string sections from Nico Muhly. He layered ambient swells beneath the falsetto vocals and orchestral elements, creating a dreamlike pop framework that extended Jónsi's Sigur Rós aesthetic into more intimate, uplifting territory—evident in tracks like "Go Do," where subtle reverb and harp integrations add ethereal depth without diluting the melodic focus.[37][23] Somers produced Damien Rice's My Favourite Faded Fantasy (2014), blending intimate folk with expansive ambient productions recorded in Iceland, emphasizing emotional rawness through layered acoustics and subtle electronic textures. He also produced albums for Pascal Pinon (Góðir Gestir, 2014), incorporating minimalist arrangements with ambient swells, and Julianna Barwick (Healing Is a Miracle, 2020), adding ethereal vocal processing and field recordings to her dream-pop sound.[38] Somers' production for American dream-pop outfit Sound Of Ceres on The Twin (2017) showcased his ability to apply ambient layering in a pop context. Working in his Reykjavík studio, he refined the band's original mixes by adding textural overlays, such as shimmering synths and reverb-drenched vocals, to evoke a hazy, literary-inspired narrative; this resulted in a polished yet otherworldly sound on songs like "Gemini Scenic."[39][40] Similarly, on Australian artist Gordi's Reservoir (2017), Somers co-produced, mixed, and engineered several tracks, including "Aeon" and "Bitter End," infusing indie-folk with expansive ambient elements reminiscent of Sigur Rós. His contributions involved programming percussion and bass while layering cello and programmed sounds to heighten emotional resonance, blending pop accessibility with experimental immersion recorded partly in Iceland.[41][42] More recently, Somers provided additional production on English producer A. G. Cook's ambitious 7G (2020), notably co-producing the track "Somers Tape" with ambient flourishes that contrasted the album's hyper-pop framework. This collaboration highlighted his technique of integrating subtle, layered atmospheres into electronic pop, adding organic depth to synthetic structures amid the record's 49-track sprawl. He also served as music director and producer for the soundtrack of Bob Dylan's Shadow Kingdom: The Early Songs of Bob Dylan (2021), reinterpreting classic tracks with intimate, ambient arrangements.[43][44]| Artist | Album | Year | Key Roles | Notable Techniques |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sigur Rós | Valtari | 2012 | Additional producer, mixer, engineer | Ambient drone layering, reverb-heavy elements for texture |
| Sigur Rós | Kveikur | 2013 | Co-producer, mixer | Balancing rhythmic aggression with ethereal overlays |
| Jónsi | Go | 2010 | Co-producer | String and reverb layering in acoustic pop |
| Sound Of Ceres | The Twin | 2017 | Producer | Shimmering synth and vocal reverb in dream-pop |
| Gordi | Reservoir | 2017 | Co-producer, mixer (select tracks) | Programmed elements with cello for folktronica immersion |
| A. G. Cook | 7G | 2020 | Additional producer (select tracks) | Ambient flourishes in hyper-pop structures |
| Damien Rice | My Favourite Faded Fantasy | 2014 | Producer | Layered acoustics and electronic textures in folk |
| Pascal Pinon | Góðir Gestir | 2014 | Producer | Minimalist arrangements with ambient swells |
| Julianna Barwick | Healing Is a Miracle | 2020 | Producer | Ethereal vocal processing and field recordings |
| Bob Dylan | Shadow Kingdom: The Early Songs of Bob Dylan | 2021 | Music director, producer | Intimate ambient reinterpretations of classics |
Film and television scoring
Alex Somers began composing for film and television in the early 2010s, drawing on his ambient and experimental background to create scores that integrate seamlessly with visual narratives. His work often features ethereal soundscapes that enhance emotional depth without overpowering the story, evolving from minimalist drones to more layered compositions incorporating orchestral elements. Early projects include the score for the WGN America miniseries Manhattan (2014–2015), using tense, atmospheric drones to underscore the historical drama of the atomic bomb project, and select episodes of Black Mirror, such as "Hang the DJ" (2017), with subtle electronic textures amplifying dystopian themes.[11][5] Somers composed the score for Captain Fantastic (2016), blending folk acoustics with ambient swells to capture the film's off-grid family dynamics and emotional intensity. For Honey Boy (2019), his intimate, cello-driven soundscapes reflected the semi-autobiographical exploration of childhood trauma. In Causeway (2022), Somers employed slow-moving field recordings and strings to evoke quiet resilience in the drama starring Jennifer Lawrence. He also scored Fresh (2022), incorporating unsettling ambient layers for the horror-thriller elements, and Together Together (2021), with warm, minimalist cues supporting the surrogacy comedy.[5] One of Somers' early notable scores was for the 2016 documentary Dawson City: Frozen Time, directed by Bill Morrison, where he blended archival footage of the Klondike Gold Rush with ambient drones crafted from processed acoustic instruments like slowed-down double bass, strings, and unconventional sounds such as dog toy squeaks run through a guitar amp. This approach created a haunting, decaying atmosphere that mirrored the film's themes of loss and rediscovery, evoking timeless ambition and despair rather than period-specific music. The score earned Somers the International Documentary Association's Creative Recognition Award in 2018.[3][45] In collaboration with Jónsi, Somers contributed instrumental production and mixing to the How to Train Your Dragon franchise (2010–2019), focusing on atmospheric tracks that supported John Powell's orchestral score, such as engineering and sampling for end-credit sequences that infused fantasy adventure with subtle ambient textures. These efforts highlighted Somers' role in bridging his ambient expertise with cinematic scope, particularly in tracks like "Test Drive" and "This Is Berk."[46][47] Somers' solo scores in the 2020s, such as Nickel Boys (2024) co-composed with Scott Alario, emphasized tension and raw emotion through experimental elements like broken fan recordings and frog croaks, complementing the film's first-person perspective on trauma and resilience in a reform school setting. Similarly, his score for the 2025 thriller Holland, directed by Mimi Cave, incorporated orchestral hybrids with suspenseful motifs—evident in cues like "Cat and Mouse" and "Unrest"—to underscore the unraveling mysteries in a small-town Michigan backdrop, marking his shift toward more dynamic, narrative-driven hybrids by blending ambient origins with symphonic swells. The premiere of his score for Charm City Kings (2020) at the Sundance Film Festival further solidified his recognition in independent cinema. More recently, Somers scored the Hulu miniseries Under the Bridge (2024), using layered ambient and orchestral elements to heighten the true-crime drama's emotional stakes, and co-composed the score for Rental Family (2025), incorporating intimate textures for the film's exploration of fabricated relationships.[48][49][50][51][52]Visual arts career
Album cover designs
Alex Somers has contributed to several notable album cover designs, blending visual artistry with the ambient and post-rock aesthetics of his musical collaborations. For Sigur Rós's fourth studio album Takk... (2005), Somers co-designed the cover alongside Ísak Winther and Lukka Sigurðardóttir, incorporating vibrant, abstract imagery that captures an ethereal, playful essence reflective of the band's evolving sound.[53] The design features stylized photographs of the band members in colorful attire against a minimalist background, emphasizing themes of joy and introspection that align with the album's title, meaning "thanks" in Icelandic.[9] In his work with the ambient project Parachutes, Somers created the artwork for the 2009 album Riceboy Sleeps, a collaboration with Jónsi that integrates found photography with digital manipulation to produce layered, dreamlike compositions. The cover and accompanying book showcase expressionistic textures and delicate illustrations, evoking a sense of serene vastness inspired by natural forms.[54] Similarly, for the collaborative release Jónsi & Alex under the same project (often associated with follow-up elements around 2010), Somers emphasized minimalist aesthetics, using sparse, evocative visuals to complement the ambient instrumentation.[55] Somers extended his design approach to his solo work, including the 2016 soundtrack album Captain Fantastic (Music from the Film), where he crafted the cover art featuring subtle, introspective imagery that blends organic elements with subtle digital effects. This design underscores the film's themes of family and wilderness, drawing on Somers's signature ethereal style.[10] Throughout his designs up to releases in the 2020s, such as his 2021 double album Siblings, Somers has frequently incorporated influences from Icelandic landscapes, using manipulated photographs of rugged terrains and atmospheric skies to evoke a sense of otherworldly tranquility.[56]Independent visual projects
Somers' visual art practice developed significantly during his over a decade residing in Reykjavík, where he drew inspiration from the Icelandic landscape to explore themes of nature and introspection. This marked a shift toward multimedia explorations that blend found objects, photography, and installation elements. By the 2020s, his approach incorporated digital techniques to manipulate archival images, emphasizing spiritual and environmental motifs in non-musical contexts.[1] In 2017, Somers contributed a multimedia installation titled Siblings to the Norður og Niður contemporary art festival in Reykjavík, featuring antique gramophone speakers, tape loops, piano, and harmonium arranged to create an immersive spatial experience that highlighted the interplay between everyday objects and sensory perception.[57] The piece, presented nightly at Norðurbryggja harbor venue, integrated visual sculpture with timed activations, collaborating with Icelandic artists in live painting and performance collectives to evoke ethereal, nature-inspired atmospheres.[58] Somers participated in the 2019 group exhibition Can You Dream It? (Yes I Can.) at Kristen Lorello Gallery in New York, curated by photographer Scott Alario, where he contributed visual works alongside non-musical artists such as k. funmilayo aileru, Brianna Rose Brooks, and Joseph Buzzell, focusing on eclectic, dreamlike assemblages that extended his interest in found imagery and abstraction.[59] This show represented a commission-like opportunity outside music promotion, showcasing his evolution toward collaborative gallery formats. Somers has also designed books, including the graphic companion to Riceboy Sleeps and The Good Heart Recipe Book (2013) with Jónsi. His 2021 albums Siblings and Siblings 2 feature mixed-media artwork incorporating 8mm family films.[1]Personal life
Relationships and family
Alex Somers met Jónsi (Birgir Jón Birgisson), the lead singer of Sigur Rós, in 2003 while attending Berklee College of Music in Boston, and the two began a romantic relationship that same year.[60][61] They moved together to Reykjavík in 2005, where their shared life intertwined personal and artistic elements, including creating music in their home environment.[60] The couple separated in 2019 after 16 years together, a development Jónsi described as uncertain earlier that year before confirming the end of their romantic partnership.[62][27] Post-separation, Somers and Jónsi relocated to Los Angeles and have maintained a close, supportive bond, referring to each other as family despite the romantic split.[62] No public information exists regarding children or further family expansions for Somers. Their relationship deeply influenced Somers' creative output, particularly in ambient projects like Riceboy Sleeps (2009), which emerged organically from domestic music-making sessions infused with romantic intimacy.[62] Similarly, Somers' Siblings series draws thematic inspiration from familial bonds, incorporating 8mm home films from family gatherings and reflections on his older brother John as a musical influence.[1] Somers and Jónsi have generally maintained privacy around personal matters, though Jónsi shared details of their breakup in rare interviews, marking a departure from his typically reserved stance over 25 years in the public eye.[60][62]Residences and influences
Alex Somers is primarily based in Los Angeles, California, having resettled there after closing his Reykjavík studio around 2019, while continuing to frequent Iceland for projects.[1][63][64] He relocated to Reykjavík in 2005, where he established a recording studio in the city's downtown area that operated until around 2019, facilitating collaborations within Iceland's vibrant music scene. Following his separation from longtime partner Jónsi in 2019, Somers resettled primarily in Los Angeles while continuing to frequent Iceland for projects.[1][63][64] The stark, isolated landscapes of Iceland have profoundly shaped Somers' ambient music style, infusing it with ethereal, introspective qualities that evoke the country's glacial expanses and natural solitude. Working from Reykjavík, his compositions often mirror the surrounding environment's vast, serene isolation, contributing to the "glacier-like" textures in albums like Riceboy Sleeps and his solo works. This rural immersion contrasts sharply with his Baltimore roots, where the urban grit of his hometown continues to exert a lingering influence, as seen in tracks like "Oella," inspired by revisits to the neighborhood's run-down, historic charm and highlighting creative tensions between city density and open expanses.[10][1] Somers' frequent travels for professional engagements, including scoring premieres at the Toronto International Film Festival and SCAD Savannah Film Festival for Rental Family (2025), have broadened his global perspectives and integrated diverse cultural elements into his oeuvre.[11][1][65]Discography
Solo studio albums
Alex Somers released his debut solo studio albums, Siblings and Siblings 2, on March 19, 2021, through the Icelandic label Krúnk. These double albums, each comprising 13 tracks, mark Somers' first independent full-length releases outside of collaborative projects or film scoring, drawing on ambient and post-classical influences developed during his production work. The material was primarily composed between 2014 and 2016, with Somers incorporating unique production elements such as field recordings to evoke impressionistic, haunting atmospheres.[1][56][66] The Siblings series partially originated from Somers' 2016 soundtrack for the film Dawson City: Frozen Time, where he explored similar sonic textures using archival audio. For Siblings, notable production notes include the integration of a child's vocal sample from the 1961 film The Innocents, layered with ambient drones and subtle instrumentation to create ethereal soundscapes. Siblings 2 extends this approach, featuring field recordings of African children from the 1950s, alongside glitch elements and orchestral swells for a companion piece that complements the first volume's intimacy.[1][56][67] As of November 2025, no additional solo studio albums have been released, though Somers has announced two further projects as nearly complete: one recorded in 2018 with the Capital Children’s Choir and another in 2019 with the London Contemporary Orchestra. These remain unreleased, with no confirmed dates.[1]| Album Title | Release Date | Label | Track Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| Siblings | March 19, 2021 | Krúnk | 13 |
| Siblings 2 | March 19, 2021 | Krúnk | 13 |