The minimal, experimental song features trombone and percussion arrangements, and serves as the second preview of the Icelandic artist's upcoming 10th album, 'Fossora', which is due out on September 30.
Following Atopos, it arrives paired with a vivid video co-directed by Björk and Nick Knight, who helmed the clip for Pagan Poetry, a track from her 2001 LP 'Vespertine'. Introducing Ovule online, Björk wrote:
"It is a meditation about us as lovers walking around this world and I imagine two spheres or satellites following us around.
"One above us that represents ideal love, one below us representing the shadows of love and we ourselves walk around in the third sphere of real love, where the everyday monday-morning meet-in-the-kitchen-love lives in."
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