Outside of his work as
the Haxan Cloak, producer/multi-instrumentalist
Bobby Krlic upheld his reputation as a master of textured, detailed, and, above all, intense sounds. With his production work on albums such as
the Body's
I Shall Die Here (2014),
Björk's
Vulnicura (2015), and
Goldfrapp's
Silver Eye (2017),
Krlic proved he could translate his aesthetic to the work of very different artists. At the same time, he established himself as an in-demand composer for film and television; whether working with
Atticus Ross on scores such as
Triple 9 (2016) or as a solo artist on the score to
Midsommar (2019), his soundtrack work made the most of his skill at conveying and evoking powerful emotions.
Born and raised in Yorkshire, England,
Krlic inherited his love of music from his guitarist father and his mother, who was a Northern soul DJ when she was a teenager. After discovering hip-hop and electronic music at age 16, he started writing and recording his own folktronica-inspired music. Following a university course in sound and visual art, he expanded his approach by purchasing a cheap violin and cello and quickly picked up the basics by playing along to
the Dirty Three's albums.
While in his last year at university,
Krlic began working under the name
the Haxan Cloak, recording in his parents' shed with a handful of microphones and his violin, cello and laptop. In 2009, he self-released
the Haxan Cloak's self-titled debut EP. The EP caught the attention of the London-based experimental metal label
Aurora Borealis, who picked it up for distribution and signed
Krlic. His first proper release for the label, the cassette-only Observatory EP, arrived in 2010. During this time,
Krlic also worked the first
Haxan Cloak full-length. He collaborated with his former university tutor and Sub Rosa recording artist
Mikhail Karikis, whose experimental work with choirs added more depth to
Krlic's already foreboding style. Arriving in April 2011,
The Haxan Cloak earned praise for its unique style and ominous atmosphere.
In 2012,
Krlic signed to Tri Angle, also home to experimental electronic artists including
oOooO and
Holy Other. That July, The Men Parted the Sea to Devour the Water, a nearly 30-minute live composition, was released by Southern Records as a part of their Latitudes series.
The Haxan Cloak's Tri Angle debut,
Excavation, appeared in April 2013 and explored the soul's journey after death. Like its predecessor, the album was acclaimed for its blend of electronic and acoustic instrumentation.
After
Excavation's release,
Krlic took a hiatus from
the Haxan Cloak to pursue a variety of other projects. Under his own name, he worked as a producer, lending his signature style to albums including
the Body's
I Shall Die Here (2014),
Björk's
Vulnicura (2015), and
Goldfrapp's
Silver Eye (2017). Later, he worked with
Father John Misty on a 2018 cover of
Link Wray's "Fallin' Rain" that appeared on the Hulu anthology series Castle Rock and with
Khalid on the title track of his 2019 album
Free Spirit.
Krlic also made a name for himself as a composer for film and television projects. With
Atticus Ross, he worked on the scores for the 2015 movie Blackhat, 2016's
Triple 9, and Steve Hoover's 2016 documentary film
Almost Holy. As a solo composer,
Krlic's projects included the music for the USA Network television series Shooter, which premiered in 2016, and director Ari Aster's 2019 film
Midsommar. Fascinated by
the Haxan Cloak's body of work, Aster wrote the screenplay for the film -- in which a troubled American couple attend a Swedish pagan ritual that delivers much more than they bargained for -- to
Krlic's music. In addition to composing the score,
Krlic also worked with Aster on the music performed during Midsommar's rituals, which incorporated traditional instruments like the hurdy gurdy and key harp along with choral vocals. ~ Heather Phares & Rich Wilson