The band was very active with live performances in and outside their native country. Abroad their most noticeable gigs where at the
CMJ,
Summerstage and touring Denmark. While active the band appeared at every
Iceland Airwaves music festival including the first one. They were a popular supporting band for foreign bands who would visit Iceland. Those included bands/artists as
Coldplay,
Blonde Redhead,
Ash,
Ian Brown,
Keane,
Modest Mouse, and
Placebo. Furthermore, Roger O'Donnell from
The Cure has appeared as a guest keyboardist on their album
Lof mér að falla að þínu eyra. In December 2004 Maus went on a hiatus. Band members decided to pursue other interests, academic and otherwise, outside of Iceland. Meanwhile, members were working on several music projects including Fræ (Palli's band), Sometime (Danni's band) and Biggi's solo project. Palli (as Páll Ragnar Pálsson) has become a respected classical composer after receiving his PhD in music from the
Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre in
Tallinn. Birgir became a screenwriter and won the Icelandic film awards Edda with co-writer and director
Baldvin Z for the film
Life in a Fishbowl (or Vonarstræti), named after a popular track from Maus's fifth studio album, Musick. In August 2013 all four members of Maus found themselves living in Reykjavík simultaneously, for the first time since the split. In November the same year they came together to play at a concert celebrating the 20 year birthday of local alternative and rock radio station X977 for a full house at Listasafn Reykjavíkur. The following spring they played at the
Aldrei fór ég suður music festival in Ísafjörður. Two festival gigs followed that summer, at the first
Secret Solstice festival and at metal festival
Eistnaflug. Early in 2015 the band announced that Maus would be playing gigs that year, including that years "Þjóðhátíð", the decades-old bank-holiday festival in
Vestmannaeyjar. The band continues to reform sporadically, after three years of intermission they came together again to play a series of concerts, including the Iceland Airwaves festival, to celebrate the 20 year anniversary of "Lof mér að falla að þínu eyra" == Discography ==