Ape in Pink Marble Devendra Banhart

Cover Ape in Pink Marble

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2016

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
21.09.2016

Label: Nonesuch Records

Genre: Songwriter

Subgenre:

Interpret: Devendra Banhart

Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Middle Names 03:29
  • 2 Good Time Charlie 02:07
  • 3 Jon Lends a Hand 02:34
  • 4 Mara 03:13
  • 5 Fancy Man 02:59
  • 6 Fig in Leather 03:13
  • 7 Theme for a Taiwanese Woman in Lime Green 04:23
  • 8 Souvenirs 02:59
  • 9 Mourner's Dance 03:19
  • 10 Saturday Night 04:24
  • 11 Linda 05:56
  • 12 Lucky 02:50
  • 13 Celebration 02:56
  • Total Runtime 44:22

Info zu Ape in Pink Marble

"Ape in Pink Marble" ist Banharts neuntes Album und folgt auf "Mala", das vor drei Jahren erschien. Das Werk wurde von dem Singer / Songwriter / Gitarristen in Los Angeles geschrieben, produziert, arrangiert und aufgenommen. Mit von der Partie waren seine langjährigen Wegbegleiter Noah Georgeson und Josiah Steinbrick, die auch bei "Mala" mitwirkten.

Devendra Banhart, der auch als bildender Künstler erfolgreich ist, machte zuletzt 2015 mit der Veröffentlichung zweier Kunstbücher von sich reden. Seine unverwechselbaren, minutiös kolorierten und oftmals geheimnisvollen Zeichnungen wurden in Galerien rund um die Welt ausgestellt, darunter bei der Art Basel Contemporary Art Fair in Miami, im San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, dem Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brüssel und dem Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art.

Noah Georgeson, bass, synthesizers, programming, koto, prepared guitar, drums, vocals, backing vocals
Greg Rogove, drums, percussion
Devendra Banhart, guitars, synthesizer, percussion, koto
Josiah Steinbrick, synthesizers, bass, marimba, guitar, drums, Mellotron, piano, percussion, koto, backing vocals
Rodrigo Amarante, guitar
Mel Shimkovitz, guitar solo

Produced, arranged, and recorded by Noah Georgeson, Josiah Steinbrick, and Devendra Banhart


Devendra Banhart
Growing up in Caracas, Venezuela and Los Angeles, Devendra Banhart was always playing music and drawing. But it wasn't until his brief stay at the San Francisco Art Institute that the disciplines became his constant companions. With the encouragement of poet and SFAI professor Bill Berskon, Banhart began experimenting with all kinds of art. He also began recording songs around that same time, usually on shoddy, hand-me-down four-track machines. Brief, half-finished, or written in stream-of-consciousness form, the recordings weren't initially intended for release. But friends encouraged Banhart, and he sent out a few tentative demos. He also left SFAI in favor of busking and wandering, and his travels led him from the Bay Area to Paris and eventually back to L.A. By now he was performing regularly, but he hadn't recorded or released anything officially. That changed when Michael Gira (Swans) issued the first Banhart material on his Young God imprint in October 2002. Oh Me Oh My... was an immediate critical hit, and comparisons to legends of songwriting, eclecticism, and tragedy were frequent (Tim Buckley, Syd Barrett, Marc Bolan, et al.). The Black Babies EP arrived in 2003, followed by Banhart's first full-length, Rejoicing in the Hands, in April 2004. Young God released its companion, Niño Rojo, in September. Acclaim for both was nearly unanimous, and Banhart's audience continued to expand. He jumped to XL for September 2005's Cripple Crow, an ambitious set and his most sonically expansive album up to that point. Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon continued in that vein, recorded at Banhart's new home studio in Topanga Canyon. A jump to Warner Bros. brought a more straightforward set (relatively speaking), What Will We Be, in 2009. Released in 2013, Mala organized some of the overstuffed elements of Banhart's multifaceted muse into a more cohesive set of songs than on his previous few albums. A trend he continued with on his 2016 album, Ape in Pink Marble. (Rovi)

Booklet für Ape in Pink Marble

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