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February 2nd, 2009

(((folkYEAH))) & naturalismo present: Kath Bloom [ + exclusive Devendra Banhart mp3]

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“One of the most heartbreaking singers ever. Beautiful” – Devendra Banhart

“I consider myself her biggest fan.” – Josephine Foster

Kath Bloom grew up in New Haven, CT, where she studied the cello as a child and started playing the guitar when she was a teenager. Bloom collaborated with Bruce Neumann in the early ’70s, but it wasn’t until she met avant-garde guitarist Loren MazzaCane Connors in 1976 that she started recording. Bloom and Connors recorded six limited edition albums of fragile, simple folk and blues melodies, the majority of which were written by Bloom herself. Bloom stopped recording new material soon after her collaboration with Connors ended, when she and her husband Stan moved to Florida together with her child from a previous marriage to live amidst the orange groves, buying and rehabilitating old houses. Kath eventually received a series of small government grants to operate a number of different after-school programs in music and other arts for latch-key kids as well as a moms-and-babies music class, and had two more children of her own. While struggling to make ends meet, she wrote copious amounts of songs and poetry that went unrecorded at the time.

On April 7th, Chapter Music is releasing Loving Takes This Course: A Tribute to the Songs of Kath Bloom. Disc One features recordings of Kath’s songs by the likes of Bill Callahan, Devendra Banhart, Mark Kozelek, Josephine Foster, Scout Niblett and many more, while Disc Two features Kath’s original versions of the songs covered on Disc One.

And, to mark the occasion, (((folkYEAH))) and naturalismo are teaming up to present Kath Bloom’s FIRST EVER West Coast tour, with Little Wings & Lee Baggett supporting. It’s going to be a short run up the coast — but these are going to be intimate gatherings, a rare chance to see this amazing folk artist on the West Coast.

March 5, Santa Barbara, Muddy Waters
promoter link: www.clubmercy.blogspot.com

March 6, Los Angeles, McCabes Guitar Shop
venue link: www.mccabes.com/

March 7, Big Sur, Fernwood Resort
venue link: www.fernwoodbigsur.com/

March 8, San Francisco, Cafe Du Nord
venue link: www.cafedunord.com/

Tracklisting for Loving Takes This Course: A Tribute to Kath Bloom

1.  Come Here – Marble Sounds
2.  The Breeze/My Baby Cries – Bill Callahan
3.  When I See You – Laura Jean
4.  Finally – Mark Kozelek
5.  Window – Mick Turner & Peggy Frew
6.  Forget About Him – Devendra Banhart
7.  I Wanna Love – Scout Niblett
8.  Biggest Light Of All – The Dodos
9.  Look At Me – Josephine Foster
10.  Ready Or Not – Mia Doi Todd
11.  Fall Again – Corrina Repp
12.  It’s So Hard To Come Home – Marianne Dissard & Joey Burns
13.  In Your School – Amy Rude
14.  If This Journey – Tom Hanford
15.  There Was A Boy – Meg Baird
16.  Come Here – The Concretes

[ first listen ] Devendra Banhart – Forget About Him

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[ first listen ] Meg Baird – There Was a Boy

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=tyler=

January 27th, 2009

New photos of Devendra Banhart in the studio

Devendra Banhart posted some new photos of him and the band in the studio recording his as-yet-untitled follow up to his last album Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon.  Hopefully we’ll have some audio to go along with these photos soon enough. You’ll hear it first here on Naturalismo when there is.

All Photos by Lauren Dukoff

November 25th, 2008

A Rational Conversation Between Two Adults: Considering Devendra Banhart in Late 2008

http://www.thefader.com/ys_assets/0000/0130/DEVENDRA_1_main.jpgEvery Tuesday, FADER deputy editor Eric Ducker gets on instant messenger and “discusses” a subject that’s been on his mind with another member of our staff or a special guest.  Read his condensed (and emoticon-free) conversation with contributing writer Daniel Arnold, who handled all the text for the recent New Folk edition of F2, about Devendra Banhart and whether listeners are forsaking him even as he creates some of the most interesting work of his career.

Click here to read!

via borntobenervous

November 17th, 2008

Arborea curates African Relief Project / World Food Program Benefit CD

Our good friends Buck and Shanti Curran of Arborea are putting together an incredible benefit CD for the African Relief Project and World Food Program… this is NOT to be missed. Incredible lineup, all around.

From Buck:

“Hi everybody, Shanti and I have been busy organizing and curating a compilation cd of some of our very favorite folks.  The tentative release date for the comp is March 21st, 2009 and  will be released on our label Borne Recordings/Acuarela (U.S. distribution through Darla Records). All proceeds are going to be donated to World Food Program (United Nations agency) to help with special and Very important relief operations and emergencies in places such as Darfur region of Sudan,Uganda, and the Congo. The confirmed lineup is – Marissa Nadler & Black Hole Infinity, Devendra Banhart, Mi and Lau, Fern Knight, Rio en Medio, Larkin Grimm, Arborea, Alela Diane, Mica Jones, Big Blood, Micah Blue Smaldone, Cursillistas, Magic Leaves, The Plains, Starless and Bible Black, David Garland, Ora Cogan, Eric Carbonara,  Jozef Van Wissem, and Silver Summit. Also, our friend Lyndsay recently introduced us to an intense and beautiful film called War Dance, about 3 children from the Acholi tribe in Uganda.  Music is a very important part of their lives.”

Click above for a clip of War Dance!

=tyler=

November 5th, 2008

Premiere: Megapuss' video for Adam and Steve

Try as I might, despite the absurdity of the project, I can’t deny the catchiness of Megapusses debut album Surfing. The new video for the single Adam & Steve sees Devendra, Greg Rorgrove and Fabrizio dancing around like crazy people and generally just having fun. You get the feeling that it must be nice to take a break away from the more serious aspects of being an artiste. I’m also always a huge advocate of artists not taking themsleves so goddamn seriously…

Edvard

July 24th, 2008

Golden Apples of the Sun Returns to Print!

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This is what started it all.

This is more than a compilation–it’s expertly sequenced and paced, like one long, slow flow of a particularly rich vibe. Liner notes are by the artists themselves, paying tribute to each other, all handlettered by Devendra, who also provides artwork on cover, back cover, sleeve, tray and the disk itself.

Track listing:

1. Vetiver (with Hope Sandoval) – “Angel’s Share” (from the “Vetiver” LP)
2. Joanna Newsom – “Bridges and Balloons” (from “The Milk-Eyed Mender” LP)
3. Six Organs of Admittance – “Hazy SF” (previously unreleased)
4. Viking Moses – “Crosses” (from “Crosses”)
5. Josephine Foster – “Little Life” (prev. unreleased home recording)
6. ESPers – “Byss & Abyss” (from “ESPers” LP)
7. Vashti Bunyan & Devendra Banhart – “Rejoicing in the Hands” (from the “Rejoicing in the Hands of the Golden Empress” LP)
8. Jana Hunter – “Farm, CA” (prev. unreleased)
9. Currituck Co. – “The Tropics of Cancer” (from “Ghost Man on First”)
10. White Magic – “Don’t Need” (from the Drag City EP)
11. Iron and Wine – “Fever Dream” (from “Our Endless Numbered Days” LP)
12. Diane Cluck – ” Heat From Every Corner” (from “Macy’s Day Bird”)
13. Matt Valentine – “Mountains of Yaffa” (prev. unreleased)
14. Entrance – “You Must Turn” (prev. unreleased home recording)
15. Jack Rose – “White Mule” (from “Red Horse, White Mule”)
16. Little Wings – “Look at What the Light Did Now” (from “Light Green Leaves”)
17. Scout Niblett – “Wet Road” (from “Sweet Heart Fever”)
18. Troll – “Mexicana” (from “Pathless Lord”)
19. CocoRosie – “Good Friday” (from “La Maison de Mon Reve”)
20. Antony – “The Lake” (from “Live at Saint Olaye’s With Current 93″)

Pre-order a copy at Arthur’s Website.

=tyler=

July 22nd, 2008

Premiere: Devendra Banhart's Music Video for Carmencita

Brazilica fantasmo Bollywood

[ download ] Devendra Banhart – Carmencita

E

July 17th, 2008

Devendra Banhart Contributes Poem & Preface to We Meet

Preface by Devendra Banhart:

I came across Kenneth Patchen the way one dreams of a tumbleweed rollin’ on by, leaving trails of luminosity from within its prismatic pit.  The world is, of course, that damn tumbleweed with Patchen’s riddle wrapped around itself, now here, now gone, like the marriage between “Hi!” and “So Long.” We are left born before a new kind of page, the shit kicked out of us, and nothing is sweeter…. Blessed be this shitkicker.

This could happen to you. It happened to me and all I did was randomly pull from my little library Patchen’s book, Because It Is. It’s something I can only describe in a matter-of-fact sort of way because it was created in a matter-of-fact sort of way. This is poetry and art explored through the language of possibility, wisdom and humor. Within these pages, mystery becomes little cartoon legs with a cosmic giggle for a head, ramblin’ out the difference between sincerity and honesty, reminding us that its one thing to have the gift but it’s a whole other thing to GIVE it.

I’m nuts about Patchen, and I’ve never come across anything like his work. I live happily at the bottom of the totem pole of Patchen’s devotees. Allen Ginsberg made a point to visit Patchen during his first trip to San Francisco. Henry Miller wrote an essay entitled “Man of Anger and Light” in his honor. Patchen worked with John Cage on an experimental radio play, “The City Wears a Slouch Hat.” Charles Mingus’ quartet accompanied him during one of his few readings (a recording has never been found). Lawrence Ferlinghetti even wrote an elegy to Patchen after his death. The list grows on.

By now, if you were me, you’d be wondering who this guy was, so I’ll tell ya’ what teeny-tiny tidbits I know. Kenneth Patchen was born on December 13, 1911, in a little city in Trumbull County, Ohio, called Niles. In 1924, Niles was the setting for an 18-hour battle between The Ku Klux Klan and the anti-Klan organization, The Knights of the Flaming Circle. I don’t know this for sure, but it’s possible that the battle (which the Knights won!) had a great impact on his being an ardent pacifist. While still in college, Patchen’s poem “Permanence” was published in The New York Times. It was his first published poem. What the fuck, right? After leap froggin’ from college to college he met his true love Miriam Oikemus, to whom he would eventually dedicate every one of his 40 plus books. He was a rising star of poetry until an accident occurred while working on a friend’s car that would debilitate him for life and eventually confine him to a wheelchair till his death in Palo Alto, California, on January 8, 1972.

Like confused clouds illuminating whatever the opposite of a shadow is, Patchen’s painted-poems and written drawings highlight a rogue sensibility within our humanity. Every emotion, every joke, every creation jostles us. To experience his work is to discover a peculiar sort of divinity. Heed the wisdom of the first poem in this collection, “to understand one must begin somewhere….” Welcome!

Poem for KP

by

Devendra Banhart

~

The Silver Deer has appeared,
it’s presenting itself,
its eyes are everyland,
its mouth milks a funny-kinda-heaven,
and knows the POEM can make the flame extinguish itself,
and knows the POEM is the circle surrounding all circles,
and it wants us to stop coddling the grumpy raisin,
to stop bobbing for beans in the house of “mama i can’t leave this
body! but oh…!”
to stop pumping stones out of our lava-slits,
to welcome in the welcoming red thread, the lining,
the one who is reaching out to wherever the hell you are,
to not wait, to never wait again.

[ We Meet @ Amazon ]

=tyler=

June 23rd, 2008

MEGAPUSS Unleashes Two More!

Head over to the MEGAPUSS myspace for two new tracks, “To the Love Within” and “Hamman.” Yay!

=tyler=

June 20th, 2008

MEGAPUSS: photos by Molly Berman

Thank You Molly for your fantastic photos!

(Devendra rocking out)

More photos after the jump!

Read the rest of this entry »

June 19th, 2008

MEGAPUSS at the Hammer Museum

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As the somnolent sun took to its slumber, the young and perpetually fashionable Los Angeles crowd was alight with anticipatory chatter. Mystery, it seemed, was half the fun. With beers in hand and smoke (of all kinds) in lungs, we waited for Megapuss to make their debut. The crowd was restless, curious and uncertain. The prevailing thought: “What the hell am I about to see?”

As the stars began to emerge I sat staring at the empty stage, thinking that mystique is an unfortunate concept. For an artist like Devendra Banhart whose own flesh is sometimes dwarfed by the size of his shadow, mystique is a burden and blessing. On the one hand, it’s what drew such thick crowds to the courtyard of the Hammer Museum in the first place; but, on the other, it forces the performer to reaffirm his own humanity beyond the gossamer cloth of expectation and illusion. Mystique is static, life is not.

While many Devendra fans may be eagerly awaiting another solo release, Megapuss will have to quench that desire for now. It’s easy to forget that his last album came out under a year ago. During the show I found myself at times somewhat yearning for the music that existed nearly a decade ago, but Devendra has grown and learned and changed into a wholly new person. It’s also easy to forget that this is MEGAPUSS and not an outlet for his solo work. If Devendra were reactionary, he wouldn’t be Devendra. Just as each passing moment is a new reality, we also become new. Devendra stepped onto the stage at 9pm wearing black spandex leggings, a droopy t-shirt, and a loincloth made of jiggling dildos. When one of Lauren Dukoff’s photographs of Devendra appeared on the screen behind the stage, Devendra aptly stated: “That’s not even me.” He was right. On that stage, in that moment, Devendra may have looked silly, but the honesty of his expression has always been his greatest charm.

For the next 45 minutes, the band performed their set with a joyous insouciance rare in a modern “indie rock” concert. The drummer wore a vibrant kimono. Noah Georgeson plucked bass and guitar wearing a Panama Jack safari getup. Greg Rogove, Devendra’s main partner in crime, complimented Devendra’s black leggings and t-shirt with a a white version. Neon sunglasses found their way onto everyone’s face at some point. The songs, as the Museum’s curator pointed out, “Were all written in ten minutes or less.” He continued to say, “I don’t know if that makes them geniuses, or idiots, or both.” The fact is, as I sat there smiling and laughing, they were both – and neither – at the same time. They were just having fun, and so was I.

[download] “Crop Circle Jerk ’94” + “Duck People Duck Man

More pics to come later!!

=tyler=

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