Product Details
Rejoicing In The Hands (Of The Golden Empress)

Rejoicing In The Hands (Of The Golden Empress)
Devendra Banhart

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Track Listing

  1. This Is The Way
  2. Its A Sight To Behold
  3. The Body Breaks
  4. Poughkeepsie
  5. Dogs That Make Up The Dark
  6. Will Is My Friend
  7. This Beard Is For Siobhan
  8. See Saw
  9. Tit Smoking In The Temple Of Artesan Mimicry
  10. Rejoicing In The Hands
  11. Fall
  12. Todo Los Dolores
  13. When The Sun Shone On Vetiver
  14. There Was The Sun
  15. Insect Eyes
  16. Autumn’s Child

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #7647 in Music
  • Released on: 2004-05-24
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Devendra Banhart is an unlikely figure for mainstream deification, but his third album, Rejoicing in the Hands--the first for forward-thinking British independent XL--proves that appearances can be deceptive. Previous albums by this shaggy-haired ex-hobo have found him shunning upmarket studios and session musicians, preferring to perform his eerie folk lullabies unaccompanied and unadorned, the results recorded onto hissy tape-decks. Given this, Rejoicing... is an upping of the ante--its 16 songs were captured on high-quality vintage equipment in the living room of a house in Alabama with occasional overdubs of piano and guitar, yet the spirit remains largely the same: hushed, haunted, but always sparking with ideas.

At heart, Banhart is much more a storyteller than a confessional songwriter--a fact that suits his flexible technique: that's why one minute, he sounds like a reedy-voiced Appalachian folk-singer, finger-picking a banjo on the porch of a rural mountain shack, and the next, on "This Beard is for Siobhan", he's curling his lip like T Rex's Marc Bolan and hollering about having "a real good time". Banhart's approach may sometimes appear wilfully amateurish--hear how he goofs the first take of "Todolos Dolores", then recommences, tape still rolling--but this is accomplished, genuinely timeless stuff. --Louis Pattison


Customer Reviews

too long3
This album suffers from being overly long and considering the there is very little variation in style it does - i am afraid to say - get a little boring. Don't get me wrong its ok, but if you don't already have it, spend your money on surfjan stevens:illinois.

lo-fi perfection5
I've not heard any of Banhart's previous records, but this is a beauty. delicate and understated but with a thrilling energy and wit that makes these simple guitar and voice songs sound a million miles away from the drippy miserablism of some singer/songwriter fare. Similar in spirit to Joanna Newsom's 'The Milk-Eyed Mender', (tho i guess Banhart was there first). There's more beauty in any one of these lo-fi gems than in a whole HMV full of over-produced digital blandness. If you're a Banhart fan, check out also David Thomas Broughton's 'Guide To Insufficiency'.

summer and autumn5
nothing can be sure to cheer me up like listening to banhart. inevitable really when most of his songs are about things like trees and bugs and breakfast.
musically similar to folk artists like nick drake (with some comparable string sections) and john renbourn, but with a slight manic, backwoods feel (largely created by the droning, sometimes quiet-sometimes loud, perfect vocals) banharts songs are low key and pretty, with a definate autumnul, earthy feel, perfect for hazy evenings and summer mornings.