If Alexander Ebert's jangly, folksy-sounding debut seems a bit familiar, it's because the singer and multi-instrumentalist has made a career performing as the frontman of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. While his original popular ten-piece was on break from tour last year, Ebert recorded the songs on his new self-titled solo disc. The first single, "A Million Years," is a wide-ranging journey filled with whimsical strings, twinkly layered harmonies, and that signature joyful chorus we all know and love. And since it's only fitting that the video should be equally all-encompassing as the track itself, he's enlisted artist William Lemon III (who also worked on Lady Gaga's "Born this Way") to create crazy-cool visual "manscapes" that you just have to see to believe. -Liza Darwin
But... strange? Where are all comments? I read somewhere Blogger is weird again... Here are the comments I have in mailbox:
From Val @ May 11 3:44 (right after the post) If Alexander Ebert's jangly, folksy-sounding debut seems a bit familiar, it's because the singer and multi-instrumentalist has made a career performing as the frontman of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. While his original popular ten-piece was on break from tour last year, Ebert recorded the songs on his new self-titled solo disc. The first single, "A Million Years," is a wide-ranging journey filled with whimsical strings, twinkly layered harmonies, and that signature joyful chorus we all know and love. And since it's only fitting that the video should be equally all-encompassing as the track itself, he's enlisted artist William Lemon III (who also worked on Lady Gaga's "Born this Way") to create crazy-cool visual "manscapes" that you just have to see to believe. -Liza Darwin
From me @ May 12 00:55 Amazing. Beautiful :) Oh! I think I felt someone walking on my face! :^| :D
From Val @ May 12 01:13 gee, i hope they were barefoot :P hahahha! have a very pleasant evening ;)
"Can you tell me where my country lies?" said the unifaun to his true love's eyes. "It lies with me!" cried the Queen of Maybe - for her merchandise, he traded in his prize ..." Dancing With the Moonlit Knight, 1973 Peter Gabriel- Genesis
The 1st post of this blog, gaves the title to the states of our souls, maybe...
6 comments:
If Alexander Ebert's jangly, folksy-sounding debut seems a bit familiar, it's because the singer and multi-instrumentalist has made a career performing as the frontman of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. While his original popular ten-piece was on break from tour last year, Ebert recorded the songs on his new self-titled solo disc. The first single, "A Million Years," is a wide-ranging journey filled with whimsical strings, twinkly layered harmonies, and that signature joyful chorus we all know and love. And since it's only fitting that the video should be equally all-encompassing as the track itself, he's enlisted artist William Lemon III (who also worked on Lady Gaga's "Born this Way") to create crazy-cool visual "manscapes" that you just have to see to believe.
-Liza Darwin
Amazing. Beautiful :)
Oh! I think I felt someone walking on my face! :^|
:D
gee, i hope they were barefoot :P hahahha! have a very pleasant evening ;)
I really love this :}
Specially how it ends :)
But... strange? Where are all comments? I read somewhere Blogger is weird again...
Here are the comments I have in mailbox:
From Val @ May 11 3:44 (right after the post)
If Alexander Ebert's jangly, folksy-sounding debut seems a bit familiar, it's because the singer and multi-instrumentalist has made a career performing as the frontman of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. While his original popular ten-piece was on break from tour last year, Ebert recorded the songs on his new self-titled solo disc. The first single, "A Million Years," is a wide-ranging journey filled with whimsical strings, twinkly layered harmonies, and that signature joyful chorus we all know and love. And since it's only fitting that the video should be equally all-encompassing as the track itself, he's enlisted artist William Lemon III (who also worked on Lady Gaga's "Born this Way") to create crazy-cool visual "manscapes" that you just have to see to believe.
-Liza Darwin
From me @ May 12 00:55
Amazing. Beautiful :)
Oh! I think I felt someone walking on my face! :^|
:D
From Val @ May 12 01:13
gee, i hope they were barefoot :P hahahha! have a very pleasant evening ;)
Still can't see what you wrote here but I hope you're right :)
Have a lovely weekend :)
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