Young God Rec.
Devendra Banhart : Rejoicing in the hands (US,2004)****
Our singer-songwriter specialist was one of the only ones not raving about the first album. He just didn’t like that lo-fi, for him, too much accidental songwriting of the first album. Personally I think the quality and musical expressive ideas compensated enough for this. Before reviewing this album I listened back to that album, and still enjoyed it much. Brilliant moods, guitars, ideas, expressive singing sometimes on the edge of weird: all was there.
This time Devendra recorded all in a studio, so please no more complaints about that, and no confusions about deliberately mystifying someone by the lo-fi discovery-effect! The true natural feel of Devendra still convinces, his somehow unforgettable, unique voice, without a necessity to be weird. I guess everything is done for a perhaps even quite pleasant and song-driven natural flow of expression, that becomes art, rather than having put "art" as a goal on its own. Here and there a track reminds me of really very old blues, or so, -without the problems. A couple of tracks have some extra arrangements for the effect to starken the musical essence in these songs.
Conclusion : the weirdness of the first album is replaced by a matured expression. Devendra definitely proved to be worth the stay, and I guess this attitude also will attract a bigger audience. This is no longer a production attractive only for those who love the obscure and weird, the abnormal. The home-recorders feel now is totally dissolved. So, this comes highly recommended.
PS. I wasn't able to check the next album thoroughly yet. A first listen in a shop and on internet links gave me the impression it suffered once more, like the debute of a hasty feeling of creativity. While he gathered for it some interesting musicians from the psych-folk scene, even started to promote this scene very much in the press, taking advantage of his charisma or look, and so he became symbol of this promotion, mixed with his character of being a weird post-hippie. The press started to call the whole new psychedelic folk scene for it freak folk or weird folk. I appreciate his promotion to the genre. Bastet magazine trusted Devendra for making a compilation of the new groups of this new psychfolk scene :