Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 26 January, 2022

Gabriel Kahane's New Album 'Magnificent Bird,' Due March 25, 2022

Hot Songs Around The World

A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
569 entries in 22 charts
Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
538 entries in 25 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
681 entries in 27 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
281 entries in 27 charts
I Had Some Help
Post Malone & Morgan Wallen
349 entries in 21 charts
Taste
Sabrina Carpenter
200 entries in 21 charts
Night Changes
One Direction
171 entries in 14 charts
Too Sweet
Hozier
534 entries in 23 charts
The Door
Teddy Swims
185 entries in 12 charts
Castle On The Hill
Ed Sheeran
252 entries in 22 charts
Tu Falta De Querer
Mon Laferte
194 entries in 3 charts
Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido
Karol G
199 entries in 13 charts
Grustnyi Dens
Artik & Asti
206 entries in 2 charts
Lose Control
Teddy Swims
914 entries in 25 charts
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Composer/ singer/ songwriter Gabriel Kahane releases Magnificent Bird on March 25, 2022. The album, his fifth solo LP and second for Nonesuch Records, chronicles the final month of a year spent off the internet. In his most personal album since 2011's Where are the Arms, Kahane revels in the tension between quiet, domestic concerns, and the roiling chaos of a nation and planet in crisis. "Sit Shiva," the album's first single, out today, finds Kahane skirting the rules of his digital hiatus in order to mourn, online, the death of his maternal grandmother; in typical fashion, he mines not just pathos, but humor and grace amidst his family's grief. Magnificent Bird is available to preorder now; preorders from Kahane's Bandcamp and Nonesuch Store include an exclusive, limited-edition print autographed by Kahane. Gabriel Kahane will tour the United States this spring with songs from the album.

In October 2020, the final month of his tech sabbatical, Kahane set out to write a song every day. "I wanted to create an aural brain scan at the end of this experiment," he explains, "and to give myself permission to write about small things, rather than trying to distill the enormity of the moment into grand statements."

In "Chemex," a cathedral built out of synthesizers and a one-man choir, he announces his theme: the marriage of the mundane to the increasingly quotidian terror that accompanies life in a wounded country, and, moreover, on a planet in the throes of catastrophic climate change. As songs like "We Are the Saints" and "Hot Pink Raingear" demonstrate, Magnificent Bird is suffused with impressions of the physical world. But the narrative is just as often internal, a landscape of the mind. Here is Kahane analyzing apocalyptic dreams ("Die Traumdeutung"), now confronting professional jealousy ("Magnificent Bird"), and there, interrogating - and yet indulging! - nostalgia (the elegiac anthem "To Be American," with an all-star backing band featuring Andrew Bird, Caroline Shaw, Chris Thile, Punch Brothers bassist Paul Kowert, and percussionist Ted Poor). And in "Linda and Stuart," sung in close harmony with Amelia Meath (of Sylvan Esso and label mates Mountain Man), a portrait of an elderly couple in housebound isolation reveals itself to be the narrator's anguished, retroactive farewell to New York.

"My internet hiatus grew out of a belief that at root, our digital devices reinforce the fiction that convenience and efficiency have intrinsic value. That has implications with respect to climate crisis, to inequality, to our (in)ability to see ourselves in each other, to build the kinds of coalitions necessary to make a more just world. I wanted to leave it all behind not as a further expression of techno-pessimism, but rather in search of a positive alternative.
"In that sense, this record relates to Book of Travelers," he muses, referring to his 2018 Nonesuch debut. Hailed as "a stunning portrait of a singular moment in America" by Rolling Stone, the album chronicled an 8,980-mile, off-the-grid railway journey in the aftermath of the 2016 presidential election. "I wanted unmediated interaction with strangers, so I took that trip without my phone. Somewhere in New Mexico, I remember thinking, 'Wow, this is really transformative. I should do this for more than thirteen days.'

The dozen collaborators who appear on Magnificent Bird - a list that also includes composer/performers Nathalie Joachim and Pekka Kuusisto; the celebrated clarinetist Anthony McGill; avant-folk stalwarts Sam Amidon and Holcombe Waller; longtime colleagues Gabriel Cabezas, Casey Foubert, Alex Sopp, and Elizabeth Ziman; and mix engineer Joseph Lorge - reflect a central paradox: a trunk of songs written in self-imposed isolation was brought to life through the very technology Kahane had shunned. "Everyone who plays on the album is someone I love as a person as much as I do as a musician. The truth is, after all that isolation, I just wanted an excuse to get in touch with my friends. It was almost secondary to get them to play on this record, which is, as much as any I've made, a pure expression of community."

Gabriel Kahane lives in Portland, Oregon, where he serves as Creative Chair for the Oregon Symphony, for whom he composed, in 2018, emergency shelter intake form, an exploration of inequality through the lens of housing issues. This season, his piano concerto, Heirloom, was premiered by his father, Jeffrey Kahane, with the Kansas City Symphony; it will be heard again in Portland in March. Upcoming projects include an orchestral song cycle - for the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Cincinnati Symphony - further exploring his internet hiatus, surveillance capitalism, and the cascading consequences of our digital regime. The recipient of a 2021 Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Gabriel has collaborated with a wide array of artists ranging from Sufjan Stevens, Phoebe Bridgers, Blake Mills, and Paul Simon, to Brooklyn Rider, yMusic, and John Adams. He is a graduate of Brown University.

GABRIEL KAHANE ON TOUR:
Mar 28 City Winery Boston, MA
Mar 31 The Falcon Marlboro, NY
Apr 4 Ferst Center for the Arts Atlanta, GA
Apr 5 City Winery Philadelphia, PA
Apr 8 Rockwood Music Hall New York, NY
Apr 14 Pat Reser Center for the Arts* Beaverton, OR
May 11 Bing Concert Hall Stanford, CA
May 12 Gold Diggers Los Angeles, CA
May 13 Swallow Hill Denver, CO
May 18 Parkway Theatre Minneapolis, MN
May 21 Constellation Chicago, IL
May 22 Kerrytown Concert House Ann Arbor, MI
May 24 City Winery Nashville, TN
May 26 Natalie's Grandview Columbus, OH.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.0068541 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0068562030792236 secs