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Find Shelter

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (14 ratings)
Find Shelter album cover
01
Tied To The Mountains
2:20
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02
Walking On Someone Else's Name
3:04
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03
Find Shelter
2:37
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04
Build And Work
2:48
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05
Hand Me, Please, A City
2:04
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06
Priests Of Cholera
4:03
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07
Glorious Glory
3:07
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08
An Anvil
3:22
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09
Wooden Empire
2:57
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10
Shawm Overture
0:42
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11
Tied To The Coast
4:26
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12
Angry Afternoon
3:42
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 35:12

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Good stuff

cosmicchild70

If you like Devendra Banhart, then I'm sure that you will enjoy Noah Georgeson. Very similar. Not as good as Devendra, but still good.

user avatar

Yes, the Pleased rocks

royallyyours

I agree about the Pleased. What a f&*#ing great band. Great live shows too. Now that Noah's hanging out with Devendra and Joanna's doing her own thing, and what is Lucky Remington (what a cool name) up to?... I suppose the band is broken up now? Sad.

user avatar

Good, but not The Pleased...

DAC

Check out Don't Make Things by The Pleased, Noah's britrock-styled band. Great stuff. This is different, more singer-songwriter, but very solid. Worth the credits...

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They Say All Music Guide

As Noah Georgeson has been a key associate of both Joanna Newsom and Devendra Banhart, it’s no surprise that his debut solo album is eccentric singer/songwriter folk-rock, with the accent on the folk rather than the rock. Fortunately, it’s not explicitly reminiscent of either Newsom or Banhart, though there are similarities in the vibe. Instead, it’s slightly wacked out Americana, rather in the mold of a 21st century Lee Hazlewood — a legendary cult figure to whom Georgeson’s wavering cowboy-operatic vocal style will inevitably draw comparisons. Like Hazlewood, Georgeson decorates wistful, plaintive folky songs with grandiose instrumentation and an unsettlingly brooding mix of the down-home and the unfathomably strange. Georgeson’s arrangements certainly have more of an alternative rock (and less of a standard pop) cast, however, whether it’s tinkling percussion, shaky organ, or ghostly synthetic strains. Find Shelter is an interesting and idiosyncratic maiden effort, though it’s unlikely to find as large an audience as Banhart and Newsom have, owing to both the narrowness of Georgeson’s vocal range and the inscrutability of his songwriting. – Richie Unterberger

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