Here (Edward Sharpe album)

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Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic62/100[1]
Review scores
SourceRating
Consequence of Sound[2]
Paste Magazine4.9/10[3]
Pitchfork Media6.0/10[4]
Under The Gun Review5/10[5]

Here is the second album from Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. It was preceded by Up from Below. Recorded at Adios Studios, a.k.a. the Ed Shed in Ojai, California and at Studio in the Country in Louisiana, it was released on May 29, 2012 by Vagrant Records and Rough Trade Records. It received mostly positive reviews, ranking #7 on Rolling Stone's Best Albums of 2012 list, saying "Frontman Alex Ebert sings earnestly about love and spirituality, letting his mind wander pleasantly over the band's homespun harmonies and easy-going folk-psych instrumentation."[6]

All tracks are written by Alex Ebert.

No.TitleLength
1."Man on Fire"4:19
2."That's What's Up"3:52
3."I Don't Wanna Pray"3:26
4."Mayla"5:42
5."Dear Believer"4:46
6."Child"3:09
7."One Love to Another"3:32
8."Fiya Wata"4:12
9."All Wash Out"4:40

Personnel

  • Alex Ebert – vocals, guitars, percussion, organ, string arrangements
  • Jade Castrinos – vocals
  • Stewart Cole – piano, organ, synths, wurlitzer, pump organ, trumpet, alto horn, baritone horn, trombone, omnichord, vocals
  • Josh Collazo – drums, vocals
  • Seth Ford-Young – electric and acoustic bass, electric guitar, vocals
  • Nora Kirkpatrick – accordion, organ, synth, vocals
  • Christian Letts – acoustic guitar, electric guitar, vocals
  • Orpheo McCord – drums, percussion, marimba, drum machines, didgeridoo, vocals

With:

  • Mark Noseworthy – electric guitar, acoustic guitar, 11 string guitar, charango, ronrocco, banjo, vocals
  • Aaron Arntz – piano, clavinet
  • Aaron Embry – piano, harmonica
  • Nico Algietti – guitars
  • Aaron Older – bass
  • Nathaniel Markman – fiddle, viola
  • George Castrinos – slide guitar on "Fiya Wata"
  • Matt Linesch – engineer/mixing engineer

Commercial performance

Here debuted at No. 5 on the Billboard 200, with 35,000 copies sold in its first week.[7][8] Up from Below, their debut album, peaked at No. 76.[9] As of July 4, 2013 the album has sold 119,000 copies in United States.[10]

Charts

References

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