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Author: Subject: Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros: an organic L.A. folk-rock band
Phobiac
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[*] posted on 5-19-2009 at 12:06 PM
Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros: an organic L.A. folk-rock band



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Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros: an organic L.A. folk-rock band

With a digital EP coming out today and a debut album soon to follow, the band has become standard-bearers for the folk-rock revival.

By Kevin Bronson
May 19, 2009


Alex Ebert could easily double as some kind of indie-rock messiah. Fronting his new band, the 11- or 12-member strong Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Ebert appears onstage shirtless and barefoot, strands of shoulder-length hair tied back in a faux crown as he conducts his smiling, face-painted ensemble like a giddy choir director.

At those moments, he is no longer Alex Ebert, hard-partying lead singer of the dance-rock band Ima Robot; he becomes Edward Sharpe, his boyhood alter ego, and his band is his family. His agenda, as 1960s as it sounds, is little more than love and honesty.

"I'm a naked dude," says Ebert, 30. "I've been humbled to the floor."

What he's built is one of the more unusual musical acts to emerge from Los Angeles in some time. From their start as an unwieldy recording project for Ebert's songs, the Zeros -- who release a new EP digitally today in advance of their debut album, due out July 14 -- have become standard-bearers for the folk-rock revival.

Their big, open-hearted anthems evoke a different (but perhaps no less turbulent) era when cynicism and irony didn't course through pop music like countermelodies. And the band's aesthetic, no matter how organic its evolution, screams throwback -- right down to touring in a converted school bus with the band's name in script on the side and a driver named Cornfed.

"That bus is like stepping into a hippie wet dream," drummer Josh Collazo jokes.

A recent Flaunt magazine story coined a catchall for revivalists such as the Zeros: "hippie-sters." Ebert cringes at that. "Categories . . . that's insular stuff. It's not real."

What is, he says, is sharing the music that came out of his personal rebirth.

Ima Robot, which emerged as a reliable L.A. party band early in the decade and made two albums for Virgin Records, fit the younger Ebert's live-fast mantra. "I used to say my primary motivation was getting things done before I die. I was getting a lot of things done, but I was a mess," he says. "I ended up on a lot of drugs; I basically lost myself. The last two years we were on the major label, I became an automaton -- I became a robot.

"It wasn't anything about the music. With Ima Robot, life was all an exorcism. With this, it's all an infusion."

For a time, Ebert was living in a place with no phone. He met Jade Castrinos, who now sings in the band. He read Kerouac, attended AA meetings and started working on songs in the Laurel Canyon house shared by now-bandmates Nico Aglietti and Aaron Older.

With the help of some seed money from the late Heath Ledger -- who intended to start a music label out of the directors, artists and other creatives he funded, called the Masses -- recording began. Friends of friends came to play and ended up joining the band.

"We decided to go back in time," says Aglietti, who co-produced the album. "We got an old 24-track tape machine from 1979 and found a deal on used reels of 2-inch tape. Twelve people playing on 24 tracks, all recorded in live fashion. . . . I'm really proud of the dogma we kept; [the album] has a natural resonance to it."

"It never felt like a grueling task," says guitarist Christian Letts, who's known Ebert since childhood. "This is a case of a group of people coming together at the right time -- I don't even think of it as a band, I think of it as a family."

Ebert treats crowds like family. "The night [in April] I went into the crowd at the Echo and everybody was singing, you could almost feel their hearts," he says.

"When you're playing in this band, it's not like there's a glass partition between you and the audience," Aglietti says. "There's nothing about this band that's 'band-y.' We're kind of an art troupe that plays music."




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Sarbear
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[*] posted on 5-19-2009 at 12:47 PM


This is awesome. It couldn't be a better write up.
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[*] posted on 5-19-2009 at 12:53 PM



"VERY IMPORTANT correction to the LA TIMES article

Kevin wrote a fine article, but a very major detail was on its head.
I did not BEGIN attending AA meetings around the time this music began. The exact OPPOSITE - I STOPPED participating in AA.

4 years ago I was beginning my ascent out from the hold of fear-based INSTITUTIONS. This very much includes Alcoholics Anonymous. To any of you who are in AA or are on drugs and need help getting off, I only state 'fear-based' as a fact. A healthy fear of drugs can be a useful tool, but I was ready to be done with participating in the practice - I needed to begin my emancipation from such institutions. The two big ones I was dissolving for myself prior to the inception of this music were AA and Marriage/Proprietary Relationships. This took and takes an immense amount of authenticity and courage - two major chords of this music and journey for me...


Authenticity requires an awareness of self, "I", and every moment of "I"'s feelings and truths. I know this sounds vague and silly to some, but in this world of mud and love and breath, the most vague is often the most exact. This awareness leaves no room for dogmatic edicts of behavior, no room for anything which preemptively restricts actions - no room for many an institution. Thats not to say I need to revolt against man's laws, only they do slowly dissolve from the beam of relevance.


Courage is what it takes to BE authentic. To Trust my process.


I do not think I could have simultaneously written this album AND been participating in the fear of AA as I once did.


Love to you all and, if any of you would like to discuss further, please feel free to email me @

caravantouchdown@gmail.com

love

=E"
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[*] posted on 5-19-2009 at 01:11 PM


that's his emaiL?

and did he message you this on myspace or something?



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what's your ID, your time and place of birth?
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[*] posted on 5-19-2009 at 04:09 PM


it was on es myspace blog



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[*] posted on 5-19-2009 at 04:49 PM


yea, it was the myspace blog that they posted after they posted the one about the EP coming out. I dont know if that is his e-mail or not. I'm assuming it is.

[Edited on 5-20-2009 by Sarbear]
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[*] posted on 5-19-2009 at 06:47 PM


That's one of his email addresses. I know of a different one.



What's. That. Sound. Keeping me up. That. Sound. Sounds. Like. A robot eating. A hobo
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[*] posted on 5-21-2009 at 06:59 AM


gah I would love to talk to alex : /

So I emailed him about what he wrote on the la times correction bulliten. Now im freaking out ha, hopefully he'll write back. I gave him a social workers perspective on what he wrote. Hopefully it was interesting enough.

[Edited on 21-5-2009 by Delta]
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