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Band of Horses is an American rock band formed in 2004 in Seattle, Washington.Led by singer-songwriter Ben Bridwell, who has been the band's sole constant member throughout numerous line-up changes, the band's current line-up also includes longtime members Creighton Barrett (drums) and Ryan Monroe (keyboards, guitar, backing vocals), alongside Matt Gentling (bass, backing vocals) and Brett ...
"The Funeral" (Live) 2006 Live at KEXP, Volume 2 "The End's Not Near" 2006 Music From The OC: Mix 6 - Covering Our Tracks "Plans" 2007 Friend "Life on Earth" 2010 The Twilight Saga: Eclipse soundtrack "Marry Song" (Live) 2011 The Bridge School Concerts: 25th Anniversary Edition "Out in Nature" 2012 The Super Music Friends Show Album
Infinite Arms is the third album by indie rock band Band of Horses, released on May 18, 2010, on Brown Records, Fat Possum Records and Columbia. [1] Most of the album was recorded in Asheville, North Carolina with some overdubbing done in Los Angeles. [2]
Across the Hall is a 2009 American neo-noir horror film directed by Alex Merkin and starring Mike Vogel, Brittany Murphy, and Danny Pino. It is based on the 2005 short film of the same name and was Murphy's final film released during her lifetime.
The video is about a woman being evicted from her home and traveling across the country with her boyfriend. The video stars Jason Lee Parry and Jenny Sirney. [13] Also, two versions of the Paul Epworth Mix video were released - one with explicit images featuring brief nudity, and one with slight changes that omit the nudity.
Band of Horses were briefly a trio featuring Bridwell (vocals and guitar), Tim Meinig (drums) and Chris Early (bass), but former Carissa's Wierd leader Mat Brooke (guitar and vocals) was added to the line up and the quartet released their debut album Everything All the Time in March 2006. In response to Bridwell's success, Brooke said, " I kind ...
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Chron recognized the band's focus on the track's vocal arrangements, [6] while The New York Times recognized the influence of "1970s soft-rock folkies America." [ 7 ] The Seattle Post-Intelligencer singled "Dilly" out as the best song from Infinite Arms and correctly predicted that it would be a future single.