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After the release, Harper went on to add a permanent backing band, the Innocent Criminals, although they remained unnamed until the Burn to Shine album. The song "I'll Rise" is based on a 1978 Maya Angelou poem "And Still I Rise".
In 1992, Harper recorded the LP Pleasure and Pain with folk multi-instrumentalist Tom Freund. After this limited-edition record, Harper secured a lifetime record deal with Virgin Records. [20] In 1993, he toured venues in California and France with his band, Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals, and performed with Taj Majal at Austin City ...
Live from Mars is a two disc live concert(s) release from Ben Harper & the Innocent Criminals, which takes tracks from unnamed venues throughout his 2000 tour and places them on either an electric (disc 1) or acoustic (disc 2) disc. It was released in the year 2001.
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"Burn One Down" is a song written and performed by Ben Harper as the sixth track on his 1995 album Fight for Your Mind. The song has been called a "James-Taylor-meets-Bob-Marley moment" for Harper, [1] and the song is a pro-marijuana anthem. [2] [3] It remains one of Harper's most performed songs live.
Give Till It's Gone is the tenth studio album by Ben Harper. [1] The album was released in Italy on May 10, 2011 [2] and worldwide on May 17, 2011 by Virgin Records. [1] It is Harper's first solo album since Both Sides of the Gun, released in 2006. [3]
Will Ferrell and Harper Steele discuss how their "SNL" pal's surprise pitch-perfect ditty came together for their new documentary. The longest-running gag in new Netflix documentary Will & Harper ...
Writing for The Arts Desk, Thomas H. Green calls out several possible musical touchstones and influences and characterizes the music as "combin[ing] a sinewy energy and solid lyrics with well-chosen retro influences that don't overshadow the end result" with Harper's "guitar-play, unshowy, imaginative and likeably expressive".