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Ultimately, Cripple Crow is a roughly stitched tapestry; it is rich, varied, wild, irreverent, simple, and utterly joyous to listen to.
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What has become increasingly clear is that Devendra Banhart needs an editor.
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Less folky and more eclectic than his past work, Crow offers ample evidence of growth in Banhart’s range as both a performer and a songwriter.
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Entertainment WeeklySupplement[s] his prior folky ways with a rash of surprising styles. [16 Sep 2005, p.85]
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If gripes were to be made, one could argue with Crow's length, which at 74 minutes may be a little more whimsy than one can handle.
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At once hip-shaking, high-brow, heartfelt, hallowed, and a hell of a good time.
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While Rejoicing and Niño Rojo were clearer, simpler and more cohesive, Cripple Crow may actually be the better record. It feels exactly like the kind of album Devendra Banhart ought to have playing in his head -- a cacophony of cool sounds, a plethora of contradictory ideas, a patchwork quilt of psychedelically bright colors.
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The New York TimesTaking the onus off his guitar playing dilutes Mr. Banhart's talent, and sometimes "Cripple Crow" makes of him what some people perhaps want him to be: a simulacrum of an obscure 1960's musician, a maker of albums that were so rare they never existed. [12 Sep 2005]
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Cripple Crow is undoubtedly impressive, vastly singular but entirely accessible, and an inspired listening experience where Banhart again proves himself one of the more talented and charismatic forces in modern folk.
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Cripple Crow finds Banhart doing what many didn't want him to do or thought he couldn't do: make a pretty lackluster album.
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Despite the piano, cellos and backing singers and the number of fleshed-out band songs, this sounds like nothing but a Devendra Banhart album.
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It’s the collage of styles that distinguishes this album: Cuban and Indian flourishes, Eisenhower-era doo-wop, the smoky Stax groove, bucolic British trad-folk, the eccentricities of American folk, of both the Dust Bowl troubadours and the Vietnam flower-children.
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A '60s psychedelic, experimental hippie-folk throwback, an invocation of lost, childish innocence delicately constructed with a deft musical touch.
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Intermittently terrific.
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There is far too much irritating hippywaffle amongst these gems.
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Flags in equally fruitful and frustrating ways.
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More than anything else, 'Cripple Crow' is an album that it sounds like it was born amidst a fun, exuberant creative process.
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Aww, our little freak is all grown up.
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At the end of the day, this still isn’t a great album. It lacks continuity, much of a sense of rhythm, and the character that Banhart’s 2004 releases took on.
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SpinBanhart brings the peace and love, but not the understanding. [Sep 2005, p.104]
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BlenderThough long, it's strong. [Oct 2005, p.134]
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'Cripple Crow' is way too much, in a way we don't get given often enough these days. Take it all in at one sitting and you'll end up bloated. But little and often? It's a cut-and-come-again treat.
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MojoA mature work from a fascinating man. [Oct 2005, p.110]
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Cripple Crow does a wonderful job expressing the range of Devendra Banhart’s musical interests, uneven though the actual payoff may be.
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Los Angeles TimesBanhart's pleas for peace and harmony have a guileless charm, and in "When They Come" they assume an epic urgency. But his whimsy is often slight and indulgent. [9 Oct 2005]
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Q MagazineIn the comparatively safe musical surrounds of 2005, he stands out as a compelling and utterly unique artist. [Oct 2005, p.119]
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FilterBanhart's most straightforward recordings yet. [#17, p.94]
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UncutIf there's a signpost that Cripple Crow isn't quite the record it could've been, it's that the most engaging moments here recall Banhart records past. [Oct 2005, p.96]
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There are no outright misfires, but some songs... remain mood pieces that never build up enough sense of occasion to find structure within Banhart’s listless wistfulness.
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Under The RadarMuch of the inensity burned into Banhart's previous albums is missing, and Crow is, upon closer look, largely a hodgepodge of references and genres... but Banhart manages to make the album sound cohesive. [#11, p.109]
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This album is nothing short of a miracle.
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All of the interesting parts of his music are still here, he's just written an album that plays up his strengths in more measured ways. The result is easily his best release to date.
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MagnetEnthralling music that embraces you like your mama never did. [#69, p.87]
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Cripple Crow is demanding because of its length - after twenty-two tracks on a single disc, nearly any artist would be difficult to tolerate. But the album is beautifully executed.
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Whether it's due to the backing band, or the better studio resources, Banhart seems more self-assured than ever as he sings his songs on Cripple Crow.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 30 out of 37
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Mixed: 4 out of 37
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Negative: 3 out of 37
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Aug 14, 2011
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JoelCJan 27, 2007Absolutely amazing, transporting as aldous huxley would say.
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BrownBDec 24, 2006