Ownerless

Everest  Producer Everest  Engineer Everest  Main Performer

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Audio Compact Disc

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Track
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1 Rapture Pollard 3:41
2 Into the Grey Pollard 4:09
3 Give a Little   3:54
4 Raking Me Over the Coals Pollard 3:13
5 Never Disappoint Graves/Pollard/Thom 2:42
6 Hungry Ghost Graves/Pollard/Thom 6:00
7 Letter Pollard 2:37
8 Games Pollard/Thomson 4:42
9 Far Off, Away Graves/Pollard 4:31
10 Hologram Pollard 3:05
11 Ownerless Graves/Pollard/Thom 4:32
  • Overview
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Ownerless

Audio Compact Disc

Label: ATO

Category: Pop/Rock

Ownerless

UPC: 880882180423

Release Date: 06/26/2012

Original Release Date: 06/26/2012

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Rapture, Into the Grey, Give a Little, Raking Me Over the Coals, Never Disappoint, Hungry Ghost, Letter, Games, Far Off, Away, Hologram, Ownerless]
Contributors:

Fred Thomas

A band made up of five singer/songwriters, all of whom are multi-instrumentalists and music industry lifers, would point to a storm of egos when making an album -- or at least a disjointed album after everyone gets his two cents in. Everest are just that band, five L.A. area musicians who've all done time in a plethora of touring bands and came together in the late 2000s to form a session players' supergroup of sorts. With its third album, Ownerless, the band of talented songwriters somehow escapes a "too many cooks" situation, and delivers a cornucopia of earthy sounds, with several discernibly different songwriting styles attributable to the respective writers. Following a year or so of intense touring in support of their sophomore album, On Approach, as well as a label change, Everest regrouped and rethought their process in the writing and recording of Ownerless. Eschewing any set personnel roles, the bandmembers switched instruments freely, collaborating on both songwriting and arrangements. Production duties, handled by renowned producers Rob Schnapf and Richard Swift along with the band, render a crisp and buoyant end product, with brilliantly focused guitar tones and vocal presence from the barnburning opener of "Rapture" to the dusty desert crawl of the album-closing title track. The album's strongest moment comes in the mellow jangle and fluttering organ tones of "Raking Me Over the Coals," a song co-written by onetime Jayhawks/Golden Smog member Gary Louris. ~ Fred Thomas, Rovi