The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2010-01-21
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News
Iggy gets jiggy with U of C students
Co-curricular record celebrates one year on campus
University considers new non-academic misconduct policy
Harper's prorogation controversy continues
U of C prof researches decline of braille
'Rebooting' apathetic Alberta's politics
History professor long way from Israel

Opinions
Editorial: Effective righting get's the axe
On Haiti, God, and the case for aid
Letter: unsettling times
Late night comedy is serious, serious business
A letter to NBC
Learning to love political elitism
A clash of the titans!

Sports
Marquee match Saturday at the Jack
Swimmers look to repeat as Canada West champions
Women's hockey team snap 13-game losing streak with back-to-back wins over the Cougars
Olympic torch returns to campus
Women's basketball look to snap three-game losing streak

Entertainment
25 years on the FM dial
Radiopark offers live music and comfortable atmosphere for students
Steam Engine don't need any training
Eli is badass but preaches to the choir
Spun: State Radio
Spun: Devendra Banhart
Spun: Sea Wolf
Spun: Boris
Spun: Patrick Watson


Web
Oh, the huge manatee!

AP
Prorogation protests postponed

  Spun: Devendra Banhart
What Will We Be

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What Will We Be (Click for larger image.) What Will We Be

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Devendra Banhart's career has produced a steady, reliable selection of soft-yet-quirky folk music.

Each of his six albums-- including his latest, What Will We Be-- has garnered remarkably consistent and respectable acclaim, both a strength and a weakness for Banhart. There is little to be unhappy about with this newest release, but there is also very little that distinguishes it from his past work.

Banhart's albums have stuck to a sparse guitar and wispy voice formula, sometimes diverting into slight musical experiments or different languages. "Anjelika" contains a catchy melody and brief foray into Spanish before returning to its main chorus. But Banhart seems unable to follow through with these musical diversions. "Rats" features the troubadour trying out psychedelic rock a la Vancouver-based Black Mountain. "Rats" is the highlight of the album simply because it's unlike anything else he's done, though it's ultimately just another mid-point break before returning to his familiar, comfortable living room sound.

What Will We Be will satisfy, if not excite, existing fans, and is as good an entry-point as any of his other works. It is the same lo-fi acoustic freak-folk he is known for, though perhaps looser and more accessible than before. Then again, he was loose and accessible to begin with.

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