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  • Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    Devlin's sophomore full-length album, For Whom the Angels Named, was released in Fall of 2011, eight months after the 7" Vinyl Ladybug EP, in winter of 2011.

    Recorded live March 19th 2011, beneath the largest full moon seen in 18 years, Devlin returned to her live, solo singer/songwriter and acoustic roots to track eight songs at FLUX Studio NYC with good friend, Sound Engineer and Studio Manager, Daniel Sanint. Previously, Devlin worked with Sanint to record the Ladybug EP.

    For Whom The Angels Named , a quote taken from Edgar Allen Poe's poem The Raven, was a nod to Devlin's Mexican, biological grandmother, Lenore Malo, who died the same year Devlin's father was born.

    "Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December,
    And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor.
    Eagerly I wished the morrow; - vainly I had sought to borrow
    From my books surcease of sorrow - sorrow for the lost Lenore -
    For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore -
    Nameless here for evermore."

    The recording preserves the gentle purity, sensational nearness and impetuous tempo audiences had come to expect from Devlin's breathlessly intimate live performances. Each of the eight songs on For Whom The Angels Named, paints the portrait and tells the story of an individual; each song title is a different name.

    For Whom The Angels Named, a limited edition, signed, 100 copy 12" vinyl pressing was released during the Summer Antifolk Festival on Sept 22, 2011 at Sidewalk Cafe in LES, NYC and received a write-up in The New York Times: Artsbeat where journalist James C. McKinley Jr. wrote about the LES Antifolk music scene in which Devlin got her start.

    "Some music scenes are too mischievous to die. For 18 years, an eclectic group of songwriters who label themselves part of the “antifolk movement” have been meeting at the Sidewalk Café in the East Village for one of the longest running open-mike nights in the city."

    Mckinley went on to highlight Devlin's performance...

    "On Thursday night, for instance, the headliner was Elizabeth Devlin, who sang her densely packed and surreal verses about the stew of being a woman over an autoharp, her little girl’s voice riding coyly over the weirdly discordant harmonies she traced with her hands. (She read Walt Whitman’s poetry between songs.) "

    Subsequently, the album was reviewed by music blogger and Consequence of Sound founder, Alex Young, who said...

    "It’s in the way Devlin sings in the same soft, fluttering voice, the way her songs wander without a traditional structure or even a chorus, and the way she paints abstract narratives with lyrics that feel more like poetry than song. That said, while the similarities are impossible to ignore, Devlin is her own artist and one that’s worthy of attention."

    Includes unlimited streaming of For Whom The Angels Named via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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about

Devlin's sophomore full-length album, For Whom the Angels Named, was released in Fall of 2011, eight months after the 7" Vinyl Ladybug EP, in winter of 2011.

Recorded live March 19th 2011, beneath the largest full moon seen in 18 years, Devlin returned to her live, solo singer/songwriter and acoustic roots to track eight songs at FLUX Studio NYC with good friend, Sound Engineer and Studio Manager, Daniel Sanint. Previously, Devlin worked with Sanint to record the Ladybug EP.

For Whom The Angels Named , a quote taken from Edgar Allen Poe's poem The Raven, was a nod to Devlin's Mexican, biological grandmother, Lenore Malo, who died the same year Devlin's father was born.

"Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December,
And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor.
Eagerly I wished the morrow; - vainly I had sought to borrow
From my books surcease of sorrow - sorrow for the lost Lenore -
For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore -
Nameless here for evermore."

The recording preserves the gentle purity, sensational nearness and impetuous tempo audiences had come to expect from Devlin's breathlessly intimate live performances. Each of the eight songs on For Whom The Angels Named, paints the portrait and tells the story of an individual; each song title is a different name.

For Whom The Angels Named, a limited edition, signed, 100 copy 12" vinyl pressing was released during the Summer Antifolk Festival on Sept 22, 2011 at Sidewalk Cafe in LES, NYC and received a write-up in The New York Times: Artsbeat where journalist James C. McKinley Jr. wrote about the LES Antifolk music scene in which Devlin got her start.

"Some music scenes are too mischievous to die. For 18 years, an eclectic group of songwriters who label themselves part of the “antifolk movement” have been meeting at the Sidewalk Café in the East Village for one of the longest running open-mike nights in the city."

Mckinley went on to highlight Devlin's performance...

"On Thursday night, for instance, the headliner was Elizabeth Devlin, who sang her densely packed and surreal verses about the stew of being a woman over an autoharp, her little girl’s voice riding coyly over the weirdly discordant harmonies she traced with her hands. (She read Walt Whitman’s poetry between songs.) "

Subsequently, the album was reviewed by music blogger and Consequence of Sound founder, Alex Young, who said...

"It’s in the way Devlin sings in the same soft, fluttering voice, the way her songs wander without a traditional structure or even a chorus, and the way she paints abstract narratives with lyrics that feel more like poetry than song. That said, while the similarities are impossible to ignore, Devlin is her own artist and one that’s worthy of attention."

lyrics

will this pass away hold my breath and listen to your dreams i lay and watch as night gives way to someday sprawled out in a sea of blue sheets soaked with the salt of you and me i pray eyes will not convey what i cannot say stirring you wake on the edge of dream lake long listless limbs pull me close calm once again i live under your chin its this pillow i love the most

do not do not you fret my darling darling babette when you wake look i am still here holding holding you close its you i love the most from demons have no fear when i am near

help me i might be losing my ability to dream when the days that veil my nights are ripping at the seams the moon she is loathsome breathless raw unwholesome a broken melody and all these things i see a lucid distant memory the trees bow down to meet the blackened glistening streets and i hear a heavy breathing behind my back and gaining a growling symphony of bubbling flesh and seething of stinking neck hairs burning with no sign of reprieve and i tumble as i swallow another pill to make me hollow so i can float down your stream into your swirling whirlpool a vacant vicious cesspool of blood and guts and mediocrity my nails claw at the wet stone i am sinking into the unknown the demons are gaining and with no god who has left me holy the devils they cajole me and i claw and i scratch and i scream but then you wake me you shake and you say

do not do not you fret my darling darling babette when you wake look i am still here holding holding you close its you i love the most from demons have no fear

credits

from For Whom The Angels Named, track released September 22, 2011
Elizabeth Devlin: All songs, Vocals, Autoharp
Produced by Elizabeth Devlin
Engineered/Mixed by Daniel Sanint
Mastered by Paul Gold, Salt Mastering
Photographs: Lia Robinson

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Elizabeth Devlin New York, New York

Elizabeth Devlin, with her haunting combination of lilting voice and enchanting Autoharp, is a self-produced NYC singer- songwriter. Devlin defies traditional musical structure with many of her songs, building miniature narratives and magical worlds where characters, fantasies and time collide.
Devlin has toured nationally, internationally, & performs in venues throughout NYC's 5 boroughs.
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