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There's No Home

Jana Hunter

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Jana Hunter

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Palms Jana Hunter 2:23 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Babies Jana Hunter 3:16 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Valkyries Jana Hunter 2:20 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Vultures Jana Hunter 2:05 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Movies Jana Hunter 3:00 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 (Guitar) Jana Hunter 0:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Regardless Jana Hunter 3:07 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Bird Jana Hunter 2:45 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Pinnacle Jana Hunter 2:43 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 (Guitar 2) Jana Hunter 0:26 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Oracle Jana Hunter 2:26 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Recess Jana Hunter 3:22 $0.99 View In iTunes
13 Sirens Jana Hunter 2:49 $0.99 View In iTunes
14 Sleep Jana Hunter 3:12 $0.99 View In iTunes
15 There's No Home Jana Hunter 4:42 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Jana Hunter's debut album, Blank Unstaring Heirs of Doom was a gentle yet psychedelically disturbing affair. It gave real weight to the term "freak folk." Its songs were wonderfully unnerving and as its titles suggests, often bleak. While the title of There's No Home doesn't make it sound like a much happier affair, musically the two sets couldn't be more different. This set, like its predecessor, was recorded for Devendra Banhart's and Andy Cabic's Gnomonsong imprint, as her sophomore effort rings truer and stronger than her first. With skeletal help from brother John Hunter, John Adams (Fatal Flying Guilloteens), and Matt Brownlie (Bring Back the Guns), Hunter's songs, while slow, drawling affairs — she's a Texan and it was recorded there — are lighter, breezier, tighter, and wittier. This is not to say she's become a pop singer. Hardly. She's still on the left side of the folk underground divide, but the practice of her craft is more disciplined and her lyric writing is tighter if no less offbeat. There are 13 new songs here, all of them standing heads and shoulders above her debut — which was no slouch. The beautiful weave of voices in "Vultures" by Hunter, Brownlie, and Ashlynn Davies turns a leaving song into a real road song. There is no bottom dwelling sentiment anywhere. The droning lilt of "Movies," on which Hunter layers her own voice and guitars with Brownlie's synth, is an atmospheric interlude worthy of anything directed by Wim Wenders. "Regardless" is a moving, fingerpicked series of open strings and guitar knots. This is not to say that Hunter's left all her darkness at the door. "Pinnacle," with its fuzzed up and droning guitars amidst the reverb-laden vocals and rumbling drums is creepy as hell, especially when followed by the guitar interlude that follows it. But "Oracle," brings it all back down to the roots of back porch, rock & roll folksy psych. "Sirens" is a haunted and hunted lullaby and the title track is one of the more wistful heartbreakers to come out of the indie folk scene period. What it all adds up to is a nice step forward for Hunter. For those who find themselves lingering on the fringes after her debut, There's No Home is the greeting card to dive in with both ears and get drenched in pleasure.

Recent Customer Reviews

great album.
     
by Dr. Fate

While not as crestfallen as Jana Hunter’s Black Unstaring Heirs of Doom, There’s No Home is still not a light hearted album by any stretch of the imagination. These brooding compositions of folk intensity originate from the artists dark sensibility to folk music but you can play this in the car before work. There’s No Home works as an early morning album, the kind of album you listen to before the kids are awake and the wife is making demands, the kind of album that lets you be alone with your thoughts before joining the rat race. There’s No Home is a lonely album, albeit since these songs are pop structured that loneliness seems more self-imposed then forced upon the listener. In other words, if you’re an insomniac this album might provide some sense of harmony before the proverbial “day begins.” Palms might be Jana Hunter’s most hummable song to date a definite must if you have not already, but there are other gems as well … such as Movies, Recess and Sleep. Honest and coherent dark-Light folk music to keep you sane in this insane world.

As Woody Allen said
     
by oblitterati

Neurotics build castles in the sky. The songs on this album build castles in my pants.

...
     
by owleyes

I don't like this album as much as Jana's first (Blank Unstaring Heirs of Doom), but it's still full of beautifully haunting songs. It's much less melancholy and dark, but it's good to hear another side of her.

Biography

Born: Texas

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

Eclectic Texas-based singer/songwriter Jana Hunter signed to Devendra Banhart and Vetiver frontman Andy Cabic's Gnomonsong label in 2005 for her debut, Blank Unstaring Heirs of Doom. The Houston native, who has also spent time in the popular southwestern group Matty & Mossy, and more...
Full Bio

Customer Ratings

     
5 Ratings

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