Inara George
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Inara George

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Band Alternative Singer/Songwriter

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"Rise and Shine"

"All Rise" with its frank, quizzical singing and classy guitar and keyboard backdrops, strikes a balance between contemporaries like Aimee Mann and the confessionals patented by Georges onetime neighbor, Joni Mitchell. - Time Out NY


"Inara George keeps it smooth, simple"

Inara George
All Rise
Everloving Records
There's no doubt last names help in this business (as in any other), and Inara George's has been worth a foot in the door more than once. But let's not get snippy about rock nepotism; even the children of the famous or once-famous eventually must deliver the goods.
Miss George, daughter of the late Little Feat master Lowell George, has them — namely, an attention-grabbing voice and a writerly gift.
Truth be told, Miss George didn't have much time to soak up the direct influence of her father. He died when she was just 5.
Thus, her work with bands such as Lode and Merrick and her solo debut, "All Rise" — a collaboration with "Donnie Darko" soundtrack composer Michael Andrews — are blissfully free of the weight of familial influence.
"All Rise," an ambient, Nick Drake-like mood piece with gentle percussion and tasteful electronic touches, is built entirely around Miss George's voice: a breathy, free-floating mezzo-soprano that moves in unpredictable intervals and quaverings, much like Bjork's or Aimee Mann's.
Her melodies are angular, playful and unhurried; her lyrics are bony and economical. Here's her sum-up of an illicit affair, as told in the opener "Mistress": "It fights and it lies and it sighs and it sighs and it sighs." Just right, and not a word wasted, especially not those extra "sighs."
Her advice to what sounds like a piece of eye candy with little to recommend upstairs: "If I was you, I wouldn't talk; I'd just keep dancing" ("No Poem"). As they say in rap battles, "Snap!"
The ocular sense as metaphor for unconditional love: "Your eyes, they're good to me/They can see what my mother sees" ("Good to Me"). Perfect.
Mr. Andrews, double-tasking as producer, plays a host of guitars, mostly acoustic and mournful, but sneaks in a smudge of grit on the peppy, McCartneyesque rockers "Genius" and "Turn On/Off." (The reference for both seems to be "Getting Better" off "Sgt. Pepper.")
Keyboardist Greg Kurstin (Beck, Ben Harper) adds a swirl of Fender Rhodes piano, vibes and spooky synthesizers .
"All Rise's" strength — uniformity — is also its weakness. It tends to sound the same even after repeated listens. Singular moments of note are hard to disentangle from the whole.
The album, however, clearly is meant for a long drive rather than an in-and-out stop at the Quickie Mart. Its rewards are tucked away for the patient, as on "Fools in Love," a seemingly downcast waltz about the pathetic irrationality of the heartstrings.
In the end comes Miss George's twist: "I should know, because this fool's in love."
Again, perfect.
- Washington Times


"B+"

A sun-kissed solo debut wrapped in a cocooon of inviting acoustic guitars and shimmering synths. - Entertainment Weekly


Discography

All Rise - 2005 featuring "Fool's Work" "Genius" etc have extensive play on KCRW and MPR's The Current.

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Bio

Every once in a while, a record comes along that marks the arrival of an authentic new voice, singing songs with which we can immediately identify. These are the records we wait for, the records that borough their way into our heads. All Rise, the transcendently beautiful debut solo album from Inara George, is one of those records.

Featuring a collection of captivating songs and George’s stunning voice, which KCRW DJ Anne Litt describes as “infinitely listenable,” the album has already received regular airplay at the world-famous college station.

Raised in Topanga Canyon, in the house that her mother still lives in, Inara was immersed in a wildly creative atmosphere from the start. Her father was the legendary Little Feat slide guitarist and songwriter Lowell George. And though he died when she was just five, she continued to be exposed to the world he’d been a part of. “My mother kept our house open to a lot of creative people,” George explains as she recalls a time when the Violent Femmes stayed at her house on their first tour to LA, “and we were always around a lot of live music and art,” including the work of her parents’ peers, Van Dyke Parks, Jackson Browne, visual artist and musician Terry Allen and many others.

But Inara herself never considered a career in music. Instead, she went to college in Boston to study classical theater acting, having grown up performing Shakespeare at Topanga’s outdoor Theatricum Botanicum. (“I know it’s nerdy, but I love Shakespeare,” says George who admits stealing from the bard lyrically on her upcoming album.)

One summer home from college, George started the band Lode with some friends from her high school, “on a lark.” Much to her surprise they were very quickly signed to Geffen and toured for two years. When they broke up, she escaped to New York to figure out what she might do next…

Before long, Inara found herself back in California and in another band, Merrick, her collaboration with Bryony Atkinson. A favorite on KCRW, Merrick was at the center of the burgeoning Silverlake/Echo Park music scene alongside BRMC, Devendra Banhart ,Midnight Movies, and Eleni Mandel. The band broke up in 2002.

According to George, All Rise could not have happened if she hadn’t met up with producer/guitarist Michael Andrews, who composed the scores to Donnie Darko, Freaks and Geek and co-wrote many of Inara’s songs.

“Mike is inspired. He’s insanely talented like some crazy mad scientist. I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone like him. And he gathered together all these incredible people to work on the record.”

All Rise features a cadre of stellar west coast musicians including keyboardist Greg Kurstin, (Beck, Bobby Hutcherson and Ben Harper), drummer Pete McNeal (Jem and Cake) and Greyboy Allstar bassist Chris Stillwell, who collectively frame George’s cherubic voice in dimension.

Andrews speaks of George’s music, “What Inara does with music is much like when someone comes into your kitchen, takes what odd items of food might be left in your fridge and makes a delicious and humble meal. Her music is both familiar and original, soothing and challenging, grounded yet elevating. Her lyrics express without explaining and her musical forms feel outside of the predictable, yet somehow it still flows naturally.”

To hear the record is to understand. Inara’s thoughtful lyrics and optimistic, vulnerable voice offer a wisdom and sense of irony that can’t be served by the naïve and ambitious youths who dominate today’s airwaves. Her phrasing is unique, yet strangely reminiscent of male singers, like Leonard Cohen or Nick Drake. And how the record sounds seems to defy context, gracefully blending the nostalgic and the contemporary, the organic and the synthesized into an immensely palatable, and wholly consistent, soundscape all it’s own.

All Rise, January 2005