Alela Diane’s claim to fame in the maritime music genre is her 2006 song, Pirate’s Gospel, which has been covered by innumerable groups and solo performers.

Alela Diane Menig, known as Alela Diane, is an American singer-songwriter from Nevada City, California.

Alela Diane is an American indie folk musician whose unconventional melodies and dreamy guitar picking style drew comparisons to the likes of Devendra Banhart and Joanna Newsom following her 2003 recording debut, Forest Parade. After releasing a pair of hushed, brittle LPs, she started to involve more collaborators to flesh out her sound, culminating with her fourth full-length, the 2011 full-band album Alela Diane & Wild Divine. A return to more intimate recordings followed, including 2015’s Cold Moon with Ryan Francesconi.

The Pirate’s Gospel
Diane was born and raised in Nevada City, California, also the hometown of Newsom. Diane’s parents were musicians, and she grew up singing with them and in her school choir. A self-taught guitarist, she released her first album, 2003’s Forest Parade, at the age of 20. Newsom provided Diane with her first public solo gigs. After a short stint with the group Black Bear and a trip to Europe, Diane returned to the States and began work on her next album. Released in 2004, The Pirate’s Gospel came to the attention of Holocene Music, which reissued it in 2006 with new artwork and a revised track listing. The album was critically well received, and she followed it with five-song EP, Songs Whistled Through White Teeth, also in 2006. Diane toured extensively in both the United States and the British Isles during the following year.

Wikipedia has an extensive biography listing for Alela Diane.

 

General Information

2003

Yes

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alela_Diane

Contact Information

Scott

Nature\Nurture Artist Management

Nevada City

CA

USA

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