Hendra (Ben Watt album)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hendra_(Ben_Watt_album) an entity of type: Thing

Hendra is the second studio album released by the English singer, author and multi-instrumentalist Ben Watt on 15 April 2014 through Unmade Road, under exclusive license to Caroline International. The record is a collaboration with Bernard Butler and features a guest-appearance by David Gilmour on slide guitar and backing vocals on "The Levels". This is Watt's first solo album for three-decades since his 1983's debut, North Marine Drive. During an interview in 2014, Watt stated the following regarding the album's title: rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hendra (Ben Watt album)
rdf:langString Hendra
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rdf:langString Ben Watt
rdf:langString Unmade Road, under exclusive license to Caroline International
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rdf:langString demo
rdf:langString live
xsd:integer 1983
rdf:langString Berlin and London 2013
xsd:date 2014-04-14
rdf:langString Spring
rdf:langString Nathaniel
rdf:langString Forget
rdf:langString Hendra
rdf:langString The Gun
rdf:langString Golden Ratio
rdf:langString Matthew Arnold's Field
rdf:langString The Heart Is a Mirror
rdf:langString The Levels
rdf:langString Young Man's Game
rdf:langString Hendra is the second studio album released by the English singer, author and multi-instrumentalist Ben Watt on 15 April 2014 through Unmade Road, under exclusive license to Caroline International. The record is a collaboration with Bernard Butler and features a guest-appearance by David Gilmour on slide guitar and backing vocals on "The Levels". This is Watt's first solo album for three-decades since his 1983's debut, North Marine Drive. During an interview in 2014, Watt stated the following regarding the album's title: "My sister died just shortly after finishing my last book and it was a big shock. She’d led a very simple life as a shopkeeper at a simple village store and lived quite a claustrophobic life. Whenever she’d try to get away she went to this little house on the edge of Cornwall called Hendra. When she died I did some research on the name and found that it’s an old Cornish word for home. It had this odd lyrical quality to it. When I found the actual meaning it seemed like the perfect title for the record."
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