Explore about the Famous Folk Singer Marissa Nadler, who was born in United States on April 5, 1981. Analyze Marissa Nadler’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Marissa Nadler dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Marissa Nadler?
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Marissa Nadler Biography
Singer and songwriter with more than a decade of albums under her belt, she is known for her haunting and ethereal mezzo-soprano voice. She is particularly recognized for the 2014 album July which peaked at #14 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers Albums chart.
As a teen, she was a self-taught guitar player focused largely in a style similar to fingerpicking. She also began writing songs. Into college, she also began performing at open mic nights.
An illustrator and painter, she earned a bachelor’s degree and master’s from Rhode Island School of Design in 2003. After college, she worked for some time as an art teacher.
Her mother, Pamela, was an abstract painter, and her older brother, Stuart, a writer and guitarist.
In November 2012, she and Angel Olsen covered the songs “My Dreams Have Withered and Died” and “Frisco Depot” on her SoundCloud.
Marissa Nadler (born April 5, 1981) is an American musician and fine artist based in Boston, Massachusetts. Active since 2000, she is currently signed to Sacred Bones Records and Bella Union, and released her eighth full-length studio album, For My Crimes, in September 2018. As a singer-songwriter, her music defies simple classification. Her work “is rooted in old-school country and folk but brings in elements of experimental and black metal”. Sometimes the term “dream folk” has been invoked to describe her work.
Marissa Nadler was born in Washington, D.C. and raised in Needham, Massachusetts. As a teenager, she taught herself to play guitar in a style similar to fingerpicking, playing a steady bass pattern with the thumb and filling out syncopated rhythms with the index finger. It was described as having an “unorthodox, dusky sound”. Also while in her teens, she began to write songs as a hobby. She studied painting at Rhode Island School of Design, where she obtained a bachelor’s degree in illustration in 2003, and a master’s degree in art education a year later. During her studies, she began to perform at open mic events around Providence. While exploring artistic techniques such as illustration, painting, bookbinding, wood carving and encaustic painting, she also honed her songwriting craft. She subsequently recorded an album titled Autumn Rose (2002) as well as the four-track EP Somber Ghost Recordings (2003), neither of which have ever been released. Nadler also contributed to the Pearl Before Swine tribute album For the Dead in Space – Volumes II & III in 2003.
Nadler released her first official album, Ballads of Living and Dying, on Eclipse Records in January 2004. The follow-up The Saga of Mayflower May was released in July 2005. Both records were distributed in the United States by Eclipse, and by the UK label Beautiful Happiness in Europe.
Nadler released her third studio album, Songs III: Bird on the Water, on Peacefrog Records in Europe on March 12, 2007. The album was recorded and produced by Greg Weeks of the band Espers in Philadelphia and was subsequently released in the US and Canada on August 12, 2007 by Kemado Records. It was nominated for two PLUG Independent Music Awards in 2008: “Best Female Artist of the Year” and “Best Americana Record of the Year”. Nadler also won “Outstanding Singer-Songwriter of the Year” at the 2008 Boston Music Awards, with three nominations altogether.
Her fourth full-length album, Little Hells, produced by Chris Coady, was released on March 3, 2009 and received praise from many critics. including 4-star reviews from magazines such as Mojo, Rolling Stone in France and Germany, Uncut, and Q. It received an 8.3 from Pitchfork. The album departed from the earlier folk-based template with the introduction of electronic elements. In early 2010, Nadler contributed vocals on Portal of Sorrow, the final album by black metal project Xasthur.
On June 14, 2011, an eponymous record was released worldwide on Nadler’s own label, Box of Cedar Records. The song “Baby, I Will Leave You in the Morning” was released as a free download on March 8, followed by a subsequent music video. The album was positively received by Pitchfork, which gave it 8.1 out of 10, and it was called “a stellar collection of sullen melodies and lovelorn anecdotes akin to those of Joni Mitchell”.
In November 2012, Nadler collaborated with Angel Olsen on two cover songs that were shared on Nadler’s SoundCloud page: the Richard and Linda Thompson song “My Dreams Have Withered and Died” and the Mickey Newbury song “Frisco Depot”.
On May 29, 2012, she released The Sister, a short eight-song “companion” album to Marissa Nadler. The album was dubbed by Paste as an “impressive concoction of stark minimalism”.
In July 2014, Nadler collaborated with Father John Misty, releasing a split 7″ on Bella Union. Father John Misty covered Nadler’s “Drive”, while Nadler covered “Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings”.
July received positive feedback from music critics. At Metacritic, it received “universal acclaim” with a score of 83 out of 100. A majority of music publications gave July 4 out of 5 stars, among them NME, Drowned in Sound, Blurt and PopMatters, In a positive review, PopMatters called the album a “triumph” and “one of 2014’s best albums so far”, while Spin called it a “masterfully composed release”. Vice Media’s Noisey website discussed the atmosphere of the album, writing that “the darkly lit July is a moody trip through heat spells and night drives… Nadler’s quiet songwriting and ethereal sound give July a sound that’s, at times, almost sinister”. Steven Rosen of Blurt wrote that Nadler managed to achieve an “almost-hallucinatory effect out of her singing, often multi-tracking the voice to create a ghostly pillowing effect”.
In 2013, she signed to Brooklyn-based Sacred Bones Records. Her album July was released by the label on February 4, 2014 and on February 10 by Bella Union in the UK. It was recorded at Seattle’s Avast Studios, and produced by collaborator Randall Dunn. The first single from the album, “Dead City Emily”, was released in November 2013 and positively received by Stereogum as an “ethereal spine-tingler” and by BrooklynVegan as “a track as haunting and delicate as any of her best tracks to date”. July debuted at No. 16 on the Billboard Folk Albums chart and No. 14 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers albums chart.
During this period, Nadler directed and animated music videos for Strangers tracks “Janie in Love” and “All the Colors of the Dark”, as well as “Blood and Tears”, a Danzig cover she had self-released as a digital-only single for Halloween 2015. In late September 2016, a video for the Strangers song “Dissolve”, featuring both animation and live performance, was released on Pitchfork.tv.
Strangers holds a score of 76 out of 100 from Metacritic based on “generally favorable reviews”. The album was listed on several lists of 2016’s best albums to date, including Spin, Newsweek, Uncut and The Quietus. Spin also listed “Janie in Love” as one of the best songs of 2016 so far.
The album Strangers, recorded with producer Dunn in 2015, was released on May 20, 2016 on Sacred Bones and Bella Union. A limited edition version with original artwork included a pre-release cassette of Bury Your Name. The album release was accompanied by an extensive tour of North America and Europe. In late 2016, Nadler joined Ghost for the US tour.
After touring Europe and North America promoting Strangers, Nadler guested on the Lawrence Rothman album The Book of Law (2017), and on Ojalá (2017), the debut album by Lost Horizons, a duo consisting of Simon Raymonde (Cocteau Twins) and Richie Thomas (Dif Juz, the Jesus and Mary Chain). On September 15, 2017, Sacred Bones released Nadler’s first compilation album, Leave the Light On: Bedroom Recordings, a collection of home recordings and demos dating back to 2014. She also self-released two covers albums on Bandcamp for free download.
For My Crimes reached No. 24 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers Albums chart on October 13, 2018. The album was relatively well-received by critics and fans, holding a score of 77 out of 100 “generally favorable reviews” on Metacritic. It was listed as the seventh best album of 2018 by Bandcamp, at No. 45 by Albumism, at No. 35 by BrooklynVegan, at No. 9 by Fractured Air, and at No. 2 by The Vinyl District, and was named the 19th best folk album of the year by Paste and the best roots album of 2018 by No Depression. The title track was selected by NPR DJ Bob Boilen as one of his favorite songs of the year, and “Blue Vapor” was singled out as one of the best songs of the year by Tiny Mix Tapes, Treble Zine and Revolver magazine.
Nadler’s eighth studio album, For My Crimes, was released by Sacred Bones on September 28, 2018. Rolling Stone wrote that, in contrast to the 2014 break-up album July, For My Crimes, “seems to touch instead on the daily realities of making a relationship work, the epilogue to a happily-ever-after love story when real life kicks in”. It was her first album cover to feature her fine art, an untitled painting. The album included guest vocals by Olsen, Sharon Van Etten and Kristin Kontrol. The album’s first video, “Blue Vapor”, was directed by Thomas McMahan, who “utilizes various experimental and mixed media animation techniques, merging the mood and imagery of the song with hallucinatory visuals…” Nadler’s wardrobe in the video for “Blue Vapor” was created and put together by New York-based costume designer and stylist Jenni Hensler, who also styled Nadler’s Pitchfork.tv performance clip for the song “Dissolve.”
On February 21, 2019, Nadler released a collaborative track with John Cale called “Poison”. On the same day she shared another song called “If We Make It Through The Summer”. Her collaborative album with Stephen Brodsky, Droneflower will be released on April 26, 2019. The album received positive reviews, earning a 8/10 score from Soundblab, 8/10 from Popmatters, 7/10 from Atwood Magazine, 7/10 from Earbuddy, 3.5/5 from The Thin Air and a 4.5/5 from Cryptic Rock. The music website Everythingisnoise remarked, “this mind meld between Nadler and Brodsky is unexpectedly brilliant.” and SLUG Magazine called the collaboration a “cosmic collision” in a favorable review. Droneflower was performed at three East Coast shows in June 2019, together with the release of a claymation video of “For the Sun.” On December 6, 2019 Nadler and Brodsky released two cover songs on Bandcamp that were not included on the Droneflower album: “In the air tonight” by Phil Collins and “More than words” by Extreme (band). Nadler’s figurative and sonic work again converged at the Grauzone Festival in The Hague in February 2020 with a stage performance and simultaneous exhibition of self-portrait paintings. In addition, 2020 saw the publication two limited-edition books of photography, and two albums of previously unreleased songs and demo versions, Unearthed and Covers 3.
What's Marissa Nadler Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Marissa Nadler Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |