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Here We Go Magic eventually morphed into a five-piece, gaining critical acclaim for The January EP (2011) and A Different Ship (2012). It was recorded almost entirely alone by Temple on a simple 4-track recorder with nothing more than a drum, one microphone, a synth, and an acoustic guitar. Their eponymous debut was released the next year. “My natural inclination,” he says, “was to figure out patterns and then write little songs from those ideas.”Īfter Tufts, and struggling to make it as a visual artist, Temple recorded two folk albums under his own name, Hold a Match for a Gasoline World (2005) and Snowbeast (2007), before forming the New York-based indie-rock band Here We Go Magic in 2008. Even his deft fingerpicked licks seem to resonate from the pattern-oriented headspace he discovered in college. “But, like guitar, I started because it is something you can do by yourself.” He also developed a keen compositional perspective as a painter at Tufts that he would eventually apply to songwriting. “I had a sense that I could sing,” he recalls. “So I started teaching myself guitar and it just evolved from there.” He even admits he was too shy, initially, to sing. “Bass is an ensemble instrument, for the most part,” he explains.
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Born in Salem, Massachusetts, Temple initially got into playing with his high school friends when he picked up bass as a teenager, but when he enrolled at Tufts School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, he didn’t have anyone to make music with. His current trajectory can be traced back to his freshman year in college. Temple’s career in music didn’t start with the concentrated, intuitive focus he possesses today. Still, musically he nods to Hank Williams and Roger Miller. His lonesome falsetto has conjured comparisons to Nick Drake and Jeff Buckley, and his songcraft is weighed against other contemporary masters, including Cass McCombs. Listen to the electronic-acoustic psychedelia of his band Here We Go Magic, or the avant-garde traditionalism of his solo work, and it becomes quite clear that over the past 10 years or so Temple has matured into the quintessential folk artist of our time. Luke Temple has such a deep, personal connection to what he sings and writes about that it seems as if he was born doing it.