Sneha Girap (Editor)

Orenda Fink

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Orenda Fink

Role
  
Musician


Orenda Fink Orenda Fink Holy Holy Live Session YouTube


Music groups
  
Azure Ray, Now It's Overhead, Art in Manila

Albums
  
Ask the Night, Invisible Ones, Now It's Overhead, Burn and Shiver, Azure Ray

Similar People
  
Maria Taylor, Todd Fink, Andy LeMaster, Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis

Profiles


Record label
  
Saddle Creek Records

Beautiful things can come from the dark orenda fink tedxomaha


Orenda Fink (born September 18, 1975) is an American musician on Saddle Creek Records.

Contents

Orenda Fink Orenda Fink Cobracamanda Publicity

Born in Birmingham, Alabama, United States, Fink was half of the Southern dream pop duo Azure Ray from 2001 to 2004. Fink is also a former member of Now It's Overhead, another Saddle Creek band. She released her first full-length solo album Invisible Ones on August 23, 2005. She is married to Todd Fink (formerly Todd Baechle) of The Faint, another Saddle Creek band. Fink uses Garrison guitars.

Orenda Fink Orenda Fink You Are A Mistery OOAM Backstage Session

Fink said she had a spiritual awakening while in Haiti and her solo music is inspired, in part, by Haitian folk music. In 2006, she formed a new band, Art in Manila, originally named Art Bell. The band's debut album was released on Saddle Creek on August 7, 2007.

Orenda Fink Orenda Fink Biography Albums amp Streaming Radio AllMusic

Orenda and her long-time friend, Cedric Lemoyne (bassist for Remy Zero) have collaborated to form a project called O+S. The album is indie rock-based, coming from sounds Orenda recorded in Haiti and other places. Cedric made loops out of the sounds and wrote songs based on them. The album was released on March 24, 2009 on Saddle Creek Records.

Orenda Fink Flowerbooking Orenda Fink

Her second solo album, Ask the Night was released on Saddle Creek Records on October 6, 2009, including the song "Why is The Night Sad" played with Azure Ray at their reunion show in Los Angeles on November 15, 2008. This was followed by a more extensive West Coast tour in July 2009.

Orenda began recording her third solo album in December 2013. Collaborating on the album is her "dream team," Ben Brodin, husband Todd Fink and Bill Rieflin. Blue Dream was released on Saddle Creek Records on August 19, 2014.

Orenda fink ace of cups berlin sessions bonus


With Little Red Rocket

  • Who Did You Pay (1997 · Tim/Kerr)
  • It's in the Sound (2000 · Monolyth)
  • With Azure Ray

  • Azure Ray (2001 · Warm)
  • Burn and Shiver (2002 · Warm)
  • November EP (2002 · Saddle Creek)
  • Hold on Love (2003 · Saddle Creek)
  • Drawing Down the Moon (2010 - Saddle Creek)
  • Solo

  • Bloodline EP (2005 · iTunes Exclusive)
  • Invisible Ones (2005 · Saddle Creek)
  • Ask the Night (2009 · Saddle Creek)
  • Blue Dream (2014 · Saddle Creek)
  • With Art in Manila

  • Set the Woods on Fire (2007 · Saddle Creek)
  • With O+S

  • O+S (2009 · Saddle Creek)
  • You Were Once the Sun, Now You're the Moon (2017 · Saddle Creek)
  • Compilations

  • Lagniappe: A Saddle Creek Benefit for Hurricane Katrina Relief (2005 · Saddle Creek)
  • Other appearances

  • Bright Eyes - There Is No Beginning to the Story (2002 · Saddle Creek)
  • Bright Eyes - Lifted or The Story is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground (2002 · Saddle Creek)
  • Bright Eyes/Neva Dinova - One Jug of Wine, Two Vessels (2004 · Crank! Records)
  • Videography

  • Bloodline (2005, directed by Nik Fackler)
  • Leave it All (2006, directed by Rudolf Buitendach)
  • Other appearances

  • Appeared in the music video for "Lovers Need Lawyers," by The Good Life.
  • Appeared in the music video for "Yellow Datsun," by Neva Dinova.
  • Performed a cover of The Flaming Lips' "Do You Realize??"
  • Contributed background vocals to The Elected's "Don't Blow It," from their debut album Me First (2004).
  • Sang backup on McCarthy Trenching's "Headlines" on their self-titled album (2007, Team Love).
  • References

    Orenda Fink Wikipedia