Chris Lambert (musician)

Chris Lambert is an American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist.

Lambert in November 2015

Lambert has released albums of varying styles, ranging from the 1990s alternative rock revival of Warp & Woof,[1] to the ambient folk sound of his most recent release, The Constant Education of Christopher Lambert.[2][3]

Beginning September 30, 2019, Chris Lambert released a 7-part podcast series called Your Own Backyard.[4] The podcast recounts, in detail, the disappearance of Kristin Smart from the campus of California Polytechnic State University in May of 1996. The podcast was downloaded over two million times in its first 4 months.[5][6] Renewed public interest led to a new billboard being put up in Arroyo Grande in January 2020 to replace the original, which had been up since 1997.[7]

Biography

Lambert was born in Santa Maria, California. He was raised in Orcutt, California, and attended Ernest Righetti High School.

A multi-instrumentalist, Lambert makes use of a variety of instruments, frequently playing many of them himself on the same track.[8]

Discography

Studio Albums

  • Two Guns (2007)
  • Songs I'd Like to Sing Into Your Open Mouth (2008)
  • The Great Dipso Drought (2009)
  • Phoebe (2010)
  • Phoebe, Naked (2010)
  • Krakatoa Lazer Punch (2011)
  • The Weatherman (2012)
  • Silver Jubilee (2013)
  • Warp & Woof (2014)
  • The Blue Hour (2016)
  • The Constant Education of Christopher Lambert (2018)
gollark: Because it's the coolest and best solution!
gollark: > are they thoyes.> 40 years for us to figure out mass recycling idkI mean, maybe, but you still have to go out to the deserts and replace all of them, and they'll slowly degrade in effectiveness before that.
gollark: I think because the main advantage was that it wouldn't produce neutrons in some sort of fusion reaction, and neutrons cause problems, except it still would because of the fuels each fusing with themselves.
gollark: I think I read somewhere that it wasn't very useful (he3) but i forgot why.
gollark: I too want vast swathes of land to be covered in generators which will not even work half the time because of "night" and "poor weather", which are hilariously energy-expensive to produce in the first place, and which will break after 40 years.

References



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