Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

1.79 %
0 less streams than the last month

Followers

Current

0.67 %
0 less streams than the last month

Streams

Current

0.01 %
0 less streams than the last month

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Slip Into The Sky (Live 1989)

91K streams

90,992

Exaggerate (Remix)

My Power

Tell Me

Shooting Rubberbands At The Stars

Ghost Of A Dog

Horse's Mouth

Stranger Things

Hunter and the Dog Star

Rocket

Biography

Edie Brickell & New Bohemians found the name of their fifth studio album, Hunter and the Dog Star, in an unexpected place: the sprawling night sky. Though she knew Orion’s Belt and Sirius, the furiously burning “Dog Star,” Brickell recently learned of the movement that connects the constellation in a single phrase. She immediately recognized herself, her bandmates, and their musical journey together in the stars. Since their earliest gigs in Dallas in 1985, Brickell and Kenny Withrow (guitar), Brad Houser (bass), Brandon Aly (drums) and John Bush (percussion) have always found their way back to one another, even when their respective pursuits pulled them in different directions. After “What I Am,” the smash single off 1988’s debut album Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars, vaulted the band onto the national stage, they recorded their sophomore album, 1990’s Ghost of a Dog, before Brickell launched a solo career and started a family. They would continue to sporadically write and record together throughout the ‘90s and 2000s, but it would be another 16 years before they would release 2006’s Stranger Things, and 12 more until 2018’s Rocket, which brought them back to Texas and each other. Hunter and the Dog Star is both a new beginning and a homecoming in many ways: it’s a tribute to their three decades and counting of collaboration and camaraderie, and an eclectic blend of the sounds, textures and experiments that shaped each member on their musical journeys along the way.