Ezra Koenig | |
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![]() Koenig performing at the 2008 Pitchfork Music Festival |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Ezra Koenig |
Born | April 8, 1984 |
Origin | New York City, New York, United States |
Occupations | Musician, singer-songwriter |
Labels | XL |
Associated acts | Vampire Weekend, Dirty Projectors, Discovery, L'Homme Run, The Sophisticuffs, The Very Best |
Website | https://www.vampireweekend.com |
Notable instruments | |
Epiphone Sheraton II, Rickenbacker 330 |
Ezra Koenig (born April 8th, 1984[1] in New York City) is the lead singer and one of the guitarists of New York-based indie rock band Vampire Weekend.
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Koenig grew up in a Jewish background[2] in Northern New Jersey and attended Glen Ridge High School. Ezra's grandmother is Romanian.[3] His mother is a psychotherapist. His father is a set dresser on film and TV productions. His parents lived on the Upper West Side of Manhattan before moving to New Jersey. Ezra has a younger sister, Emma Koenig. His maternal grandfather was the philosopher Richard McKeon. He began writing music around the age of ten or eleven, and his first song ever was titled "Bad Birthday Party." He attended Columbia University where he majored in English literature.
Prior to forming Vampire Weekend, Koenig was involved in numerous musical projects with Wes Miles,[4] a former high school classmate and current front-man of Ra Ra Riot, along with childhood friends Dan Millar and Andrei Padlowski. Koenig and Miles' experimental band, The Sophisticuffs, has been described as "wildly inventive musical work".[5] Later, Koenig formed the "serious" rap band L’Homme Run[6] with Andrew Kalaidjian and fellow band member Chris Tomson, played saxophone for the indie rock band Dirty Projectors, worked as an intern for The Walkmen,[7] and was an eighth-grade English teacher in Junior High School 258 in Brooklyn, New York, until 2007.
Koenig met the members of Vampire Weekend while attending Columbia University and started the group in their senior year. The name of the group comes from the movie of the same name that Ezra and his friends made over summer vacations. Ezra plays the main character, Walcott, who has to go to Cape Cod to tell the mayor that vampires are coming. They self-produced their first album after graduation while concurrently working full-time jobs. In 2010, they released their second album, Contra. It reached number one on the US and British album charts, among others.
Koenig provides vocals on the song "Carby" on LP, the debut album of Discovery, a group which features Vampire Weekend keyboardist Rostam Batmanglij and his childhood friend, Ra Ra Riot Vocalist, Wes Miles. He's also featured on "Warm Heart of Africa" by The Very Best, "Pyromiltia" by Theophilus London and "I Could Be Wrong" by Chromeo. He also recently appeared and provided brief vocals in the music video for Duck Sauce's Barbra Streisand. His recording of the song Papa Hobo, by Paul Simon, is part of the soundtrack for Max Winkler's film Ceremony.
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Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Ezra Koenig |
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Ezra (/ˈɛzrə/; Hebrew: עזרא, Ezra; fl. 480–440 BC), also called Ezra the Scribe (עזרא הסופר, Ezra ha-Sofer) and Ezra the Priest in the Book of Ezra, was a Jewish scribe and a priest. According to the Hebrew Bible he returned from the Babylonian exile and reintroduced the Torah in Jerusalem (Ezra 7–10 and Neh 8). According to 1 Esdras, a Greek translation of the Book of Ezra still in use in Eastern Orthodoxy, he was also a high priest.
Several traditions have developed over his place of burial. One tradition says that he is buried in al-Uzayr near Basra (Iraq), while another tradition alleges that he is buried in Tadif near Aleppo, in northern Syria.
His name may be an abbreviation of עזריהו Azaryahu, "God-helps". In the Greek Septuagint the name is rendered Ésdrās (Ἔσδρας), from which the Latin name Esdras comes.
The Book of Ezra describes how he led a group of Judean exiles living in Babylon to their home city of Jerusalem (Ezra 8.2-14) where he is said to have enforced observance of the Torah. He was described as exhorting the Israeli people to be sure to follow the Torah Law so as not to intermarry with people of particular different religions (and ethnicities), a set of commandments described in the Pentateuch.
Uzayr - most often identified with the Judeo-Christian Ezra (عزير, 'Uzair) - is a figure mentioned in the Qur'an, in the verse 9:30, which states that he was revered by the Jews as "the son of God". Jews do not agree on that statement. Historically, Muslim scholars have interpreted this verse as referring to a small group of Jews making such a reverence.
Ezra lived between the times of King Solomon and the time of Zachariah, father of John the Baptist. Although not explicitly mentioned in the Quran among the prophets, Ezra is considered as one by some Muslim scholars, based on Islamic traditions. On the other hand, Muslim scholars such as Mutahhar al-Maqdisi and Djuwayni and notably Ibn Hazm and al-Samaw'al accused Ezra (or one of his disciples) of falsification of the Torah. Several sources state that the Qur'an refers to Jews who began to call Ezra a "son of God" due to his religious achievements.
Gordon Darnell Newby states it may due to misunderstanding of Ezra's position in the Jewish faith as a Bene Elohim. Other Western scholars, relying on exegetical material from Ibn Abbas and Ibn Qutaybah, consider Uzair not to be Ezra but Azariah, mentioned in the Book of Daniel as Abednego.
Ezra is a male biblical name derived from Hebrew (עזרא) and must not be confused with the Turkish female name Esra. In a biblical context, Ezra refers to:
Ezra may also refer to: