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drawn to immediately. He jumped at the chance to stay productive, collaborating with his environment to bring a new batch of highly introspective songs into the world.
“ This record felt like I sat down to conjure something, and in the act of conjuring, it sort of opened up a rich vein of channeling,” Thile recalls.“ I wanted to make a record that considers the religious impulse, and walks all around that. It’ s a record full of questions.” Fresh insight into himself and his music came with the new territory.“ Being deprived of other voices to listen to helped me realize the extent to which I’ d been taking [ them ] for granted,” he says.
The October show will be Thile’ s first time playing here, and he’ s excited— to experience the beauty and creativity Brown County is known for, and because the format will also be a first for him. On this tour, Chris will be presenting Laysongs the same way he recorded it: just him and his mandolin. The big difference being, of course, that instead of the vaulted ceilings and stained glass windows of the empty church, his audience will be hundreds of people, each with their own stories and expectations.
No problem at all, says Chris: the uncertainty of how his bare-bones performance will translate at a venue designed for grandness and spectacle is part of the tour’ s appeal.“ This record starts with the question‘ What shall we sing now, when we gather together?’” he explains.“ I love the thought that we get to take a crack at answering that at each of these solo shows. I realized I need that collaboration [ with the audience ]. You’ re going to see a very grateful and humbled mandolinist onstage.”
What you won’ t see on this tour, however, is a typical mandolinist. Over a lifetime of dedication to his instrument, Chris has explored its possibilities from just about every angle. Born in southern California, Thile says he was just two years old when he first knew he wanted to play music.“ It was at a pizza place in north San Diego county,” he tells me.“ This guy named John Moore led a bluegrass band there. I remember loving the mandolin, but I’ m pretty sure I loved it because he played it.” Chris had to wait until he was five to get a mandolin of his own, and as a steady stream of records and sold-out shows can attest, he hasn’ t stopped playing it yet.
50 Our Brown County Sept./ Oct. 2021
After releasing a few albums of traditional-sounding music as a kid, he broke big with Nickel Creek, a Grammy-winning progressive bluegrass trio he formed with two local friends. And as Thile’ s songwriting talent and performance evolved and expanded, so did his circle of collaborators. He’ s played Carnegie Hall with the Punch Brothers, another of his groups. His less regular fellow travelers have included Brad Mehldau on piano, Edgar Mayer on bass, and an impressive roster of others.
But make no mistake: despite performing alone on this tour, Chris Thile will be no less thrilling at Brown County Music Center than at any other point in his career.“ I want expectations to be exceeded,” he says.“ I’ ll always be up there trying to surprise myself, exceeding my own expectations. Having never been to Nashville, Indiana before, I anticipate getting to see my music by the light of those sparks that fly when an artist meets an audience for the first time.”
You can get tickets and details for all Brown County Music Center shows at < BrownCountyMusicCenter. com > and < Ticketmaster. com >. •