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An Evening with Mandolin Orange
Saturday, Sep 23, 2017 8:00 PM
$20 - Reserved Seating + Fees
Lean in to Mandolin Orange’s recent album, “Blindfaller,” and it’s bound to happen. You’ll suddenly pick up on the power and devastation lurking in its quietude, the doom hiding beneath its unvarnished beauty. You’ll hear the way it magnifies the intimacy at the heart of the North Carolina duo’s music, as if they created their own musical language as they recorded it.
Zone 1 Reserved Seating - $20.00
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Ticket Availability
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Lean in to Mandolin
Orange’s recent album, “Blindfaller,” and it’s bound to happen. You’ll suddenly
pick up on the power and devastation lurking in its quietude, the doom hiding
beneath its unvarnished beauty. You’ll hear the way it magnifies the intimacy at
the heart of the North Carolina duo’s music, as if they created their own
musical language as they recorded it.
Building on the acclaim of Mandolin Orange’s 2013
breakthrough debut on Yep Roc Records “This Side of Jordan” and its follow-up,
last year’s “Such Jubilee,” their new album “Blindfaller” is already following
suit. Upon its September 30 release, the album charted on Billboard’s
Bluegrass (#3) and Folk/Americana (#16), made Rolling Stone’s “40 Best Country
Albums of 2016” and was featured on NPR’s “Heavy Rotation,” among others.
“When we finished ‘Such Jubilee,’ I started writing these
songs with a different goal in mind. I thought about how I would write songs
for somebody else to record,” Marlin explains. “I ended up with a bunch of
songs like that, but we chose ones that I still felt personally connected to.”
Holed up at the Rubber Room studio in Chapel Hill, N.C., with
a full band this time around, they laid down the tracks in a week between
touring. They’ve always been keen on the notion that drawn-out recording
sessions don’t necessarily yield better results. A good song, and just one good
take, will always shine through any studio sorcery.
The passage of time, and the regret that often accompanies
it, courses through these songs. “When did all the good times turn to hard
lines on my face/ And lead me so far from my place right by your side?” Marlin
ruminates on “My Blinded Heart.”
In fact, there’s heartache by the numbers on “Blindfaller.”
If you didn’t know better, you’d swear “Picking Up Pieces” is a tearjerker
George Jones or Willie Nelson sang back in the early 1970s. It’s a Mandolin
Orange original, of course, and also a poignant reminder of the economy and
grace with which Marlin imbues his songs – say what’s important and scrap the
rest.
A country dirge with soulful washes of pedal steel and
mandolin, “Wildfire” details the the lingering, present-day devastation of
slavery and the Civil War, with Marlin’s voice locking into close harmonies
with Frantz on the chorus. “Take This Heart of Gold” opens with perhaps the
best classic-country line you’ll hear all year: “Take this heart of gold and melt
it down.” (Marlin admits it was inspired by a Tom Waits lyric he misheard.)
But there’s also room for detours. Straight out of a honky
tonk, “Hard Travelin’” lets the band shift into overdrive. A freewheeling ode
to life on the road, it had been kicking around for a while but never fit on
previous releases.
As for the album title, it’s meant to evoke a sense of
wonder, of contemplation. A “faller” is someone who fells trees, and in this
case that person is blind to his/her own actions and those of the world. The
spectral cover photo, by Scott McCormick, is open to interpretation, too:
Either those trees are engulfed in flames or sunlight is pouring through them.
It’s up to you.
“We wanted different vibes and different intuitions on these
tracks,” Marlin says, “and I feel like we really captured that.”
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