DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:
Usually available in 1-2 weeks
Will not arrive by Dec. 24
Visit our Gift Guide or send a Gift Card
Delivery Time and Shipping Rates
Enter a zip code
CD
On Chris Thile's previous album with the band now known as the Punch Brothers -- that would be his "solo" disc, How to Grow a Woman from the Ground -- the Nickel Creek mandolinist contributed a desultory, heartrending song titled "I'm Yours if You Want Me." The person to whom that song was addressed had already answered no, thus laying the groundwork for Punch, Thile's in-depth, anguished account of the collapse of his marriage. Not that it's a downer. By and large, the music soars and sprints along on wings of breathtaking virtuosity by the assembled quintet (Chris Eldridge, guitar; Greg Garrison, bass; Noam Pikelny, banjo; and Gabe Witcher, fiddle). The high-energy newgrass opener, "Punch Bowl," boasts some catchy Beatles-like harmonic changes in the verses and allows Thile to demonstrate some newfound vocal strength, as he belts out the lyrics in a sturdy, assured timbre he's mostly kept under wraps. But the heart of Punch -- a signal moment both in Thile's career and in the annals of contemporary bluegrass -- is the four-movement suite titled "The Blind Leaving the Blind," a forensic investigation into the artist's matrimonial debacle. Compositionally, "The Blind" is a tour de force, featuring stirring passages of intricate instrumental dialogues, bold soloing, rousing ensemble interludes, and abrupt shifts in texture that evoke the thin line between love and hate. The whole enterprise is more than 40 minutes in length and is, despite its frank accounts of heartbreak, betrayal, rage, and conciliation, surprisingly buoyant, even celebratory at times, perhaps to underscore Thile's healing sense of personal renewal. As his history makes clear, where Chris Thile goes from here is anybody's guess, but he will get there. As his second album's title had it, not all who wander are lost. David McGee, Barnes & Noble