Gulf Today - Panorama

Singing a different tune

ACCLAIMED SINGER/ SONGWRITER JOSH RITTER DISCUSSES HIS LATEST ALBUM GATHERING, BRUCE SPRINGSTEE­N AND SONGS LACED WITH QUESTIONS

- by Roisin O’connor

Josh Ritter feels luckier with each record he releases. The miracle to him is “survival,” he says. “I’m so lucky that I’ve been playing music for a while now, and that I’ve continued to feel like I’ve brought something new out of myself. Everybody fears becoming a ‘medley’ artist.”

He’s endearingl­y happy through the interview — he repeats a sincere “thank you” several times at the slightest compliment and smiles bashfully at a mention of Bruce Springstee­n, who’s visited Ritter at his shows on more than one occasion.

“He came backstage and was in our band huddle before a show,” he chuckles. “He’s an amazing person. He took me all over town one night, showed me some of his haunts and was an incredible gentleman to me.

“I’ve always felt so inspired just by the fact that Bruce Springstee­n is out there, man. More and more my heroes are people who have done things for their whole career, managed to have lives in the meantime, do good things and still be hungry, still put out this amazing music.”

Ritter’s own, most recent record Gathering

— his ninth — is his most diverse to date, exploring in superb detail

a new freedom, where he untangles himself from expectatio­n and creates a series of characters who battle weather along with their internal demons.

On his 2015 record Sermon on the Rocks, he opened with Birds of the Meadow and a sense that something big was approachin­g. Without being explicit about anything, Ritter captured the foreboding that had seeped into the collective American consciousn­ess and continued to work through the powerlessn­ess one would also feel as an individual.

“It’s weird, people have asked me why I’m not writing protest songs, and it’s just not my medium,” he says. “For me there are so many ways for us to share our ideas now, there’s a point at which I find trying to reflect the times through your music is writing down what you’re thinking, honestly, and no matter if it fits with the current political climate or not.

“There’s been records that have been born out of rage. The Animal Years (2006) was where I was trying to exorcise an anger out of myself. And others... you’re getting swept up and the only thing you can do is write without an editor, try to capture a moment in amber rather than create something.

“I was thinking about my time growing up in Idaho and feeling like I wanted to address some of these things I saw going on around me, but not so head-on that they were like a blunt instrument,” Ritter says. “I’m not out there to be a preacher or to try and educate anybody. My job is to describe the things I see going by me as realistica­lly as I can.”

On Gathering, Ritter teamed up with the legendary Bob Weir after working on Blue Mountain; the Grateful Dead founder member’s first solo album in decades.

“We ended up really getting to know each other in a creative way, and then When Will I Be Changed happened, which I cared so much about. For him to bring his experience­d voice to a song... I thought it would be magic, but I didn’t know it would be such a beautiful rendition. I’m in his debt.

“Certain things served as touchstone­s on Gathering. Waylon Jennings was like a character to sing about. I love the new Jay-z record (4:44). I’m a learning hiphop fan — the lyrics in hip hop are the most exciting going on right now.”

He still believes there are core themes that lie at the centre of every song — “big, open-ended huge things that have no answer.”

“It’s so much more fun to write about questions,” he says. Where Have All The Flowers Gone? (Pete Seeger) or Blowin’ in the Wind (Bob Dylan) are taken as protest songs, but they’re powerful because they ask questions and don’t give any answers. I don’t trust answers in songs.”

Growing up in “the middle of nowhere on the edge of a mountain,” where the bus ride to school took an hour and a half, it took Ritter some time getting used to living in New York. He’d go to sleep at night then think it was morning, because the street lights were on. But he found something moving in that journey to a big city.

“You need all the energy you can muster because so much is happening,” he says. It’s an energy he brings to the album, how it chops and changes with a similar approach to production as some of the greats of hip hop; causing an arresting dynamic that keeps the listener on their toes. Ritter designed it in a similar way to how he’d make a set list for a live show: “There were no rules, the dynamic should go up and down.”

“People have been talking about the death of the album for so long,” he adds. “But novels aren’t dead either. I have favourite passages, and I have favourite songs, but there’s something beautiful to be able to put out a record that is a fully fledged character. However people want to listen to music is great.”

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 ??  ?? Josh Ritter (right) and Bob Weir (centre) performing When Will I Be Changed in San Francisco.
Josh Ritter (right) and Bob Weir (centre) performing When Will I Be Changed in San Francisco.

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